These rights vary from country to race to gender across the board, aligning a person for a role they will play for the advancement of their immediate and overall society. Here the giving of an identity is expressed, and just as one has the ability to give identity, one can also take it away. An example of this is with the Nazis before World War II, with Adolf Hitler's obsession with political and racial purity. To begin with the demise of the Jewish people, the Nazis were ordered to deprive them of their rights and limit their connections to the outside world. From here, they were just a minority in the community, herded into ghettos and eventually sent to various camps. However, they were stripped not only of their citizenship, but also of their humanity, becoming stars pinned to T-shirts and another pair of shoes to pass by at the Holocaust Museum. This new definition of what it means to be a citizen and a human being did not end with the fall of Adolf Hitler, but continues today. In the United States alone, approximately 4% of the population is made up of undocumented people of all ages. This is a combination of immigrants, refugees, and those former citizens who have been disenfranchised. The restriction of citizenship translates into a restriction of the rights that a human being can possess while living among millions of people who will never know what would happen
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