“…Anarchists themselves agreed, at least in principle, that they were not citizenship material. Insofar as citizenship finds any place in anarchist ideology, it is typically only in the abstract, cosmopolitan sense of being a “citizen of the world.” For example, when the US government barred foreign‐born anarchists from becoming naturalised American citizens in 1906, Goldman (1906, p. 2) replied in her magazine Mother Earth , “Citizenship has no meaning to the [anarchists], since their ideal of human liberty and righteousness goes beyond the narrow bounds of nationality.” In 1917, Goldman's lifelong comrade and fellow deportee Alexander Berkman more bluntly defined a “loyal citizen” as one who was “Deaf, dumb and blind,” “patriotism” as “Hating your neighbor,” and “humanity” as “Treason to government.” 3 Turn‐of‐the‐century anarchist writings such as these frequently invoked “natural” or human rights that, as Mark Bray notes, “not only transcended the state and the realm of citizenship, but entailed their abolition” (Bray, 2019, p. 330). Nevertheless, anarchists were also cognizant of the practical utility of citizenship and the rights it afforded, and occasionally invoked its protections even as they denied the legitimacy of states' claims to bestow (or deny) those protections.…”