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Hey, our ancestors did...
Lists Of Things To DoWe got a lot of these, and Joe Cocimano’s is a good one: Joe Cocimano, joe.cocimano@voss.com, wrote: Several thoughts on “What is to be done”-yeah, I know it’s a Lenin quote. 1. Arm all civilian aircrew-George Bush is already going weak and wobbly on this request from ALPA. 2.Freeze all granting of Visas immediately, especially from countries with populations hostile to the West. 3.Find and deport all illegal aliens in the US. 4. Penalize businesses that employ illegal or undocumented workers. 5.Reform immigration laws, possibly along the lines of McCarran-Walters of 1924. [i.e. a national-origins system, restricting immigration to countries with compatible cultures.] 6.Completely revamp airport security, including the personnel who work on or around the planes. 7.Improve cooperation between intelligence agencies and law enforcement.
Phillip Hilton writes from Australia, with a different, and useful list: Here are my suggestions. Some may not be viable for obvious political reasons, but I think that such ideas may be a useful point of departure for debate/reflection: 1) Foreign nationals from countries that have produced terrorists that have targeted American institutions or people who seek a visa for entry to the USA should post a good behaviour bond with the INS (to be forfeited at the discretion of US authorities, without rights of appeal) or should be required to have a US citizen sponsor their temporary entry - this will nor eliminate terrorism by any means, but it would establish a clear cut paper trail that would assist the authorities in managing the problem; 2) The US should prohibit the entry of missionaries from the Wahabi sect of Islam (the established faith in Saudi Arabia and, I think Qattar) who have a well established history of conducting radical Islamic agit-prop on their ‘pastoral’ missions and should also prohibit the receipt of funds by US mosques etc from Saudi sources; 3) The US should also amend its extradition laws to expedite terrorist suspects to the countries that are seeking them - gov’t directly threatened by Mid-East (or other) terror will do the dirty work, all America has to do is to desist from unwittingly providing shelter to mutual enemies; such laws might restrict extradition to countries that are proven US allies; and 4) The US should amend its commercial law to make US based organisations that promote or assist terrorism or violent political change in or against allied states liable to civil suits from foreign gov’t’s or private citizens that wish to seek redress for damages (this might eventually see universities that hire tenured apologists for terror being sued, or ‘charities’ that raise funds to help guerrillas/terrorists/fanatics; it would be especially helpful if these laws extended the liability to the directors/managers of the institutions involved); this would kill off troublemaking in various émigré communities extremely fast. The Winner: A Return to First PrinciplesThis is so simple, but so important. There is nothing here that you don’t already know, but there is also none of these principles that won’t be disputed by an immigration enthusiast, set aside by a court or sneered at by the Wall Street Journal. I think this is worth writing down, memorizing, and reciting. In fact, I’ve given it its own page so you can print it out and frame it. John Miano, miano@colosseumbuilders.com,wrote: John Miano’s Principles of Immigration 1. The purpose of immigration policy is to benefit the citizens of the United States. 2. As immigration shapes the country, immigration policy should be set by action, not accident. 3. Policy is set by laws that are enforced. 4. There is no legal right for non-citizens to remain in the U.S, whatsoever. Non-citizens enter the United States as guests and may be removed at will by the government of the U.S. 5. The U.S. should keep track of guests while they visit. 6. Those who enter the U.S. illegally or remain beyond the terms of their visas are criminals and should be regarded as such. Anyone doing so should be permanently barred from entering the U.S. for any purpose. 7. Guests who will not be accepted for return to their home countries may be detained by the government until such time as their home country or suitable alternate country will accept them. 8. Adjustments of status must take place in the applicant’s home country. The only purpose bouncing among the alphabet soup of visa categories serves is to feed immigration lawyers. 9. There must be numerical limits on immigration. Numbers determine funding. If funding is set at one level and the number of people allowed is set at a higher level, you have a mess. 10. It is not possible for everyone in the world to live in the United States. A signed copy of Alien Nation is on its way to him. More proposals? Write me at jfulford@vdare.com October 10, 2001 |
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