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Activists of the movement argue that, if
borders are opened to multinational corporations,
they should be similarly opened to allow free
and legal circulation and choice of residence for
migrants and refugees. These activists tend to
target organisations such as the International
Organization for Migration and the Schengen
Information System.
In 2003, many of those involved in the
movement showed wide opposition to the war
in Iraq. Many participants were among those 11
million or more protesters that on the weekend
of the 15th of February participated in global
protests against the Iraq war and were dubbed
the "world's second superpower" by an editorial in the New York Times. The economic and military
issues are closely linked in the eyes of many
within the movement.
Despite the lack of formal co-ordinating
bodies, the movement manages to successfully
organise large protests on a global basis, using
information technology to spread information.
One argument often made by the opponents
of the anti-globalisation movement is that,
although it protests about things that are
widely recognised as serious problems, such
as human rights violations, genocide and global
warming, it rarely proposes detailed solutions.
Some have also criticised the movement for
engaging in violent or destructive protest. In
general, movement leaders tend to encourage
peaceful protest as the more productive way
of getting attention and respect for their goals,
although occasionally protests do turn violent.
Tim eline of anti-globalists events
June 18, 1999 — Carnival against Capitalism worldwide, including London,
England, and the USA
January 20, 2001 — Washington, D.C., President Bush's inauguration
June 25, 2001 — Barcelona, Spain, World Bank protests
July 20, 2001 — Genoa, Italy, G8 summit
September 29, 2001 — Washington, D.C., Anti-capitalist anti-war protests
Weekend of February 15, 2003, March, April — Global protests against
Iraq war about 12 million anti-war protesters
May 29 — June 3, 2003 — Evian, Geneva and Lausanne, Switzerland, G8
July 2 — July 8, 2005 — Scotland, Protests against the G8 Summit
June 2006 — Russia, St Petersburg, G8
June 2, 2007 — 80,000 protest in Rostock ahead of the G8 Summit