The definition of deporting does not specify that it must be to the country of origin. It is simply the expulsion of a foreigner from a country. No specific destination is needed.
This may seem pedantic, but words matter, and if you’re starting your argument by trying to twist and change what words mean, then you’re already weakening your point. Especially when you end your argument with GET THE LANGUAGE RIGHT.
It can be a legal process, and it may return you to your place of origin. Those aren’t requirements though. Yeah, it’s how the word is typically used and understood, but it is not strictly required.
I do agree we need to use more precise language here though, and deportation isn’t it. It does technically fall under the definition of deportation, but it isn’t as descriptive as it should be.
Some of my ancestors suffered through the Expulsion of the Acadians and that’s widely referred to as a deportation, despite most Acadians not being “sent back where they came from”.
I’m not sure your definition of deportation is widely accepted. None of the dictionaries I consulted mention any implications of deportations specifically referring to sending people to their country of origin.
The definition of deporting does not specify that it must be to the country of origin. It is simply the expulsion of a foreigner from a country. No specific destination is needed.
This may seem pedantic, but words matter, and if you’re starting your argument by trying to twist and change what words mean, then you’re already weakening your point. Especially when you end your argument with GET THE LANGUAGE RIGHT.
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It can be a legal process, and it may return you to your place of origin. Those aren’t requirements though. Yeah, it’s how the word is typically used and understood, but it is not strictly required.
I do agree we need to use more precise language here though, and deportation isn’t it. It does technically fall under the definition of deportation, but it isn’t as descriptive as it should be.
Some of my ancestors suffered through the Expulsion of the Acadians and that’s widely referred to as a deportation, despite most Acadians not being “sent back where they came from”.
I’m not sure your definition of deportation is widely accepted. None of the dictionaries I consulted mention any implications of deportations specifically referring to sending people to their country of origin.
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Yeah, in particular I know that being shipped from one Soviet Republic to a gulag in another was, and still is, referred to as being "deported, " e.g.