Rebuilding the Asylum System - George Soros

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Gemini
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Rebuilding the Asylum System - George Soros

Post by Gemini »

Note: This article is by one of the greatest arch enemies of Communism, George Soros. Soros is a cosmopolitan imperialist and disciple of Karl Popper. Soros is such a disciple of Karl Popper he named his foundation the Open Society.
After the Open Society concept outlined by Karl Popper in his book the Open Society And It's Enemies.

Communism and Fascism were considered "Closed Societies" whilst Liberalism was considered Open Society.

So we should understand that Soros works for uninterrupted liberalism.

Here he is in an essay saying how Germany needs to take 1 million migrants annually. This topic is important for Communists.
If one of the arch enemies of Communism is stage managing migration flows then Communists need to ask whether migration, under this imperialist controlled context works against Communism.

My opinion is that by dissolving nations via uncontrolled migration you leave the average person more vulnerable, more socially isolated. More disconnected from society. Not only does their class conscious go. But their entire concept of national identity disappears. The imperialists are doing this in favour of organising giant supranational blocks with very limited democratic accountability and to ensure the unrivalled rule of capital.

It is a liberal a social democratic creation: the migrants don't become communists they become thankful to be exploited by the centre of imperialism and show their loyalty to imperialism justly. Not only are they passively accepting of imperialist society but support it full throttle. United States organises bands of reactionaries that move to USA as weapons against developing nations and their breaking free of imperialist chains.
And frankly I am not a humanitarian.
I am a Communist.
I don't give a fuck if someone moves to the Global North to "escape persecution" or whatever.
If they were forced to stay where they were they would end up picking up rifles against imperialism.
European leaders emerged from yet another summit this week, having made only modest progress towards definitively addressing a refugee crisis that has caused enormous human suffering and shaken the EU to its core. The time for partial measures is long past; a comprehensive plan is needed.

NEW YORK – The European Union needs to accept responsibility for the lack of a common asylum policy, which has transformed this year’s growing influx of refugees from a manageable problem into yet another political crisis. Each member state has selfishly focused on its own interests, often acting against the interests of others. This precipitated panic among asylum seekers, the general public, and the authorities responsible for law and order. Asylum seekers have been the main victims.

The EU needs a comprehensive plan to respond to the crisis, one that reasserts effective governance over the flows of asylum-seekers so that they take place in a safe, orderly way, and at a pace that reflects Europe’s capacity to absorb them. To be comprehensive, the plan has to extend beyond the borders of Europe. It is less disruptive and much less expensive to maintain potential asylum-seekers in or close to their present location.

As the origin of the current crisis is Syria, the fate of the Syrian population has to be the first priority. But other asylum seekers and migrants must not be forgotten. Similarly, a European plan must be accompanied by a global response, under the authority of the United Nations and involving its member states. This would distribute the burden of the Syrian crisis over a larger number of states, while also establishing global standards for dealing with the problems of forced migration more generally.

Here are the six components of a comprehensive plan.

First, the EU has to accept at least a million asylum-seekers annually for the foreseeable future. And, to do that, it must share the burden fairly – a principle that a qualified majority finally established at last Wednesday’s summit.

Adequate financing is critical. The EU should provide €15,000 ($16,800) per asylum-seeker for each of the first two years to help cover housing, health care, and education costs – and to make accepting refugees more appealing to member states. It can raise these funds by issuing long-term bonds using its largely untapped AAA borrowing capacity, which will have the added benefit of providing a justified fiscal stimulus to the European economy.
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It is equally important to allow both states and asylum-seekers to express their preferences, using the least possible coercion. Placing refugees where they want to go – and where they are wanted – is a sine qua non of success.

Second, the EU must lead the global effort to provide adequate funding to Lebanon, Jordan, and Turkey to support the four million refugees currently living in those countries.

Thus far, only a fraction of the funding needed for even basic care has been raised. If education, training, and other essential needs are included, the annual costs are at least €5,000 per refugee, or €20 billion. EU aid today to Turkey, though doubled last week, still amounts to just €1 billion. In addition, the EU also should help create special economic zones with preferred trade status in the region, including in Tunisia and Morocco, to attract investment and generate jobs for both locals and refugees.

The EU would need to make an annual commitment to frontline countries of at least €8-10 billion, with the balance coming from the United States and the rest of the world. This could be added to the amount of long-term bonds issued to support asylum-seekers in Europe.

Third, the EU must immediately start building a single EU Asylum and Migration Agency and eventually a single EU Border Guard. The current patchwork of 28 separate asylum systems does not work: it is expensive, inefficient, and produces wildly inconsistent results in determining who qualifies for asylum. The new agency would gradually streamline procedures; establish common rules for employment and entrepreneurship, as well as consistent benefits; and develop an effective, rights-respecting return policy for migrants who do not qualify for asylum.

Fourth, safe channels must be established for asylum-seekers, starting with getting them from Greece and Italy to their destination countries. This is very urgent in order to calm the panic. The next logical step is to extend safe avenues to the frontline region, thereby reducing the number of migrants who make the dangerous Mediterranean crossing. If asylum-seekers have a reasonable chance of ultimately reaching Europe, they are far more likely to stay where they are. This will require negotiating with frontline countries, in cooperation with the UN Refugee Agency, to establish processing centers there – with Turkey as the priority.

The operational and financial arrangements developed by the EU should be used to establish global standards for the treatment of asylum-seekers and migrants. This is the fifth piece of the comprehensive plan.

Finally, to absorb and integrate more than a million asylum seekers and migrants a year, the EU needs to mobilize the private sector – NGOs, church groups, and businesses – to act as sponsors. This will require not only sufficient funding, but also the human and IT capacity to match migrants and sponsors.

The exodus from war-torn Syria should never have become a crisis. It was long in the making, easy to foresee, and eminently manageable by Europe and the international community. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has now also produced a six-point plan to address the crisis. But his plan, which subordinates the human rights of asylum-seekers and migrants to the security of borders, threatens to divide and destroy the EU by renouncing the values on which it was built and violating the laws that are supposed to govern it.

The EU must respond with a genuinely European asylum policy that will put an end to the panic and the unnecessary human suffering.
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TemperedSteel
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Post by TemperedSteel »

Migration is one of those things that is very difficult to discuss in communist movement.

Migration is a promised law of capitalism as imperialist nations attempt to syphon raw materials out of imperialised nations and build up capital in their own.

At the same time we cannot help see the fracturing of our (imperialist) societies due to the imperialists trying to turn the entire world into a cosmopolitan slop. A giant starbucks zionist prison camp.
CombatLiberalism
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Post by CombatLiberalism »

You're watching a tightly coordinated plan between World Health Organisation (setup by Rockefeller's) and the deliberate created migrant crisis. Tyrants prefer foreigners to oppress their nations people's for obvious reasons: a native wouldn't oppress their own people

Peter Hotez is already calling for NATO to basically occupy USA.
"I've said to the Biden administration: "The health sector can't solve this on its own, we're going to have to bring in Homeland Security, Commerce Department, Justice Department to help us understand how to do this". I met with doctor Tedros last month in Geneva, WHO the director general to say: "I don't know that the World Health Organization can solve this on our own. We need the other United Nations Agencies, NATO." This is a security problem because it's no longer a theoretical construct or some arcane academic exercise. 200,000 Americans died because of anti-vaccine aggression, anti-science aggression. And so this is now a lethal force. And now I feel as a pediatric vaccine scientist, just as it's important for me to make new vaccines to save lives, the other side of saving lives is countering this anti-vaccine aggression."
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JoeySteel
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Post by JoeySteel »

The future is Haiti.

Gearoid O Colmain was way ahead of his time.
The fact that Zionism is using the refugee crisis to further its imperialist agenda does not mean, however, that all refugees in the world are being used for this purpose. Rather, just as in the Arab Spring where the social inequalities of capitalism were used by imperialism to further the cause of capitalism, many refugees coming from the Middle East and Africa are being used for the same purpose.

Throughout the world Homo sapiens is being supplanted by Homo economicus: a vacuous, brain-washed, rootless cosmopolitan, a deterritorialised and acculturated nomad, hopelessly blown hither and thither by the exigencies of capital. Meanwhile, Zionism continues to stoke up the incessant and utterly fraudulent War on Terror, with omnipresent mass surveillance of the “nations” (goyim) while at the same time Jews are being encouraged by the Israeli regime to leave Europe for settlement on Arab lands, ruined and depopulated by Zionism’s wars.
Zionism: Imperialism in the Age of Counter-Revolution (criticism of cpgbml)
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