If you renounce your citizenship and become stateless, where will you be deported to?
>>1156026
You actually have to present yourself at an embassy or similar to renounce citizenship. Most developed nations require you to already have another citizenship before doing so.
It's not some way to a free plane ticket and being a "free man on the land" or whatever bollocks, it's literally shooting yourself in the foot and making your life a bureaucratic nightmare.
Literally impossible.
There are agreements in place to make sure that nobody can be stateless.
>>1156040
Wikipedia says that the US is one of a few nations that will allow you to renounce citizenship without holding another.
>>1156040
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statelessness#Statelessness_since_1961
but its basically impossible to get because the state has to revoke it (or cease to exist). People who join ISIS might lose it for example as some western countries want to revoke citizenship of native ISIS fighters. In any way statelesness is nothing to strive for, especially when you like travelling.
>>1156049
>People who join ISIS might lose it for example as some western countries want to revoke citizenship of native ISIS fighters
Only if they're dual citizens, it's basically targeted at immigrants from islamic countries that go and join IS.
If they're homegrown islamists, they just get killed in airstrikes or arrested if they ever come back.
>>1156026
You get sent wherever they want, 99℅ it will be your previous home country
>>1156026
There are a few autocratic populist governments that will revoke citizenship and make someone stateless but other countries won't necessarily recognise the revocation though since it's likely to happen to high-profile exiled politicians, they'd probably get asylum anyway.
It's illegal under international law to render somebody stateless, only dictators or pseudo-dictators generally do it to prove how manly they are by defying international law. Trump will probably start doing it if he wins.
Almost all stateless people were citizens of somewhere that ceased to exist, in some cases they declined to apply for citizenship in the new country that replaced their old one. It's usually a product of civil war or annexation.
>>1156026
You're totally free to go wherever you want bro, it's like being a sovereign citizen of the united States, legally speaking customs officers aren't even allowed to question you or refuse you entry. Next time you have a trip overseas just flush your passport down the toilet and declare yourself a stateless citizen, and you're good to go ANYWHERE