The claimed precedence that Merkel want Germans and Europe to follow:
LINK: Sweden's ugly integration problem
Quote:
So how are things working out in the most immigration-friendly country on the planet?
Not so well, says Tino Sanandaji. Mr. Sanandaji is himself an immigrant, a Kurdish-Swedish economist who was born in Iran and moved to Sweden when he was 10. He has a doctorate in economics from the University of Chicago and specializes in immigration issues. This week I spoke with him by Skype.
“There has been a lack of integration among non-European refugees,” he told me. Forty-eight per cent of immigrants of working age don’t work, he said. Even after 15 years in Sweden, their employment rates reach only about 60 per cent. Sweden has the biggest employment gap in Europe between natives and non-natives.
In Sweden, where equality is revered, inequality is now entrenched. Forty-two per cent of the long-term unemployed are immigrants, Mr. Sanandaji said. Fifty-eight per cent of welfare payments go to immigrants. Forty-five per cent of children with low test scores are immigrants. Immigrants on average earn less than 40 per cent of Swedes. The majority of people charged with murder, rape and robbery are either first- or second-generation immigrants. “Since the 1980s, Sweden has had the largest increase in inequality of any country in the OECD,” Mr. Sanandaji said.
It’s not for lack of trying. Sweden is tops in Europe for its immigration efforts. Nor is it the newcomers’ fault. Sweden’s labour market is highly skills-intensive, and even low-skilled Swedes can’t get work. “So what chance is there for a 40-year-old woman from Africa?” Mr. Sandaji wondered.
Sweden’s fantasy is that if you socialize the children of immigrants and refugees correctly, they’ll grow up to be just like native Swedes. But it hasn’t worked out that way. Much of the second generation lives in nice Swedish welfare ghettos. The social strains – white flight, a general decline in trust – are growing worse. The immigrant-heavy city of Malmo, just across the bridge from Denmark, is an economic and social basket case.
|
In Germany, the first city has send out letters this week to renters of public housing and tells them that the city is cancelling their tenancy agreement. They must leave and their flats are being given to foreigners instead.
Nice. You live in a flat for 15, 20 years, and then you get kicked and your flat being given to foreign asylum seekers not paying for it.
In the bordering countries to Syria, several million more Syrians now become unrestful and want to head for Germany.
And lets not be mistaken - these are no temporary guests that will leave after some years. Those from Syria - are here to stay, forever.
The supply in wealth and climate migrants wanting to enter into Europe and here: Germany, is practically unlimited.
An Germans and most others are too cowardly to speak out a loud and clear "No".
Mahlzeit.