Welcome to a new episode of the podcast “Integration or ReImmigration.”
My name is Attorney Fabio Loscerbo.
Today I want to talk to the American audience about a concept that is often misunderstood, both in Europe and in the United States: citizenship is not, and should not be, irreversible.
For a long time, citizenship has been portrayed as a final and untouchable status. Once granted, it is assumed to be permanent, regardless of how it was obtained. Time itself is treated as a cure for any defect, transforming irregularities into acquired rights. This idea may sound reassuring, but in reality it weakens the State and empties integration of any real meaning.
A recent opinion issued by Italy’s highest administrative court makes this point very clear. If citizenship is obtained through false documents or a false representation of reality, the State retains the power to revoke it, even many years later. There is no legitimate reliance when the benefit was obtained through deception. Time does not legalize fraud.
This is not a technical detail. It is a fundamental legal and political message. Citizenship is not a reward automatically granted by the passage of time, and it is not a permanent amnesty for past misconduct. It is a serious legal status, built on honesty, loyalty, and respect for the legal order from the very beginning.
When citizenship is lawfully obtained, it is strong and meaningful. But when it is built on false premises, it has no solid foundation. In those cases, revocation is not arbitrary power. It is the restoration of legality.
This is exactly where the paradigm Integration or ReImmigration comes into play. Integration is not a slogan. It is not an emotional narrative. It is a legal and social process based on responsibility, respect for the rules, and genuine adherence to the values and institutions of the host country. When these elements are missing, integration fails.
Revoking citizenship in such cases is not ideological punishment. It is the State reaffirming its sovereignty and making one thing clear: membership in a national community cannot be based on a legal lie. Rights obtained through deception break the social and legal pact before it even begins.
There is another point that deserves attention, especially for an American audience. ReImmigration is not an extreme measure; it is an ordinary function of the State. When integration does not occur, when legal requirements collapse, and when the bond with the legal order exists only on paper, the State must be able to act. Without hesitation and without hypocrisy.
A system that never revokes is a system that does not control. And a system that does not control does not integrate. It accumulates tension, erodes trust, and ultimately undermines social cohesion. On the contrary, a State that verifies, corrects, and when necessary revokes, is a credible State. And credibility is the essential condition for real integration.
Citizenship, therefore, returns to its true nature in public law: a demanding bond, not an untouchable shield. A bond based on truthful premises and continuous respect for the rules.
Integration or ReImmigration is not a provocation. It is a framework for democratic governance. Either integration is real, grounded in legality and responsibility, or the State must have the courage to say no and restore the legal order, including through revocation and return.
This is not about exclusion. It is about seriousness. And seriousness is the foundation of any stable democracy.
Thank you for listening.
See you in the next episode.
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