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Trump Wants to Remove US Citizens from the US

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Does he want to remove immigrants who came here on a B1/B2 visa which does not authorize paid work and worked illegally between September and October of 1996 on nude modeling jobs

 

TAKING JOBS AWAY FROM AMERICAN NUDE MODELS 😄

 

Asking for a friend.

 

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  • He can start with all the people who said they would leave the US if he became president, but didn't.   All the people that stole via USAID , SS , NGO's , and the violent domestic terrorists

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    Getting accused of a crime, kicked in to a jail in El Salvador, good luck to get a lawyer there to fight the dictator. You get what you vote for.

  • A good definition, I think... MAGA Republicans are people who will withhold food from 1000 people out of fear that 1 person might not deserve it. Demo

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On 4/11/2025 at 8:08 AM, Etaoin Shrdlu said:

There is presently no law that specifically prevents a US citizen from being removed from the US.

No law, except 14th A, SCOTUS decision Afrorim v. Rusk (1967), Vance v. Terrazas (1980)

These rulings established that the government cannot strip citizenship unless the individual voluntarily gives it up.

But as you know quite often the government ignores the law and you have to sue them in court to uphold the law.

 

ChatGPT:

While the law protects citizens from removal, there have been documented instances of U.S. citizens being mistakenly detained or deported, often due to errors in immigration enforcement. For example, over 4,000 U.S. citizens were wrongfully caught in the immigration system in 2010 alone.

 

Obama was president then, mmmkay.

 

I'm no Trump supporter, but this is more about the camera on GOP TV than reality.

  • Author
1 hour ago, SiSePuede419 said:

No law, except 14th A, SCOTUS decision Afrorim v. Rusk (1967), Vance v. Terrazas (1980)

These rulings established that the government cannot strip citizenship unless the individual voluntarily gives it up.

But as you know quite often the government ignores the law and you have to sue them in court to uphold the law.

 

ChatGPT:

While the law protects citizens from removal, there have been documented instances of U.S. citizens being mistakenly detained or deported, often due to errors in immigration enforcement. For example, over 4,000 U.S. citizens were wrongfully caught in the immigration system in 2010 alone.

 

Obama was president then, mmmkay.

 

I'm no Trump supporter, but this is more about the camera on GOP TV than reality.

 

Loss of citizenship is a different matter.

 

Would the 14th prevent a US citizen from being sent to a prison outside the US and beyond the reach of the US court system?  Trump has said he's looking into including US citizens in his schemes to deport people. Perhaps a better word would be "involuntary expatriation".

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