marhay70 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 02, 2024 3:51 pm
The penny is finally beginning to drop with many of the wokes in Europe and the EU Institutions, that multiculturalism does not work. Why it has taken so long is obvious when you discover that it's bottom-line economics that has forced the rethink.
Truth is, all these immigrants were seen as a cheap source of labour, but the figures coming out now show that more than 60% of all immigrants in the last twenty years have not worked or sought work since they arrived. Over 200,000 immigrants have disappeared off the radar in Germany, nobody knows where, or even who, they are. Think about it, almost a quarter of a million untraceable aliens on a continent with no borders.
But finally, hopefully, things are beginning to change, Germany has scrapped Merkel's disastrous "open borders" policy and is embarking on a purge of both legal and illegal immigrants, but woke policies have meant that it could take over 70 years to deport only 50,000 of them. The Nordic countries, who were equally as welcoming, have changed their laws and taken a tougher stance, France, Netherlands, and Italy, the latter two having recently elected right leaning parties, are following suit. Further east, Poland, Hungary, and Slovakia have strict anti-immigrant stances.
So where does Ireland stand on this? Are we to continue with our open-door system, with loads of goodies for whoever bothers to turn up, to the detriment of our people and our economy? How much extra tax are the workers going to have part with to support this? How much longer will our stretched, under-resourced public services, be able to cope with exponentially increasing numbers of "free lunch" clients.
Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, and Egypt, conveniently didn't sign up for the UN charter on refugees and so are not obliged to take in a single soul, meaning that some of the richest states in the world, and only a stone's throw, by comparison, away from the origin of the crisis, contribute virtually zero.
With the politicians we have at the moment, I can't see any change in the near future. It's up to the people, at the next GE, to elect those politicians who can be held to account, and not pay lip service to democracy by electing civil war dinosaurs or leftie "luvvies".
German politicians have had to change.
The AfD party have had a mayor elected in the last couple of weeks in Pirna, Saxony.
They got 38.5% of the vote in three way runoff.
Now the big trend to read out of this is that the other two were Kathrin Dollinger-Knuth (31.4%) of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), and Ralf Thiele (30%) of the ultraconservative Free Voters party.
Over 53% of the electorate turned out and most voted for conservative in varying degrees.
And AFAIK the guy that won only ran on the AfD ticket and is not even a member.
The AfD are really on the rise and it is scaring the shyte out of the rest.
Much like Macron in France getting off his hole as he looks over his shoulder at Le Pen and the even further right parties.
The next European Parliament is going to be totally strange for the woke lefties and greenies.
The new ones elected throughout Europe will make Farage look like an alter boy.
We have 6 months until Euros and local elections.
Things are not getting any better, more accommodation is going to have to be seconded for all the ones arriving.
Compulsory acquisitions have no doubt being discussed, but it might prove too hard to get support from grassroots.
Next thing you will find is private security being setup around proposed asylum locations, all paid for by our taxes.
They wont want to try push in AGS as it wont wash like their use in Rossport to bully locals and protestors.
The times are very different now.
There will be more fires, people have copped on it is ultimately the only solution.
And if any of these private security contractors get in the way of any accidental fires it will be their tough luck.
And all it will take is another event ala Dublin child attack somewhere in the country for things to kick off, and not just in that area.
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to know how stretched the AGS is and much like the fire brigade they can only deal with so many fires at once.
And all of this largesse being spent at a time when cost of living going up for taxpayers and workers.
The middle class Dublin commuter belt got another kick in the nads in the last couple of days, and aint going to go down well when you have workers facing expensive commutes to return late at night to their town to see chancers hanging around doing nothing while being housed, fed and clothed on the taxpayers dime.
The next election is going to be ugly that is if the fooking c un ts have the balls to actually go out and face the public.