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Radical Immigration Objectives PDF Print E-mail
Written by Simon   
Sunday, 20 July 2008

Radical Immigration is a new idea.  Our intent is to change the way the world thinks about immigration.

    Our objectives are:

                                           MORE
  • -To build a large coalition of people who believe that the Right to Migrate is a basic human right. Join the Movement
  • -To serve as a forum where supporters of the Right to Migrate can share idea, learn arguments and take actions.
  • -To promote and fund initiatives, like the film Beyond Borders that attempts to convince other Americans that there is a Right to Migrate.
  • -To point out the inequities caused in the world by restrictive immigration policies and propose better solutions. Immigration News
  • -To promote, publicize and support groups that try to mitigate the terrible human damage done by bad immigration laws around the world. Links to organizations we support
  • -To support all legislative initiatives that move towards more open immigration policies in the USA and around the world. Our take on the 2008 CIR
  • -To pass legislation at the national level that will make the One Percent Solution a law.
  • Radical Immigration will create awareness that responsible people no matter where they are born have the right to live where they choose.
  • We will help people discover that allowing much more immigration is good for a country ethically, economically and culturally.
  • We will expose the anti-immigrant alarmist as the paranoid luddites that they are.

Comments (12)

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 1 2
The Once and Future Right
Simon,

I just discovered your site, and have barely started poking around, so you may already know this. The United States once recognized the right of free migration. Previous to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, the treaty between China and the U.S., known as the Burlingame treaty (named for Ansel Burlingame, the U.S. Ambassador to China appointed by Abraham Lincoln), declared "the inherent and inalienable right for man to change his home and allegiance."

It is this right that we abandoned in favor of racist immigration laws which continue to exist (and continue to be racist) today.

I am an immigrant rights activist turned law student, focussing on immigration law with the specific intent of fighting for the recognition of the right of free migration. We should talk.
John Moore , August 17, 2008
The Once and Future Right
Simon,

I just discovered your site, and have barely started poking around, so you may already know this. The United States once recognized the right of free migration. Previous to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, the treaty between China and the U.S., known as the Burlingame treaty (named for Ansel Burlingame, the U.S. Ambassador to China appointed by Abraham Lincoln), declared "the inherent and inalienable right for man to change his home and allegiance."

It is this right that we abandoned in favor of racist immigration laws which continue to exist (and continue to be racist) today.

I am an immigrant rights activist turned law student, focussing on immigration law with the specific intent of fighting for the recognition of the right of free migration. We should talk.
John Moore , August 17, 2008
 1 2

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Last Updated ( Monday, 28 July 2008 )
 
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