Remigration Is Ethnic Cleansing in MAGA Drag
The final form of Trumpism was never policy. It was always supremacy.
On the morning of November 29, 2025, the official account of the Department of Homeland Security posted, “The stakes have never been higher, and the goal has never been more clear: Remigration now.”
There was no explanation, context, or follow-up.
The post came just three days after a fatal shooting near the Farragut West metro station in Washington, D.C., where a National Guard soldier, Sarah Beckstrom, was killed and another wounded. The shooter, identified as Rahmanullah Lakanwal, was an Afghan national who had entered the U.S. as part of the 2021 evacuation effort from Afghanistan. His asylum had been finalized under the Trump administration just seven months earlier.
By evening, the phrase “remigration now” had gone viral. In far-right spaces, it was celebrated. Elsewhere, it was met with alarm, confusion, and dread.
This was not the first time DHS had used the word. In October, the agency had posted “Remigrate” with a link to a self-deportation portal. That earlier post was widely condemned by immigration advocates, civil rights groups, even California Governor Gavin Newsom, who accused the administration of adopting white nationalist language. The backlash was swift but ineffective. DHS never deleted or clarified the post.
Now, less than two months later, they have escalated it and attached it directly to a violent tragedy.
What seemed in October like a litmus test now reads, unmistakably, as intent.
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What “Remigration” Really Means
To the untrained ear, “remigration” might sound like a neutral policy term, a softer variant of “deportation,” or perhaps a new strategy in border enforcement.
However, the word’s origins betray its true meaning.
While the first use in the 17th century by theologian Andrew Willet did have such a connotation, and even later usage after max exodus due to war or disasters, the term gained a fundamentally different meaning fairly recently. “Remigration” gained traction in European far right and identitarian movements beginning in the early 2010s, referring not to the lawful return of undocumented immigrants or the voluntary return of those displaced, but to the mass removal of immigrants and their descendants, including legal residents and naturalized citizens, for reasons of race, culture, or national purity.
Functionally, it is the policy arm of Great Replacement Theory, the white supremacist belief that Western populations are being “replaced” by nonwhite immigrants through demographic change. In this ideological framework, remigration is the solution, or as one analyst put it: “The Great Replacement is the diagnosis. Remigration is the prescription.”
Figures like Martin Sellner of Austria’s identitarian movement have promoted the idea for years. The far-right Freedom Party of Austria made it a campaign slogan in 2024. German neo-Nazi and nationalist groups have called for entire families, including some in Germany for generations, to be forcibly removed for not being ethnically “German enough.”
This isn’t immigration reform. It’s ethnic cleansing, bureaucratized and repackaged in MAGA drag.
And now, it’s here, posted publicly and intentionally by a U.S. government agency.
A Direct Line, Not a Sudden Turn
The language may feel new, but the trajectory is anything but.
Donald Trump launched his political career in 2015 by describing Mexicans as “rapists.” As president, he banned travelers from Muslim-majority countries, separated thousands of children from their parents at the border, sought to end DACA, and oversaw detention conditions that drew allegations of medical abuse and sterilization.
When a neo-Nazi murdered a counter-protester in Charlottesville, Trump said there were “very fine people on both sides.” He built his movement on racial grievance, and his immigration policies reflected that ideology at every turn.
In 2024, while running for re-election, he accused African immigrants in Ohio of “eating the cats” and “eating the dogs.” He then used the murder of a white college student by an undocumented immigrant to push the Laken Riley Act and then promised “reverse migration.” Once in office for a second time, he delivered. ICE raids ramped up, asylum processing was nearly frozen, and a new initiative began constructing detention camps in Texas, Arizona, and Nevada.
In spring 2025, he federalized National Guard units to support ICE operations in major Democratic cities. By summer, documents leaked revealing a proposal for an Office of Remigration inside the State Department, essentially a centralized authority to coordinate deportations and removals with international partners.
This isn’t policy evolution. It’s escalation.
If you’ve been paying attention, this isn’t a turn, but rather a straight line. It ends at the same place it’s always aimed for: supremacy, cloaked in state power.
A Weaponized Tragedy Again
Lakanwal’s attack in D.C. was a tragedy, but it was also an opportunity, one the administration seized immediately.
Never mind that he was admitted under a U.S.-led evacuation operation greenlit by Trump in his first term. Never mind that he was vetted over multiple years. Never mind that his asylum was approved by Trump’s own DHS secretary in April 2025. Never mind the CIA ties that now make the case ripe for conspiracy theorists.
All of those complexities were swept aside. In the public narrative, one immigrant committed one act of violence, and that was enough.
It echoed the Laken Riley case, where the murder of one young white woman by an undocumented Venezuelan immigrant became the emotional fuel for sweeping legislation, ICE crackdowns, and political theater.
This is the formula: One crime. One face. Endless fear.
The Politics of Selective Grief
It’s no coincidence that the faces used to justify these policies — Riley, Beckstrom — are young, white, and female.
This isn’t just grief. It’s weaponized symbolism.
In the American psyche, there is no more potent narrative than the innocent white woman harmed by the foreign brown man. It activates maternal fear, white male protectiveness, and racialized rage. It bypasses the rational mind entirely.
No statistic can compete with that. Yes, there deaths are tragic and should not have happened. However, that tragedy is not being focused on attacking others, and neither they nor their loved ones agreed to have their grief turned into a weapon against others.
Furthermore, it doesn’t seem to matter that, according to a 2024 National Institute of Justice study in Texas, undocumented immigrants are statistically less likely to commit violent crime than U.S.-born citizens. It doesn’t matter that most crimes are committed by people born and raised here. It doesn’t matter that most American women die at the hands of their current or former partners. Where is the outrage for those deaths? Where is the policy addressing that?
While the tragic image of a young immigrant boy drowned on the shore gave us momentary pause, for some, the familiar face elicits more empathy than a thousand unfamiliar. To quote the often-misattributed truth, “one death is a tragedy, a million deaths a statistic.”
The story wins, and the story is designed to wound the conscience while feeding the machine.
Who Gets to Stay?
Supporters of “remigration” argue that it’s simply about restoring order, enforcing the law, and protecting American values.
But what happens when the law is bent to fit racial suspicion?
What happens when long-settled immigrants or their children are told to “go back” to countries they barely know, or have never lived in?
What happens when your racial proximity to whiteness becomes the test for national belonging?
This is not a new question. It echoes the “one-drop rule” of Jim Crow, where even a single Black ancestor could strip a person of full citizenship. It is not legal reasoning. It is tribal sorting.
If remigration were applied fairly, none of us would be safe unless we could trace all of our ancestors to indigenous tribes. Of course, we know that was never what they meant. What the right means is not just European enough, but also the right kind. So instead, we’d be unpacking DNA kits, birth records, bloodlines, and hoping our whiteness passes the test.
That’s not immigration policy. That’s eugenics by another name.
They’re Not Building a Policy. They’re Building a Nation For Themselves
The U.S. has always claimed to be a melting pot. However, today’s right doesn’t want a pot. It wants a filter.
We’ve seen the rhetoric evolve:
From “illegal aliens” to “chain migration”
From “anchor babies” to “invasion”
From “reverse migration” to “remigration”
Each step narrows who is seen as American. Each step moves closer to something that cannot be undone without tragedy.
They are not just drawing lines. They are drawing blood.
The Last Gasp of White Supremacy
There is reason for hope. What we are witnessing is not the rise of a new ideology, but the last violent defense of an old one.
The country is changing demographically, culturally, and generationally.
Young people are mixed-race, queer, global, and disobedient. They are rejecting the language of walls and borders. They are marrying across ethnicity, building community across continents, refusing to let fear define who they love or trust. And while this perspective didn’t begin with them, they are viewed as the culmination of it over generations.
That’s what this backlash is reacting to. That’s why it’s so loud, so relentless, and so brutal. It’s the rage of those watching their world dissolve.
However, that doesn’t make it less dangerous. Dying ideologies don’t surrender. They lash out.
The Emma Lazarus poem “The New Colossus” on the Statue of Liberty has become a political target. Some argue it doesn’t represent America, that it was added later, that it came from France, and that it doesn’t count.
However, the truth is, it reflects who we said we were, and if we can’t live up to those words now, it’s not the poem that changed.
It’s us.
We want the benefits of a global world, with access to all of the cuisine, art, resources, and products of the world, yet some are still clinging fiercely to primitive tribalism. This is the legacy of colonialism and conquest.
However, in the digital age, with more ease of travel, it is too late to convince the masses to demonize the other. The vast majority of us have complicated ethnicities and connections. We call the ones they wish us to view as “the other” friend, peer, coworker, family, and partner. We recognize that we all bleed, cry, love, and grieve in the same language.
Remigration is eugenics. It is ethnic cleansing for a new age. Don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. The American Dream wasn’t stolen by your neighbor. It was crushed by the powerful.
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Sources:
DHS faces backlash after tweeting “Remigration now” following D.C. shooting Hindustan Times
Gavin Newsom slams DHS ‘remigration’ post, points at Trump family’s immigrant history Latin Times
Trump administration embraces word used by white nationalists to call for mass deportations TIME
What is remigration, and why is the German far right calling for it? GZERO Media
How remigration became a buzzword for Europe’s far right The Guardian
Remigration: White Nationalists Are Repackaging Ethnic Cleansing Canadian Anti-Hate Network
State Department to consider “Office of Remigration” under reorganization plan Axios
DHS social media accounts, State Department promote “remigration,” a term associated with ethnic cleansing Immigration Policy Tracker
National Guard member Sarah Beckstrom has died after shooting in Washington, D.C., Trump announces The Guardian
National guardsmen shot in Washington, DC – what happened, who’s the suspect? Al Jazeera
National Guard shooting suspect was radicalized in US, says DHS Secretary Noem Reuters
Unauthorized Immigration, Crime, and Recidivism: Evidence From Texas NIJ Report
President Trump signs Laken Riley Act into law DHS.gov
Misguided Laken Riley Act fails to fix broken immigration system American Immigration Council




I for one am not remigrating. Trump and his followers can suck it!