They told us remigration was a fantasy. They scoffed when we demanded our cities back and when we raised our voices against sanctuary chaos and the betrayal of our borders’ sanctity. But now, with the border slammed shut, and enhanced migrant processing centers like Florida’s “Alligator Alcatraz,” the tide has turned. The American People have awakened to a truth too long buried: sovereignty begins not at the border, but in the heartbeats of those who live and breathe devotion to our Land. Common heritage and loyalty, not latitude and longitude, define a People.
It is past time to take the necessary next step: denaturalization. No longer can we afford to pretend that a birth certificate alone makes someone an American.
For decades, activist judges and globalist policymakers wielded the Fourteenth Amendment like a cudgel, turning every border breach into a baby shower of future voters. The result? An America diluted, disoriented, and dangerously close to demographic collapse. First-generation children of illegals — many raised to resent this country even as they benefit from it — are not a blessing of diversity, but a Trojan horse of division. True Patriots must now confront this hard truth: if remigration is the cleanup, denaturalization is the cure. After the repeal of birthright citizenship, the legal status of every beneficiary must be reassessed. If your parents snuck across our border with a coyote and a sob story, your so-called citizenship deserves review and revocation.
Let us deal in facts, not in sentiment. A Yale study from before the Biden years estimates that more than 22 million illegals are present in the United States. Add to that the 4.5 to 5 million U.S.-born children of those individuals — children who benefited from birthright loopholes — and you have a deportable population of over 25 million. That is not a fringe minority; it is a voting bloc. It is a cultural revolution imported wholesale to destroy Americans’ dominance over their own homeland. Imagine the renewed strength of our cities, our schools, and our national identity once this demographic distortion is corrected.
Denaturalization is not cruel; it is correctional. Receiving nations will be happy to have their workers back, and history will remember those brave enough to say what others dare only whisper: America must be American again. And it will be.