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The Stateless
- 190 statements
- 35 feature instances
- 27 referencing feature instances
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There are the persons who have a nationality. And there are the stateless persons, who don't have one. Whether your state was destroyed, your country doesn't want you anymore or you passed through breaks in nationality laws, you ended up without nationality. This became common with the rise of nationalism and citizenship, as having papers signified access to property, voting rights, bank accounts and inheritance, lack of access to which wreak havoc on citizens. This became especially common in the 20th century, when wars and revolutions meant your country could no longer exist or a dictatorship could expel you and/or strip you of your nationality. It's a Cyclical Trope in the media and stories, rising and ebbing with increasing and lowered international tensions, as a result of poor diplomatic relations, sanctions, and wars and revolutions. Since the end of the Cold War the treaties were redacted to reduce cases in which someone could end up without nationality; nevertheless, some might end up stateless by not having their birth registered. Is likely to be a status for Space Cossacks, or anyone else who is migrating or Settling the Frontier. Sometimes it is kind of the point as the reason they went into the wilderness was specifically to get away from the state. If the person(s) remain(s) loyal to the old country of their birth despite their statelessness, they become a Patriot in Exile. One variety of the Flying Dutchman, in the "The Man With No Country" section. May lead into Invading Refugees. The Knight Errant and Rōnin are a smaller scale version who lack a Lord to serve under (which is essentially the same thing in a feudal system). The Germanic concept of the Outlaw is something of a precursor trope. See also You Can't Go Home Again, Doomed Hometown, Un-person, The Exile and Persona Non Grata. This trope has nothing to see with the Mukokuseki trope, although it literally means "stateless." Examples |
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Dropped link to ArtisticLicenseLaw: Not an Item - CAT | |
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Dropped link to AvertedTrope: Not an Item - IGNORE | |
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Dropped link to ChroniclesOfAncientDarkness: Not an Item - UNKNOWN | |
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Dropped link to WretchedHive: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
The Stateless | processingUnknown |
ChroniclesOfAncientDarkness | |
The Stateless | isPartOf |
DBTropes | |
The Stateless / int_14d341dc | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_14d341dc | comment |
One Star Trek Online Foundry mission, "Crimes of the Many" by voporak, features a Starfish Alien prisoner at Facility 4028 who was arrested for drug smuggling and had his citizenship revoked by his home nation. | |
The Stateless / int_14d341dc | featureApplicability |
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Star Trek Online (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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The Stateless / int_207208a9 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_207208a9 | comment |
This was actually used by Magneto as a justification for most of his atrocities when he was brought to trial. Because his German nationality was revoked by the Nuremberg Laws, he argued that he was a state of one and was engaging in legitimate acts of war against aggressive foreign powers. Because he was not a citizen of any country (and therefore could not have broken any laws, as he was not subject to them), the International Court of Justice was forced to concede this stance and (after some typical Comic Book shenanigans) he was ultimately released after they determined that he had not violated the Geneva Convention and had, therefore, committed no war crimes (such as targeting civilians or mistreating prisoners of war, for example). | |
The Stateless / int_207208a9 | featureApplicability |
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Magneto (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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The Stateless / int_2372359 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_2372359 | comment |
In the backstory of The Belgariad, the Ulgos (and the beasts who populate the region where they live) were the product of the gods screwing around with their creation powers. The god UL refused to let His children destroy those poor folks when they'd finished playing around with them, but the other gods refused to claim them, having already chosen their own followers, so those godless people were forced to wander around for centuries until finally the prophet Gorim convinced UL to take them in. Alas, when Gorim went to tell his fellow godless that they now had a new god, only a minority agreed accept UL and follow Gorim to their new home. The rest remained godless, and Gorim made them barren so that they'd all eventually die off; he considered this far more merciful than letting their race persist. | |
The Stateless / int_2372359 | featureApplicability |
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The Belgariad | hasFeature |
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The Stateless / int_2a786b7f | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_2a786b7f | comment |
In Darklands, the Player Party aren't citizens of any city in the Empire. As a result, they are legally only permitted to live in inns while inside city walls, and are forbidden from staying in any town for more than 30 days before suffering penalties to their local Alliance Meter. | |
The Stateless / int_2a786b7f | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_2a786b7f | featureConfidence |
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Darklands (Video Game) | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_2a786b7f | |
The Stateless / int_3790ae45 | type |
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The Stateless / int_3790ae45 | comment |
In Double Homework, this is a strong possibility with Dr. Mosely/Zeta, who travels the world conducting unethical and illegal experiments at the behest of governments around the world. | |
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Double Homework (Visual Novel) | hasFeature |
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The Stateless / int_3d22c14b | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_3d22c14b | comment |
Mobile Suit Gundam 00: Several of the characters in Celestial Being have no known national allegiance. While most of them are citizens either of Earth or a Space Colony who joined the organization, it is an open question whether Tieria or the other Innovades (Artificial Humans) are legally registered anywhere. Feldt Grace was literally born and raised in the covert organization, so it is rather unlikely that she has been given nationality anywhere either. | |
The Stateless / int_3d22c14b | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_3d22c14b | featureConfidence |
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Mobile Suit Gundam 00 | hasFeature |
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The Stateless / int_3d562910 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_3d562910 | comment |
In Robinson Crusoeland, the last Laurel and Hardy film, Antoine is a stateless refugee aboard a boat and ends up citizen of "Crusoeland", an island found by the boat. | |
The Stateless / int_3d562910 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_3d562910 | featureConfidence |
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Robinson Crusoeland | hasFeature |
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The Stateless / int_40122bd0 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_40122bd0 | comment |
Miriam meets several stateless persons along her aboard in Das Schiff ohne Hafen. Justified since many of them are fleeing Nazi Germany and the rest of Central Europe to go to Latin America. | |
The Stateless / int_40122bd0 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_40122bd0 | featureConfidence |
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Die Kinder aus Nr. 67 | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_40122bd0 | |
The Stateless / int_408937d5 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_408937d5 | comment |
The Mariner from Waterworld has no nationality. Many characters in this film have only their boat as their "nation," since all nations as we know them have been submerged after the polar ice caps melted. The closest thing to nations in this universe are the Atoll, while it lasts, and Deacon's oar-powered supertanker. | |
The Stateless / int_408937d5 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_408937d5 | featureConfidence |
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Waterworld | hasFeature |
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The Stateless / int_517380f | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_517380f | comment |
One of the defining features of the (purportedly) utopian society of Terra Ignota is that it's become possible to be one of these and still live a normal life. In fact, it's the default: people are born stateless, into the protection of the Universal Laws, which apply to all humans everywhere regardless of status, and only when they come of age does it become possible to apply for citizenship to a nation of their choice. And if that nation later makes decisions they disagree with, they can renounce their citizenship and join another, or go back to none at all. Such stateless people are even represented in the Universal Free Alliance Senate alongside the world's other nations. | |
The Stateless / int_517380f | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_517380f | featureConfidence |
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Terra Ignota | hasFeature |
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The Stateless / int_59151283 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_59151283 | comment |
Metal Gear: Legendary soldier Big Boss became tired of states using and then discarding soldiers, so he worked to create a system where soldiers could live outside of any country's influence. There were several groups formed by Big Boss that follow this ideology, and this eventually lead to the creation of Outer Heaven. | |
The Stateless / int_59151283 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_59151283 | featureConfidence |
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Metal Gear (Video Game) | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_59151283 | |
The Stateless / int_5db5cff4 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_5db5cff4 | comment |
Arch of Triumph is about Dr. Ravic, an Austrian refugee in 1938 Paris who has no passport and no way to get one, his country, Austria, having been absorbed by Nazi Germany. | |
The Stateless / int_5db5cff4 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_5db5cff4 | featureConfidence |
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Arch of Triumph | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_5db5cff4 | |
The Stateless / int_5e56223b | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_5e56223b | comment |
In a story, "The Incident", Superman plans to renounce his American citizenship so that his world-saving skills are not used against The United States (more about this here). In the Silver Age, the UN appointed Superman a "Citizen of the World". None of this, of course, affects Clark Kent's citizenship. | |
The Stateless / int_5e56223b | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_5e56223b | featureConfidence |
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Superman (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_5e56223b | |
The Stateless / int_60156176 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_60156176 | comment |
Vorkosigan Saga: In Captain Vorpatril's Alliance Lady Moira ghem Estif renounced her Cetagandan citizenship when she and her husband expatriated to Komarr in the wake of the disastrous invasion of Barrayar. Her husband took Komarran citizenship, and she had residency as his spouse. Since then, she has lived with House Cordonah on Jackson's Whole, and as a resident alien on Earth, but specifically calls out her status as someone who's been stateless for over a century. Arguably, the many Houseless residents of Jackson's Whole (collectively referred to as Grubbers) would also count, as the Houses Major and Minor are effectively the governments of that planet, so anyone who hasn't got House allegiance/protection is effectively stateless. |
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The Stateless / int_60156176 | featureApplicability |
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Vorkosigan Saga | hasFeature |
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The Stateless / int_61b1bd67 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_61b1bd67 | comment |
Tsubasa -RESERVoir CHRoNiCLE-: Fai D. Flourite. With his home country gone, he has no place to officially call home. Syaoran lacks a nationality, as well. Thankfully, they both have loved ones in welcoming countries, and perhaps someday they will become citizens of one of them. | |
The Stateless / int_61b1bd67 | featureApplicability |
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Tsubasa -RESERVoir CHRoNiCLE- (Manga) | hasFeature |
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The Stateless / int_6373f729 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_6373f729 | comment |
Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl. The Frank family, along with fellow Jews of German origin, were deprived of their citizenship by the Nazi-imposed Nuremberg Laws (see Real Life below). | |
The Stateless / int_6373f729 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_6373f729 | featureConfidence |
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The Diary of a Young Girl | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_6373f729 | |
The Stateless / int_6c1234ed | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_6c1234ed | comment |
One can start the Dwarf Fortress Adventure mode as a Human Outsider, that is, in the wilderness, outside of any village or civilization. | |
The Stateless / int_6c1234ed | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_6c1234ed | featureConfidence |
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Dwarf Fortress (Video Game) | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_6c1234ed | |
The Stateless / int_71a1ca53 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_71a1ca53 | comment |
The premise of The Terminal is as follows: Viktor Navorski's passport is no longer valid because, while he was on an airplane, a revolution occurred in his home country, Krakozhia. That means he's trapped in the airport because he can't enter the US without a valid passport, but he also can't be deported, because the nation he was a citizen of no longer exists. | |
The Stateless / int_71a1ca53 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_71a1ca53 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Terminal | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_71a1ca53 | |
The Stateless / int_822b3920 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_822b3920 | comment |
In Casino Royale the villain flaunts his statelessness, claiming to have lost his memory during World War II and calling himself Le Chiffre or any other equivalents in other languages (because "I am only a number on a passport"). | |
The Stateless / int_822b3920 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_822b3920 | featureConfidence |
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Casino Royale | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_822b3920 | |
The Stateless / int_95226eb6 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_95226eb6 | comment |
Similarly, Cyberpunk has the same concept of people locked outside the system. | |
The Stateless / int_95226eb6 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_95226eb6 | featureConfidence |
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Cyberpunk (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_95226eb6 | |
The Stateless / int_9af804ae | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_9af804ae | comment |
Captain Nemo from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea is suggested to have exiled himself from the world after an encounter with the forces occupying his country had devastating effects on his family. | |
The Stateless / int_9af804ae | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_9af804ae | featureConfidence |
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20,000 Leagues Under the Sea | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_9af804ae | |
The Stateless / int_a5549ed0 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_a5549ed0 | comment |
The Bible. Ruth is this after the death of her husband, when she chooses to leave with Naomi. Naomi is returning to her homeland, although it's unclear whether she has any family left or would be welcome in her community. Although there were no legal statutes determining citizenship, someone without family members was essentially stateless. Jesus was effectively this for the first few years of his life, along with his parents Joseph and Mary although they were still within the borders of The Roman Empire (probably), so they were in some ways shielded from the usual consequences. This was due to the King in their homeland being Axe-Crazy. | |
The Stateless / int_a5549ed0 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_a5549ed0 | featureConfidence |
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The Bible | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_a5549ed0 | |
The Stateless / int_a5b8b965 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_a5b8b965 | comment |
The Iliad. Patroclus is this, having been exiled by his home city after committing murder. This is sort of the point, as Patroclus is the one person sympathetic to the problems of the ordinary Argive soldiers thanks to not having his own agenda. Namely that they are getting their butts kicked, without the leadership of Agamemnon and Achilles. | |
The Stateless / int_a5b8b965 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_a5b8b965 | featureConfidence |
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The Iliad | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_a5b8b965 | |
The Stateless / int_b6b8857e | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_b6b8857e | comment |
Count Dracula is welcome nowhere on Earth in Dracula 2000, because it's revealed that he's actually Judas Iscariot, sentenced to deathlessly Walking the Earth, forever hated, hounded and hunted. | |
The Stateless / int_b6b8857e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Stateless / int_b6b8857e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dracula 2000 | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_b6b8857e | |
The Stateless / int_b6ba8ee | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_b6ba8ee | comment |
In Lucifer's Star, Cassius Mass is a citizen of the now-destroyed Archduchy of Crius. The former Archduchy reforms into the Republic of Crius but it is a Puppet State of the Commonwealth that conquered it. Cassius is considered a war criminal by the Commonwealth and considers his homeland destroyed. | |
The Stateless / int_b6ba8ee | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Stateless / int_b6ba8ee | featureConfidence |
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Lucifer's Star | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_b6ba8ee | |
The Stateless / int_bcb32dc6 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_bcb32dc6 | comment |
Shadowrun borrowed the concept of SINs from Gibson, along with other things, and turns being SINless into an advantage, given the lifestyle of the typical Shadowrunner. Though fake SINs are also fairly easy to come by on the black market. And the two Matrix crashes wiped most SIN databases so there are quite a few people are stuck outside the system. The game treats being SINless as the "natural state" of a Shadowrunner as every Player Character starts Creation as SINless, with SINs as a disadvantage (you have to pay taxes, information about you are in the system and so on) with some advantages (you have an actual SIN you don't need to worry about being fake, and can easily use the advantages of the Government and Megacorps). | |
The Stateless / int_bcb32dc6 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_bcb32dc6 | featureConfidence |
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Shadowrun (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_bcb32dc6 | |
The Stateless / int_ce4be0b6 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_ce4be0b6 | comment |
In Thunderball, the cover for SPECTRE's Paris headquarters is an NGO for assisting the stateless. | |
The Stateless / int_ce4be0b6 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_ce4be0b6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Thunderball | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_ce4be0b6 | |
The Stateless / int_d6e2146d | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_d6e2146d | comment |
In Diablo III, almost all demons are associated and in service to one of the 7 Evils or their Sin Lords. The only exceptions are the Mallet Lords. These are monstrous 4-armed greater demons that are too powerful to control and wander as they please, they will work with other demons but only because they wish to at the time. The Siege Breaker demons are also this too a lesser extent. With only a handful in existence, these powerful demons can be controlled by the Sin Lords and above but only with constant, enormous effort so they can only handle one at a time and never for too long. | |
The Stateless / int_d6e2146d | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_d6e2146d | featureConfidence |
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Diablo III (Video Game) | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_d6e2146d | |
The Stateless / int_da25a6a8 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_da25a6a8 | comment |
The Falcon and the Winter Soldier: Due to half of Earth's population being erased from existence in Avengers: Infinity War, borders worldwide were opened so that countries desperate for workers could get them. Then, in Avengers: Endgame, the missing half of the population was suddenly restored and the world's governments prioritized giving them their lives back over the people who had taken their roles, leaving the un-Blipped to be herded into refugee camps, unable to either stay or go home. | |
The Stateless / int_da25a6a8 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_da25a6a8 | featureConfidence |
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The Falcon and the Winter Soldier | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_da25a6a8 | |
The Stateless / int_df7fa951 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_df7fa951 | comment |
In Casino Royale (2006), Le Chiffre's nationality is given as 'stateless' on the MI6 file Bond is seen reading. | |
The Stateless / int_df7fa951 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Stateless / int_df7fa951 | featureConfidence |
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Casino Royale (2006) | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_df7fa951 | |
The Stateless / int_e26905cd | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_e26905cd | comment |
Tekken: According to their biographies, both Kazuya Mishima and his father Heihachi have had their citizenship revoked by the Japanese government since at least the fifth game. Curiously, Jin Kazama is still a Japanese citizen, even though his reputation in the world is much worse (good or not, the world still sees him as a warmongering conqueror, after all). | |
The Stateless / int_e26905cd | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_e26905cd | featureConfidence |
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Tekken | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_e26905cd | |
The Stateless / int_e8f15e5b | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_e8f15e5b | comment |
In Captain French, or the Quest for Paradise, the titular space trader explains that, after his first historic interstellar flight, he got quickly tired of resting on his laurels on Earth and decided to abscond with the ship that he flew, which was being claimed by three different owners after NASA's shutdown. He tricked them into loading the ship with food and drink (supposedly for a party) and then left orbit, proclaiming that he was renouncing his US citizenship and all property on Earth, thus becoming the first of the Space People. He later tells his new wife that, aboard the Circe, he is the absolute monarch with her as his queen. Anyone who visits the ship has to abide by his rules, even if the ship is orbiting a planet at the time. It's mentioned that it's possible for a citizen of a planet not to be allowed back after a sufficient time has passed and if strict immigration laws are in place to combat overpopulation. It's also common enough on many planets to disenfranchise people, removing their citizenship status. This usually applies to criminals, cult members, doom-sayers, and other undesirables. | |
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The Stateless / int_e8f15e5b | featureConfidence |
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Captain French, or the Quest for Paradise | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_e8f15e5b | |
The Stateless / int_f01be35d | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_f01be35d | comment |
In Outlaw of Gor, the second book in the series, Tarl Cabot is returned to Gor and discovers that his city-state Ko-ro-ba has been destroyed by the Physical Gods of the world and no person from Ko-ro-ba may associate with any other; hence he is literally an outlaw, someone outside the law of any city-state. This situation remains until the end of the third book, at which point Korobans are allowed to rebuild their city. | |
The Stateless / int_f01be35d | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_f01be35d | featureConfidence |
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Gor | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_f01be35d | |
The Stateless / int_f7f52529 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_f7f52529 | comment |
Thunderball has SPECTRE using the "International Brotherhood for Assistance of Stateless Persons" as a front. It appears to actually help stateless people in Europe - but in the back rooms, Blofeld, Largo, and others discuss extortion, murder, and their plot to acquire nuclear weapons. | |
The Stateless / int_f7f52529 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_f7f52529 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Thunderball | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_f7f52529 | |
The Stateless / int_fc1d6ac6 | type |
The Stateless | |
The Stateless / int_fc1d6ac6 | comment |
Witcher neutrality means that, in theory at least, witchers are not meant to be allied to any particular fiefdom, effectively making them stateless. In practice, however, many witchers adopt home cities to make themselves more marketable and Wolf School witchers could technically be considered Kaedweni. During the second Nilfgaardian invasion, Coen ends up fighting for the Northern Kingdoms at the Battle of Brenna. Nobody seems to mind it, but it is considered quite surprising. | |
The Stateless / int_fc1d6ac6 | featureApplicability |
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The Stateless / int_fc1d6ac6 | featureConfidence |
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The Witcher (Franchise) | hasFeature |
The Stateless / int_fc1d6ac6 |
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