Trump Considers Deporting Millions of Americans to Make America Great Again
- Chadwick Dolgos

- Nov 12
- 2 min read
President Donald Trump unveiled a bold expansion of his administration's deportation strategy this week, setting sights on millions of American citizens who fail to align with the core tenets of making America great again.
The initiative would prioritize individuals carrying excess body weight, those expressing reservations about the nation's deep alliance with Israel, and anyone still poring over the latest Jeffrey Epstein court documents, with the goal of importing skilled foreign talent to bolster domestic production of electric vehicle batteries and defense missiles.
The plan builds on the White House's ongoing mass removal operations, which have already ramped up with National Guard deployments at the southern border and congressional approval of billions in enforcement funding earlier this year.
Health officials report that adult obesity affects about 40 percent of the population, a figure that has held steady despite public health campaigns.
Recent Epstein file disclosures, including FBI memos detailing images and victim accounts, have kept the scandal in the headlines, while Trump's diplomatic efforts have advanced the Abraham Accords by drawing in new Middle Eastern partners committed to stronger ties with Israel.
Speaking to reporters outside the Oval Office, Trump laid out the rationale with characteristic directness.
"We've got to bring in the best people from places like South Korea, who've been building batteries their whole lives, or experts who know missiles inside and out," he said. "You can't just grab someone from the unemployment line and expect them to handle that kind of precision work."
Private contractors, including those with ties to the prison industry, stand to benefit from the scaled-up efforts, as the policy shifts focus inward to reshape the labor pool.
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem echoed the president's urgency during a briefing on Capitol Hill. "This is about efficiency through strength," she stated.
"Clearing out distractions lets us prioritize the real builders who keep America great."
Israel remains a cornerstone of U.S. foreign policy under Trump, with recent summits yielding pledges for joint defense projects that rely on imported engineering expertise.
The Epstein saga, meanwhile, continues to unfold with a pending House vote on full file transparency, potentially exposing more high-profile connections. As factories hum with the need for specialized hands, the White House projects that the deportations could inject fresh vitality into sectors vital for economic and military dominance.
White House economic adviser Peter Navarro wrapped up the announcement with a nod to long-term gains.
"These moves ensure we're not just competing but dominating," he declared. "The numbers don't lie—obesity costs the economy hundreds of billions annually, and divided loyalties weaken our alliances."
The policy rollout coincides with a surge in H-1B applications from Asia and Europe, as companies race to staff assembly lines for next-generation lithium-ion cells and hypersonic warheads.
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