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hannah9898 wrote:Denmark just ended Asylum Seeker last May. And there are some more countries in Europe that will end it too. I bet Finland, Poland, Romania and Czech Republic has already ended too. Any other countries in Europe in your opinion that also end Asylum Seeker or is just these 5?
hannah9898 wrote:Denmark just ended Asylum Seeker last May. And there are some more countries in Europe that will end it too. I bet Finland, Poland, Romania and Czech Republic has already ended too. Any other countries in Europe in your opinion that also end Asylum Seeker or is just these 5?
fallap wrote:Do you have any sources to support your claim? I live in Denmark (albeit currently studying in Switzerland) and I have heard no such thing as a total ban on granting people asylum.
hannah9898 wrote:Denmark just ended Asylum Seeker last May. And there are some more countries in Europe that will end it too. I bet Finland, Poland, Romania and Czech Republic has already ended too. Any other countries in Europe in your opinion that also end Asylum Seeker or is just these 5?
tommy1808 wrote:hannah9898 wrote:Denmark just ended Asylum Seeker last May. And there are some more countries in Europe that will end it too. I bet Finland, Poland, Romania and Czech Republic has already ended too. Any other countries in Europe in your opinion that also end Asylum Seeker or is just these 5?
None, it would violate the terms of the EU membership: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/about-pa ... he%20Union.
best regards
Thomas
VSMUT wrote:hannah9898 wrote:Denmark just ended Asylum Seeker last May. And there are some more countries in Europe that will end it too. I bet Finland, Poland, Romania and Czech Republic has already ended too. Any other countries in Europe in your opinion that also end Asylum Seeker or is just these 5?
We didn't. We began deporting rejected asylum seekers from peaceful areas of Syria back to Syria, and parliament approved of plans to process asylum seekers at new asylum centres that will be located outside Denmark (Rwanda as it looks right now). It is still possible to apply for asylum.
tommy1808 wrote:hannah9898 wrote:Denmark just ended Asylum Seeker last May. And there are some more countries in Europe that will end it too. I bet Finland, Poland, Romania and Czech Republic has already ended too. Any other countries in Europe in your opinion that also end Asylum Seeker or is just these 5?
None, it would violate the terms of the EU membership: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/about-pa ... he%20Union.
best regards
Thomas
AirPacific747 wrote:VSMUT wrote:hannah9898 wrote:Denmark just ended Asylum Seeker last May. And there are some more countries in Europe that will end it too. I bet Finland, Poland, Romania and Czech Republic has already ended too. Any other countries in Europe in your opinion that also end Asylum Seeker or is just these 5?
We didn't. We began deporting rejected asylum seekers from peaceful areas of Syria back to Syria, and parliament approved of plans to process asylum seekers at new asylum centres that will be located outside Denmark (Rwanda as it looks right now). It is still possible to apply for asylum.
Honestly surprised this move came from a social democrat led government. Everyone would have expected such a move from the far right, but not the soc dems..
AirPacific747 wrote:VSMUT wrote:hannah9898 wrote:Denmark just ended Asylum Seeker last May. And there are some more countries in Europe that will end it too. I bet Finland, Poland, Romania and Czech Republic has already ended too. Any other countries in Europe in your opinion that also end Asylum Seeker or is just these 5?
We didn't. We began deporting rejected asylum seekers from peaceful areas of Syria back to Syria, and parliament approved of plans to process asylum seekers at new asylum centres that will be located outside Denmark (Rwanda as it looks right now). It is still possible to apply for asylum.
Honestly surprised this move came from a social democrat led government. Everyone would have expected such a move from the far right, but not the soc dems..
L410Turbolet wrote:tommy1808 wrote:hannah9898 wrote:Denmark just ended Asylum Seeker last May. And there are some more countries in Europe that will end it too. I bet Finland, Poland, Romania and Czech Republic has already ended too. Any other countries in Europe in your opinion that also end Asylum Seeker or is just these 5?
None, it would violate the terms of the EU membership: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/about-pa ... he%20Union.
best regards
Thomas
Lest we forget: knee-jerk Merkel created this mess. If read your own link, it mentions "temporary protection" and Dublin Agreement, which Germany unilaterally violated.
fallap wrote:AirPacific747 wrote:VSMUT wrote:
We didn't. We began deporting rejected asylum seekers from peaceful areas of Syria back to Syria, and parliament approved of plans to process asylum seekers at new asylum centres that will be located outside Denmark (Rwanda as it looks right now). It is still possible to apply for asylum.
Honestly surprised this move came from a social democrat led government. Everyone would have expected such a move from the far right, but not the soc dems..
The Social Democratic Party of Denmark has moved so far to the right in terms of immigration policies that they ressemble any other right winged party.
sabenapilot wrote:fallap wrote:AirPacific747 wrote:
Honestly surprised this move came from a social democrat led government. Everyone would have expected such a move from the far right, but not the soc dems..
The Social Democratic Party of Denmark has moved so far to the right in terms of immigration policies that they ressemble any other right winged party.
As was meanwhile explained to you, the idea that a Social Democrat should be soft on immigration is dead wrong.
In fact, they should be exactly the opposite, as their core business is to defend a strong social security, something which is only possible if a country's mandatory social security system remains self-funded and thus largely closed off from all too many lateral entry / direct entry beneficiaries who immediately start to draw from it from the moment they arrive, all without ever having contributed and with a high risk of never contributing in future either.
Look at it this way:
a country's social security system is nothing but a sort of a collective fire insurance for its citizens whenever things go wrong on a personal level.
Just as with a private insurance for any material belongings you may have, mandatory social security should only cover you IF you've somehow been contributing to it BEFORE calling upon it.
Social security affiliation is mandatory, so basically everybody born in a country has been and will be contributing for his entire life, but this is not the case for any direct entrants of course!
Asylum seeking effectively leads to the odd situation where people (in need) who've never previous contributed to a country's social security system flow in laterally and can immediately start drawing from it: while it can be allowed for individuals on compassionate grounds, and it can be allowed on a reciprocity basis (within the EU to the citizens of the 27 member states) it can not be let to happen continuously and in massive numbers to outsiders or it simply bankrupts a country's social secutriy system itself in the end.
And yet that is exactly what is at risk of happening when hundreds of thousands of people suddenly want to move to a country.
Surely it is no surprise asylum seeking happens most in rich (and generous) countries, with the asylum seeker often traveling half way round the globe for it even, crossing through tens of 'safe' yet far less generous countries...
People from Syria, Iraq, Afganistan etc were perfectly safe the moment they crossed the border with say Turkey or Pakistan: as from then on, there never was a need for them to move thousands of kms further up north and west, other than that life would be much better there than it would have been in Turkey or Pakistaan.
But the critirium to seek asylum is NOT to get the best possible new life, it is to live your life safely.
The moment you're in safety, and move further, you effectively become an economic immigrant, rather than an asylum seeker.
M564038 wrote:I think the Social Democrats in Denmark realised they would forever have lost their core voters, which are the people closest to the imigration/integration problems, to the populist right if they didn't bypass the international solidarity-part of social domocratic ideology for a while.
LCDFlight wrote:We are having the same debate in the US, particularly among new legislators who have no professional experiences or qualifications. They haven't yet realized that unlimited social benefits cannot be combined with unlimited in-migration.
LCDFlight wrote:We are also dealing with misuse of the "asylum" definition by economic migrants. New justifications include things like hopelessness, routine crime and low wages.
VSMUT wrote:M564038 wrote:I think the Social Democrats in Denmark realised they would forever have lost their core voters, which are the people closest to the imigration/integration problems, to the populist right if they didn't bypass the international solidarity-part of social domocratic ideology for a while.
It's not just that. It was threatening to dismantle other things and causing big and lasting damage. A vote for the right-wing nationalist DPP for whatever reason is also a vote to a party that wants to dismantle the European Union and is more than willing to impose hamfisted rules that prevent large employers (like Lego, Maersk, Novo Nordisk, Siemens Windpower, Universal Robots and Vestas) from importing specialised labour and expertise from abroad.
Aesma wrote:Saying "asylum seekers don't contribute to the system" is wrong. If they're integrated correctly they do contribute, and that doesn't cost that much to do. Plenty of jobs nobody in advanced countries want to do, that these people will take up. You also have doctors and engineers among asylum seekers.
Aesma wrote:And of course coming as adults, they haven't cost the country anything in education, healthcare etc. In France education costs the country 100000€ on average just to get kids to the end of high school.
Aesma wrote:I'm not sure why Rwanda is involved, it doesn't seem like the most obvious country for this scheme, to me.
VSMUT wrote:AirPacific747 wrote:VSMUT wrote:
We didn't. We began deporting rejected asylum seekers from peaceful areas of Syria back to Syria, and parliament approved of plans to process asylum seekers at new asylum centres that will be located outside Denmark (Rwanda as it looks right now). It is still possible to apply for asylum.
Honestly surprised this move came from a social democrat led government. Everyone would have expected such a move from the far right, but not the soc dems..
Is it really? Social Democratic core voters were moving to DF in droves. Immigration has never been a core socialist value. The welfare state is only possible if the people pull a share of the burden, and immigrants are the most unemployed and work shy part of the population, a drain on public finances. Immigrants aren't even good voters, they vote significantly less than practically every other group in society. Everything spoke for the Social Democrats doing something to curb further immigration.
sabenapilot wrote:fallap wrote:AirPacific747 wrote:
Honestly surprised this move came from a social democrat led government. Everyone would have expected such a move from the far right, but not the soc dems..
The Social Democratic Party of Denmark has moved so far to the right in terms of immigration policies that they ressemble any other right winged party.
As was meanwhile explained to you, the idea that a Social Democrat should be soft on immigration is dead wrong.
In fact, they should be exactly the opposite, as their core business is to defend a strong social security, something which is only possible if a country's mandatory social security system remains self-funded and thus largely closed off from all too many lateral entry / direct entry beneficiaries who immediately start to draw from it from the moment they arrive, all without ever having contributed and with a high risk of never contributing in future either.
Look at it this way:
a country's social security system is nothing but a sort of a collective fire insurance for its citizens whenever things go wrong on a personal level.
Just as with a private insurance for any material belongings you may have, mandatory social security should only cover you IF you've somehow been contributing to it BEFORE calling upon it.
Social security affiliation is mandatory, so basically everybody born in a country has been and will be contributing for his entire life, but this is not the case for any direct entrants of course!
Asylum seeking effectively leads to the odd situation where people (in need) who've never previous contributed to a country's social security system flow in laterally and can immediately start drawing from it: while it can be allowed for individuals on compassionate grounds, and it can be allowed on a reciprocity basis (within the EU to the citizens of the 27 member states) it can not be let to happen continuously and in massive numbers to outsiders or it simply bankrupts a country's social secutriy system itself in the end.
And yet that is exactly what is at risk of happening when hundreds of thousands of people suddenly want to move to a country.
Surely it is no surprise asylum seeking happens most in rich (and generous) countries, with the asylum seeker often traveling half way round the globe for it even, crossing through tens of 'safe' yet far less generous countries...
People from Syria, Iraq, Afganistan etc were perfectly safe the moment they crossed the border with say Turkey or Pakistan: as from then on, there never was a need for them to move thousands of kms further up north and west, other than that life would be much better there than it would have been in Turkey or Pakistaan.
But the critirium to seek asylum is NOT to get the best possible new life, it is to live your life safely.
The moment you're in safety, and move further, you effectively become an economic immigrant, rather than an asylum seeker.
tommy1808 wrote:And it was Victor Orban that commandeered public transport to give refugee seekers a free and convenient trip through Hungry that started the whole mess, which is in deed a treaty violation. I only wonder what his cut was from the trafficking profits.... Germany only reacted to his treaty violation.
tommy1808 wrote:L410Turbolet wrote:tommy1808 wrote:
None, it would violate the terms of the EU membership: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/about-pa ... he%20Union.
best regards
Thomas
Lest we forget: knee-jerk Merkel created this mess. If read your own link, it mentions "temporary protection" and Dublin Agreement, which Germany unilaterally violated.
The Dublin agreement gives nation the right to return asylum seekers to the the country the entered the EU though, it doesn´t create a requirement to do so. No Dublin Agreement violation there, in fact article 17 of the Dublin Agreement gives member states the right to accept asylum seekers they could return quite explicitly. So not just no violation, but following the Dublin Agreement to the letter.
Aesma wrote:Saying "asylum seekers don't contribute to the system" is wrong. If they're integrated correctly they do contribute, and that doesn't cost that much to do.
prebennorholm wrote:tommy1808 wrote:And it was Victor Orban that commandeered public transport to give refugee seekers a free and convenient trip through Hungry that started the whole mess, which is in deed a treaty violation. I only wonder what his cut was from the trafficking profits.... Germany only reacted to his treaty violation.
Wrong. Orban had to react on the mess which Merkel created in his country with her "Wir schaffen das" statement. And that's what he did.
Jetty wrote:Europe had a mutually agreed and quite restrictive immigration policy,
yet Merkel without any consultation of other EU countries basically invited migrants to come to Germany (and thus Europe) by saying they will manage it; ‘Wir schaffen das’.
tommy1808 wrote:Jetty wrote:Europe had a mutually agreed and quite restrictive immigration policy,
Nope, each Member state has its own Asylum policy, the Dublin Agreement only is about who has to take the refugees (that is the party Orban violated) and minimum standards (that Orban violated).
yet Merkel without any consultation of other EU countries basically invited migrants to come to Germany (and thus Europe) by saying they will manage it; ‘Wir schaffen das’.
Which, as i already pointed out, is nonsense. Hungry decided to violate the Dublin Agreement and provided transit service into Europe for free, Merkel consulted with the other impacted party, Austria, and both agreed that the only way to stop the tide of refugees (that Orban had transported to their borders) would be to open fire on them, and that they can´t do that.
Its not like the times line isn´t documented very well, despite the persistent attempts of right wing hate merchants to shield the responsible parties (Hungry and the other European countries that refused to aid in stemming the tide in Greece in Italy, with Orban turning into a human trafficker) from the blame they so rightfully deserve.
Jetty wrote:tommy1808 wrote:Jetty wrote:Europe had a mutually agreed and quite restrictive immigration policy,
Nope, each Member state has its own Asylum policy, the Dublin Agreement only is about who has to take the refugees (that is the party Orban violated) and minimum standards (that Orban violated).
Absolute nonsense. I’ll simply quote the EU itself:
It wasn’t only Austria that was impacted, the whole of Europe got a huge influx of immigrants after Merkel spoke. Let alone there is a huge middle ground between shooting and saying Germany/Europe can manage a huge influx of immigrants; it was an issue without a binary solution.
The biggest wave of immigrants happened after Merkel incited illegal immigration, this has been very well documented as well.
tommy1808 wrote:The biggest wave of immigrants happened after Merkel incited illegal immigration, this has been very well documented as well.
Yes, after Orban became a human trafficker, violated treaties and refused to, alongside a few other eastern European member states, agree to any solution because it may cost a little money. Orban blew up the damn, the rest was just handling of a flood.
best regards
Thomas
VSMUT wrote:The Hungarians started letting them go to the border on the 3rd of September and let them cross on the 4th.
tommy1808 wrote:VSMUT wrote:The Hungarians started letting them go to the border on the 3rd of September and let them cross on the 4th.
The decisions to accept refugees under blanket terms was taken in the night from September 4th to the 5th, after Chief trafficker Orban deposited them on the border.
https://www.zeit.de/2016/35/grenzoeffnu ... ettansicht
There where rumors to that effect between "Wir schaffen das" and the arrival or the Orban trafficking express, but those where rumors and explicitly denied: https://www.spiegel.de/politik/deutschl ... 50917.html
There is no spinning who violated the Lisbon Treaty or the Dublin agreement.
best regards
Thomas
VSMUT wrote:tommy1808 wrote:VSMUT wrote:The Hungarians started letting them go to the border on the 3rd of September and let them cross on the 4th.
The decisions to accept refugees under blanket terms was taken in the night from September 4th to the 5th, after Chief trafficker Orban deposited them on the border.
https://www.zeit.de/2016/35/grenzoeffnu ... ettansicht
There where rumors to that effect between "Wir schaffen das" and the arrival or the Orban trafficking express, but those where rumors and explicitly denied: https://www.spiegel.de/politik/deutschl ... 50917.html
There is no spinning who violated the Lisbon Treaty or the Dublin agreement.
best regards
Thomas
The official decision was taken that night but Merkel and her government started talking openly about it over a week before. The migrants don't wait for an official confirmation, they hear a rumour and they go. These are people that don't even speak the language or know the political culture, it is a bit ridiculous to assume they would understand the difference.
tommy1808 wrote:you got the timeline wrong:
Orban Express first
We can´t shot them, so "Wir schaffen das", next.
Braybuddy wrote:tommy1808 wrote:you got the timeline wrong:
Orban Express first
We can´t shot them, so "Wir schaffen das", next.
But the public perception will always be that Orban was trying to stem the tide, while Merkel opened the floodgates.
tommy1808 wrote:Jetty wrote:tommy1808 wrote:Nope, each Member state has its own Asylum policy, the Dublin Agreement only is about who has to take the refugees (that is the party Orban violated) and minimum standards (that Orban violated).
Absolute nonsense. I’ll simply quote the EU itself:
Maybe try reading it? "Minimum standard", is not the same as "required procedure". Those minimum standards where violated by Hungry, and what Germany did is explicitly covered by the Dublin III agreement, no violation anywhere.
tommy1808 wrote:VSMUT wrote:The Hungarians started letting them go to the border on the 3rd of September and let them cross on the 4th.
The decisions to accept refugees under blanket terms was taken in the night from September 4th to the 5th, after Chief trafficker Orban deposited them on the border.
https://www.zeit.de/2016/35/grenzoeffnu ... ettansicht
There where rumors to that effect between "Wir schaffen das" and the arrival or the Orban trafficking express, but those where rumors and explicitly denied: https://www.spiegel.de/politik/deutschl ... 50917.html
There is no spinning who violated the Lisbon Treaty or the Dublin agreement.
best regards
Thomas
In general, I can say that the problem of human trafficking is one of the most important problems in modern society and we should pay more attention to it. On the WritingBros website, I read some very useful articles that provide constructive information on statistics and facts that are related to human trafficking.
Dutchy wrote:tommy1808 wrote:hannah9898 wrote:Denmark just ended Asylum Seeker last May. And there are some more countries in Europe that will end it too. I bet Finland, Poland, Romania and Czech Republic has already ended too. Any other countries in Europe in your opinion that also end Asylum Seeker or is just these 5?
None, it would violate the terms of the EU membership: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/about-pa ... he%20Union.
best regards
Thomas
And the Refugee confention of the UNHCR. Would indeed be quite a serious thing if Denmark would have done that. Not even Orban dares to make such a move, formally.
LCDFlight wrote:sabenapilot wrote:fallap wrote:
The Social Democratic Party of Denmark has moved so far to the right in terms of immigration policies that they ressemble any other right winged party.
As was meanwhile explained to you, the idea that a Social Democrat should be soft on immigration is dead wrong.
In fact, they should be exactly the opposite, as their core business is to defend a strong social security, something which is only possible if a country's mandatory social security system remains self-funded and thus largely closed off from all too many lateral entry / direct entry beneficiaries who immediately start to draw from it from the moment they arrive, all without ever having contributed and with a high risk of never contributing in future either.
Look at it this way:
a country's social security system is nothing but a sort of a collective fire insurance for its citizens whenever things go wrong on a personal level.
Just as with a private insurance for any material belongings you may have, mandatory social security should only cover you IF you've somehow been contributing to it BEFORE calling upon it.
Social security affiliation is mandatory, so basically everybody born in a country has been and will be contributing for his entire life, but this is not the case for any direct entrants of course!
Asylum seeking effectively leads to the odd situation where people (in need) who've never previous contributed to a country's social security system flow in laterally and can immediately start drawing from it: while it can be allowed for individuals on compassionate grounds, and it can be allowed on a reciprocity basis (within the EU to the citizens of the 27 member states) it can not be let to happen continuously and in massive numbers to outsiders or it simply bankrupts a country's social secutriy system itself in the end.
And yet that is exactly what is at risk of happening when hundreds of thousands of people suddenly want to move to a country.
Surely it is no surprise asylum seeking happens most in rich (and generous) countries, with the asylum seeker often traveling half way round the globe for it even, crossing through tens of 'safe' yet far less generous countries...
People from Syria, Iraq, Afganistan etc were perfectly safe the moment they crossed the border with say Turkey or Pakistan: as from then on, there never was a need for them to move thousands of kms further up north and west, other than that life would be much better there than it would have been in Turkey or Pakistaan.
But the critirium to seek asylum is NOT to get the best possible new life, it is to live your life safely.
The moment you're in safety, and move further, you effectively become an economic immigrant, rather than an asylum seeker.
We are having the same debate in the US, particularly among new legislators who have no professional experiences or qualifications. They haven't yet realized that unlimited social benefits cannot be combined with unlimited in-migration.
We are also dealing with misuse of the "asylum" definition by economic migrants. New justifications include things like hopelessness, routine crime and low wages.
Kiwirob wrote:Dutchy wrote:tommy1808 wrote:
None, it would violate the terms of the EU membership: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/about-pa ... he%20Union.
best regards
Thomas
And the Refugee confention of the UNHCR. Would indeed be quite a serious thing if Denmark would have done that. Not even Orban dares to make such a move, formally.
It's a very old and now outdated treaty, in 1951 when the convention was ratified it was never intended to be abused to the level it's been abused over the last couple of decades. The number of refugees back then was a pittance compared to today, we needs to be scrapped or significantly revised.
Dutchy wrote:Kiwirob wrote:Dutchy wrote:
And the Refugee confention of the UNHCR. Would indeed be quite a serious thing if Denmark would have done that. Not even Orban dares to make such a move, formally.
It's a very old and now outdated treaty, in 1951 when the convention was ratified it was never intended to be abused to the level it's been abused over the last couple of decades. The number of refugees back then was a pittance compared to today, we needs to be scrapped or significantly revised.
Ok, I'll bite, what would your proposal be? How would it be amended?
Kiwirob wrote:Dutchy wrote:Kiwirob wrote:
It's a very old and now outdated treaty, in 1951 when the convention was ratified it was never intended to be abused to the level it's been abused over the last couple of decades. The number of refugees back then was a pittance compared to today, we needs to be scrapped or significantly revised.
Ok, I'll bite, what would your proposal be? How would it be amended?
Disband it in its entirety, the developed nations cannot and should not be the end game for everyone who isn't happy with their country of birth. Lets face it the system has been abused, it was never envisioned when set up in the 1950's for the numbers of refugees we see today.
Dutchy wrote:Kiwirob wrote:Dutchy wrote:
Ok, I'll bite, what would your proposal be? How would it be amended?
Disband it in its entirety, the developed nations cannot and should not be the end game for everyone who isn't happy with their country of birth. Lets face it the system has been abused, it was never envisioned when set up in the 1950's for the numbers of refugees we see today.
Ok, so no refugees at all, never. Does that included all countries in the world or 'just' developed nations?
Kiwirob wrote:Dutchy wrote:Kiwirob wrote:
Disband it in its entirety, the developed nations cannot and should not be the end game for everyone who isn't happy with their country of birth. Lets face it the system has been abused, it was never envisioned when set up in the 1950's for the numbers of refugees we see today.
Ok, so no refugees at all, never. Does that included all countries in the world or 'just' developed nations?
It's so open to abuse I'd stop it completely until the process can be refined and made fair for everyone. IMO it would be much more efficient helping refugees in there own countries rather than traipsing halfway round the world looking for the country who will offer them the most benefits, which is what happens.
Kiwirob wrote:Dutchy wrote:Kiwirob wrote:
Disband it in its entirety, the developed nations cannot and should not be the end game for everyone who isn't happy with their country of birth. Lets face it the system has been abused, it was never envisioned when set up in the 1950's for the numbers of refugees we see today.
Ok, so no refugees at all, never. Does that included all countries in the world or 'just' developed nations?
It's so open to abuse I'd stop it completely until the process can be refined and made fair for everyone. IMO it would be much more efficient helping refugees in there own countries rather than traipsing halfway round the world looking for the country who will offer them the most benefits, which is what happens.
Dutchy wrote:Kiwirob wrote:Dutchy wrote:
Ok, so no refugees at all, never. Does that included all countries in the world or 'just' developed nations?
It's so open to abuse I'd stop it completely until the process can be refined and made fair for everyone. IMO it would be much more efficient helping refugees in there own countries rather than traipsing halfway round the world looking for the country who will offer them the most benefits, which is what happens.
They flee their countries because of war, because of being prosecuted, because of human rights abuse, because of natural disaster, because of lawlessness, or any other reason you can claim asylem on basis of the Refugee Convention - UNHCR. How do you propose that we help them in the country which they have fled?
noviorbis77 wrote:Dutchy wrote:Kiwirob wrote:
It's so open to abuse I'd stop it completely until the process can be refined and made fair for everyone. IMO it would be much more efficient helping refugees in there own countries rather than traipsing halfway round the world looking for the country who will offer them the most benefits, which is what happens.
They flee their countries because of war, because of being prosecuted, because of human rights abuse, because of natural disaster, because of lawlessness, or any other reason you can claim asylem on basis of the Refugee Convention - UNHCR. How do you propose that we help them in the country which they have fled?
Some do.
Most asylum seekers I have encountered have been economic migrants abusing the asylum system.
MohawkWeekend wrote:It is pretty easy to argue that gangs or corrupt police make your migration necessary. And they are allowed in to the United States.
The rules written post WWII were to deal with the Holocaust and then the forced expulsion of Germans from areas of Eastern Europe where Germans had lived for generations. Historians debate the number of German refugees killed by vengeful people - but it was in the hundreds of thousands. "The death toll attributable to the flight and expulsions is disputed, with estimates ranging from 500,000–600,000[14][15] and up to 2 to 2.5 million.[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_an ... %80%931950)
Really IMO no one in the Western Hemisphere meets that same criteria.