Remigration
The sociopolitical term Remigration (sometimes also written re-migration; from the Latin remigrare "migrate" or "wander back") means the return or deportation of criminal and unwilling-to-integrate foreigners from a host country to their ancestral homeland or their point of origin. Peoples instinctively and naturally resist infiltration by foreign masses. Resistance by a Volksgemeinschaft to cultural conquest and subjugation by foreigners must be understood as a right of the natives.
Contents
History
The term originated in the patriotic, identitarian movement in Germany and Austria and describes the emergency that arose after mass migration brought about thousands of violent crimes, rapes and murders but also Muslim-Islamic terrorism (e.g. 2016 Berlin truck attack) by foreigners since the influx of legal and illegal asylum seekers (German: Asylantenflut) from 2014/15.
A conviction for a crime should always result in a prison sentence and subsequent remigration for foreigners. The return of refugees is also expressed as a desire for remigration after the reason for their flight in their home country has been eliminated. Herbert Kickl, the politician (FPÖ) tasked with forming a new coalition in Austria by the Federal President, openly advocates the "remigration of uninvited strangers".
Dual passport holders
Ordinary citizens with a migration background (naturalized citizens) are expressly not included in the remigration plans, albeit leftist propaganda by legacy media claims otherwise, calling it a "battle cry of the European New Right". However, criminals and people who are incapable of integration and who at the same time hold two passports are exempt from this regulation.
In Germany, for example, because they represent the largest such group, namely Turks who are citizens of both countries but who, ethnically and culturally, identify with Turkey and against Germany in the vast majority, have served Recep Tayyip Erdoğan as a provocative and subversive Germanophobic 5th column since the 2010s. If the circumstances are so serious, it must be possible to ask a citizen who has two passports to decide with heart and hand for one country and only one passport. If this is not the host country, then these citizens must also be remigrated to their beloved homeland.
Expulsion
Remigration must never be confused with expulsion. Remigration brings people back to their homeland, expulsion, as the word suggests, drives people out of their homeland by foreign forces, such as the unprecedented expulsion of Germans from Eastern Germany after WWI, but especially after WWII.
Subject | Object | Reason | Means | Character | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Remigration | Native population | Foreign population | Preservation of one's own living space and/or identity | Voluntary, incentives or coercion | Defensive |
Expulsion | Non-local, foreign population / intruders | Native population | Conquest of foreign living space, hate, racism | War, violence (rape, torture, mass killings) | Offensive |
Quotes
- This is what Europe needs: young men who are willing to stand up against the invasion of our continent and call for remigration. May many more European men join you. – Eva Vlaardingerbroek, Dutch nationalist, political commentator and legal philosopher, on 24 October 2023[1]
See also
- Repatriation
- Autogenocide
- Great Replacement
- Leo Stettin – Remigration would have saved his and so many others' lives.
Further reading
- Guillaume Faye: The Colonisation of Europe, Arktos, 2016
- Martin Sellner: Remigration – Ein Vorschlag, Verlag Antaios, Steigra 2024
References
- Articles containing German language text
- Identitarian
- Traditionalism
- Demography
- Immigration
- Migration
- Society
- Politics
- People
- Crime
- Islamic terrorism
- Nationalism
- European New Right
- Conservative Revolutionary movement
- Cultural Marxism
- Europhobia
- New World Order
- Race relations
- Race war
- White nationalist associated slogans