![]() The Department of Justice has quietly revived a troubling policy: denaturalization. Once reserved for Nazi war criminals and fraudsters, it’s now being expanded to target naturalized U.S. citizens for vague “serious conduct” and “certain crimes”—terms left deliberately undefined. This isn’t a trial. There’s no jury. No public defender. Just a federal judge and a civil case with a lower burden of proof. For many of us who earned our citizenship—by serving, working, and contributing—it’s an alarming shift. One that redefines citizenship as conditional. And if history has taught us anything, it’s that bureaucratic power wielded without guardrails can be weaponized against anyone. ⚠️ Read the full analysis and take action here: 👉 Denaturalization by Memo: When Citizenship Becomes a Target
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When Chaos Becomes the Norm: Why I Wrote a White Paper on Executive Drift and Governance Breakdown6/10/2025 I didn’t set out to write a white paper. I set out to understand why I felt so damn uneasy. Maybe it started with seeing peaceful protestors met by armored vehicles. Maybe it was the endless chaos in Washington. Or maybe it was just me—an immigrant, veteran, and parent—wondering how much longer our institutions could bend before they break.
What began as frustration turned into research. What became research turned into structure. What emerged is now something I hope contributes meaningfully to the public record: a documented, reasoned critique of how executive power has drifted from constitutional constraint toward normalized chaos. 📄 Read the full white paper here! |
AuthorAxel Newe is a strategic partnerships and GTM leader with a background in healthcare, SaaS, and digital transformation. He’s also a Navy veteran, cyclist, and lifelong problem solver. Lately, he’s been writing not just from the field and the road—but from the gut—on democracy, civic engagement, and current events (minus the rage memes). This blog is where clarity meets commentary, one honest post at a time. ArchivesCategories
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