florian schneider on 12 Oct 2000 14:24:19 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] March for Unconditional General Amnesty, October 14th, 2000 |
From: Joelmrsj@aol.com October 12, 2000 March for Unconditional General Amnesty, October 14th, 2000 New York, Chicago, Miami, Seattle, Denver, Oregon, Austin, are the cities that have been confirmed for a mobilization by the National Coalition for Dignity and Amnesty, on October 14th, where more than 100,000 immigrants will gather to demand a General Unconditional Amnesty, calling upon Democrats and Republicans, and presidential candidates of this country, to pronounce themselves in favor of a proposal for a law that addresses this demand. The March in New York will start on 58th Street and 8th Avenue, at 10 AM this October 14th, and will go on 57th Street and then 2nd Avenue to United Nations. There are two initial demands proposed by the National Coalition for Dignity and Amnesty: (1) A General Unconditional Amnesty for all undocumented immigrants who are already in the United States so they can obtain Permanent Residency and immediate family reunification, and (2) A new entry system for workers who are solicited by the U.S. economy, by way of a Temporary Residency of three years, granted with the obligation to pay taxes and the right to social security, to organize and unionize to defend one's labor rights. This system must be implemented to avoid having workers cross the border by paying a smuggler, to end the numerous deaths on the border caused by Operation Gatekeeper, and to prevent employers from taking advantage of undocumented workers to whom they pay half of the minimum salary and who must endure inhuman work schedules of two shifts, treated as slaves and without any kind of benefit. The National Coalition for Dignity and Amnesty that already incorporates more than 300 organizations of 25 states, since its inception in April of 1999, has pressured and sought support from Congress people and Senators to convert its demands into a legal proposal. Among other Congressmen and Senators who support the demands is Congressman Luis Gutierrez, for the state of Illinois, who has most expressed a willingness to listen to and support these demands. And to offer a response to these demands, he would introduce to the U.S. Congress, on October 2nd, a proposal to amend the Immigration and Nationality Act, and to change the registration date from January 1, 1972 to August 26, 2000. Congressman Luis Gutierrez announced it on September 25th, in an audience of the Chicago City Council. Even though Gutierrez proposal is not a complete response to the demands of the National Coalition for Dignity and Amnesty, and knowing that its struggle must continue for the sake of undocumented immigrants and their families who are still excluded by this amendment, the members of the National Coalition for Dignity and Amnesty have decided to seek the support of other Congressmen to support the introduction of the Amendment Proposal, so that all immigrants who arrived before August 26, 2000 will be granted Permanent Residency. The National Coalition for Dignity and Amnesty calls to unity and support for this amendment, all organizations, unions, churches and coalitions that have been supporting various legal proposals for the permanent residency of their constituencies, and who would be included in this proposal. The National Coalition for Dignity and Amnesty continues to oppose all Guest Worker Visas (H-2C), Bracero programs, and H-2A and H-2B visas that operate only as legal contracts of slavery, that most adversely affect undocumented workers, and prevent the legal defense of their labor rights. _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold