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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repatriation

>Repatriation is the process of returning a thing or a person to its country of origin or citizenship. The term may refer to non-human entities, such as converting a foreign currency into the currency of one's own country, as well as to the process of returning military personnel to their place of origin following a war. It also applies to diplomatic envoys, international officials as well as expatriates and migrants in time of international crisis. For refugees, asylum seekers and illegal migrants, repatriation can mean either voluntary return or deportation.

Well, it sounds clean and civilized...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remigration

>Remigration, or re-immigration,[1] sometimes euphemized as "repatriation",[2][3] is a far-right political concept referring to the forced or promoted return of non-ethnically European immigrants, often including their descendants, back to their place of racial origin regardless of citizenship status.[4][5][6] This idea is especially popular within the Identitarian movement in Europe.[7][8] Most proponents of remigration suggest leaving some residents with non-European background aside from the forced return, based on a vaguely defined degree of assimilation into European culture.[9][10][11] Advocates of remigration promote the concept in pursuit of ethno-cultural homogeneity.[11] According to Deutsche Welle, ethnopluralism, the Nouvelle Droite concept that different ethnicities require their own segregated living spaces, creates a need for remigration of people with "foreign roots".[12] Scholar José Ángel Maldonado has compared the idea to a "soft type of ethnic cleansing under the guise of deportation and segregation."[13] Presented by far-right extremists as a remedy to mass immigration and the perceived Islamisation of Europe, remigration has increasingly become an integral policy position of the Identitarian movement.[14][15] Research from the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, conducted in April 2019, showed a distinct rise in conversations about remigration on Twitter between 2012 and 2019.[16]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remigration#Wider_usage

>The term remigration stems from Classical Latin remigrāre, "to return home", and was first used in English in the writings of Andrew Willet, an early 17th century Church of England theologian.[17] It originally refers to the voluntary return of an immigrant to their place of origin and is still used as such in social science.[18][19][20][21] In German, the word involves the return of an individual to their ethnic community, without a necessary connection to a country of origin.[22]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remigration#Origins_and_development

>Early evocations of the modern far-right concept of remigration can be found in French 1960s movements such as Europe-Action,[23] considered the "embryonic form" of the Nouvelle Droite.[24][25] Jean-Pierre Stirbois, then General Secretary of the National Front (FN), was the first to coin the expression "we will make them leave" ('on les renverra') in an interview.[26] He was the architect of the first electoral breakthrough of the FN in 1983, earning nearly 17% of the votes in the city of Dreux with the promise of "inverting the migratory flows".[27] The idea is also expressed in the German slogan "Deutschland den Deutschen, Ausländer raus" ('Germany to Germans, foreigners out'),[28] and in the motto of L'Œuvre Française "La France aux Français" ('France to the French').[29] Since the 2010s, the Identitarian movement has engaged in forms of agitprop, or "cultural struggle", in an attempt to push remigration towards the centre of the political debate.[4] The term is closely related to the concept of the Great Replacement, which states that the white Christian European population is being progressively replaced with non-European populations, specifically from North Africa and the Middle East, through mass migration, demographic growth, and a European drop in the birth rate.[30][31] Proponents of remigration often use the historical example of the expulsion of Pieds-Noirs from Algeria in 1962 as a successful past instance of organized forced remigration,[32][33] even though the exodus is described by some historians as an ethnic cleansing stimulated by violence and threats from the National Liberation Front (FLN) and part of the native Muslim population, as evidenced by the slogan "the suitcase or the coffin" promoted by the FLN, the kidnappings of Pieds-Noirs, or the Oran massacre of 1962.[34][35]

Holyshit almost nazism...

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This is what free for all attack on White civilizations look like