Xenophobic nonsense. IS is run by 23 year olds who have no "plan" beyond the middle east version of flashing " bling" and blowing things up and , if their "plan" is to dilute the " Christian nature of Europe" , it seems that , at least in your case, there is little real Christianity left ( at least that Christ would recognize) Here are the facts: 1) Why mostly men, so few children ? : In any war, 50% of the casualties are children under the age of 5. This is because their head to body surface area makes them more vulnerable to brain blunt force trauma and their abdomen is more vulnerable to shock force trauma. Drop a bomb on a house, that is who dies. Add to that that , in Syria, Assad has been using cluster bombs and chemical weapons, which dissproportionally affect children due to their airway being more vulnerable to gas and their tendency to pick up ordinance unknowingly. As Syria has been at war for 4 years and those dying in greater numbers have been children under the age of 5 AND the birth rate has gone down ( malnourished women don't ovulate) that should answer your question. . Those who were 5 at start of conflict are now 9 and are likely out there trying to earn enough to feed their family, but too young to travel alone to the EU. 2) Old people just want to die in their homes in their own land and won't budge 3) In middle east culture, young women take care of their parents ( the old people) , unless they have a young child they are trying to get to safety ( I think you may have seen a few in photos) 4) why are the men leaving / why don't they stay and fight ? ( this statement is amazingly uninformed) The learning curve is pretty steep at this point, but here is a link: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/mar/12/syrias-war-80-in-poverty-life-expectancy-cut-by-20-years-200bn-lost In short, they have ben fighting, and fighting and fighting with , it seems, weapons we supplied or that we manufactured her at home in the US and allowed weapons traders to sell on the open market. Yes, lots of US weapons dealers making a fortune gleefully in Syria and Iraq right now. These people are refugees, their country needs to be stabilized or this is just the tip of the ice berg Syria has been at war for 4 years, 80% of its population has lost its only means to obtain food and clean drinking water. Its economy is non-existant. Its President has been bombing its peopel for 4 years and only Iraq for 10 and Afghanistan for 12 . 14 years ago, Europe removed its national borders. |
| Several said because they did not want to be conscripted. |
So who wanted to assimilate, and who didn't? |
| The word is out that Europe offers extended financial assistance. The Syrians and Eritreans are in a terrible situation at home and deserve to be helped. Many others are joining in for economic reasons. The current chaos is the best opportunity for the latter group. |
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In the Muslim world, men are not single, especially when they are over 16 yo. They have wives and children back home and will send for them when they have settled in whichever country. Angela Merkel is crazy. Anybody consider SECURITY letting anybody stay in Germany when they reach it? What if they are ISIL members? |
Mexico is not in a war! |
I think it is much more difficult to assimilate in Europe than in the US. Despite the liberalism of northern Europe, they are still a very traditional and closed society. You just cannot compare the US and Europe. It would be interesting if they did a study to see if the US or Europe tended to attract the more conservative or liberal immigrants. |
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The question is do immigrants WANT to assimilate into new societies.
Lots of them don't want to, and don't. Especially those who felt forced to leave. They're angry. And remain so. |
The one that isn't politically correct? |
See, e.g. France and certain cities in the U.K. Europe has been so emasculated that it is now...this. Oh well. |
Huh? NP but your argument makes no sense to me. Are refugees infiltrating your town? Nope, mine neither. Assimilation takes the work of both the government, the individuals who migrated, and the community at large, and it will be quite the challenge. Germany at least seems to recognize the challenge to a degree, but whether this experiment will work out for them is anyone's guess. |
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There seem to be several posters on here that assert that many (or the majority?) of refugees are actually "economic migrants." I'm curious as to how you know this? Do some of you work for the govt or with NGOs that work directly with this crisis? Or have numbers/percentages been published in a news source that I just haven't seen?
Also, this is probably a dumb question, but how do you distinguish between a "refugee" and "economic migrant"? Say you have two people coming for Syria- one has been driven from their house (or it's been destroyed) while the other still has somewhere to live but has lost their way of living and ability to provide for their family due to the war. Is the former considered a refugee but the latter an economic migrant? |
A refugee is defined as one that will be persecuted or killed due to political, religious or sexual orientation reasons. If their ability to provide for their family has been taken away, that is not a refugee, or if it is, they are called "economic refugees" and most countries don't recognize that as a reason. One can say that the Syrian refugees are religious refugees from ISIS. I know I would be one if ISIS were taking over my country. Also, there are millions of refugees in Turkey and Lebanon, but their status there is terrible. So, perhaps, many men have left their wives and kids in Lebanon or Turkey while they go to Europe to find a job, then send for them later once they have more money. This is fairly typical. I saw a picture of a Syrian man in Lebanon, holding his sleeping 4 yr old daughter, and trying to send generic ball point pens on the streets. He had about a half dozen or so in his hands, desperately trying to sell them. It was so sad. Some people around there started a kickstarter campaign for him and his family. I don't know what happened. I just imagine my DH holding my 6 yr old trying to sell a few pens on the street so that we could eat. Heartbreaking. |
No, the one where they make up their own reality. |