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Reply to "Trump plans to revoke citizenship for crimes "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]This administration rules by fear, just like any other dictatorship. They are trying to silence any dissenters, and remove "others". Any naturalized citizen should be afraid. Go read the FAFO thread. It's full of "but, I didn't think he meant meeeee..." posts. Yes, he does mean you. He doesn't care about you. Of course, the hypocrisy is that Trump's wife and entire family should also have their citizenship revoked since Melania lied on her application, and her father is an admitted communist. Remember Rs? Communism is a national threat, right? They won't care if you came here as a baby and became naturalized. So, don't think that just because you came here as a child you are safe. You aren't. Absolutely bonkers.[/quote] Because MAGA are suddenly such purists about people's immigration status and who's a "real" American, let's examine some members of Trump's own extended family. *Trump's current FIL was a card-carrying communist party member in Yugoslavia. *His first wife, Ivana, was from a communist country and while there's no evidence that she or her family were communists, they did receive some privileges that only connected people tend to get in communist countries. *Also, in order to be able to visit his daughter in the US, Ivana's father was registered as a “conspiratorial” informant or “confidant” of the StB (the Czech. secret police, which worked closely with the KGB) starting in 1977, the year Ivana married Trump. The father reported on Ivana’s activities, including her life in the U.S., her husband’s business dealings, and political insights. *Ivana's path toward US citizenship was not exactly a straight one. First, in order to get out of Czechoslovakia, in 1971 she married an Austrian friend to get Austrian citizenship. They never lived together. In 1972 she got her Austrian passport and she and her first husband divorced in 1973. Between 1972 and 1976, Ivana lived in Canada. In 1976 she moved to the US where she soon met Trump and they married in 1977. "Her entry into the U.S. was legal, but her earlier marriage to Winklmayr [the Austrian] raised questions during a later FBI investigation due to its strategic nature, which resembled “marriage fraud” under U.S. law (though no charges were filed)." *In 1989, the FBI opened a counterintelligence inquiry into Ivana’s ties to Czechoslovakia, prompted by a confidential source and her frequent visits to her homeland. The investigation, spanning multiple countries (including Canada and Austria), examined her immigration history, employment, and connections to Czechoslovak intelligence. Documents noted inconsistencies in her Immigration and Naturalization Service file regarding dates of residence, schooling, and employment, as well as her rapid changes in citizenship (Austrian in 1972, Canadian in 1978, and U.S. permanent resident in 1978). The inquiry was closed in 1991 due to a lack of actionable leads, but the heavily redacted 190-page file (part of a 900-page dossier) suggests ongoing concerns about her Eastern Bloc connections. [/quote]
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