USA 2024 Elections Thread

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Thu Dec 15 23:36:37 PST 2022


Europe's torrid result from foolishly letting millions of unskilled,
broke, criminal, nonspeakers, and incompatibles including Islam,
invade and roam its streets... will soon be mirrored in the USA...
and the US had 10 years observatory notice from EU that if they
did it too, it would be a bad situation... Biden did it, just wait
about two years delay for the real impacts to hit hard...

Of course Govt's will just solve it by using them as literal slave labor
and panderized votes to prop up the tax theft revenues Politicians
use to keep themselves in power. "No borders" is just political
whitewash cover for creating problems to steal more power.


Wall Street Journal Slams German Migration Policy,
Points To Terrible Unemployment Situation

by John Cody

https://rmx.news/germany/wall-street-journal-slams-german-migration-policy-points-to-terrible-unemployment-situation/
https://www.wsj.com/articles/germany-is-short-of-workers-but-its-migrants-are-struggling-to-find-jobs-11670844930
https://rmx.news/article/new-data-shows-germanys-2015-16-migrant-wave-brought-few-skilled-workers/
https://rmx.news/germany/germanys-population-exceeds-84-million-for-the-first-time/
https://rmx.news/germany/we-need-400000-immigrants-a-year-claims-the-head-of-german-labor-office/

The influential Wall Street Journal has set its sights on Germany’s
migration policy, accusing the country of continuing to pursue more
migrants for its workforce despite remarkably poor results up until
now.

The paper raises the question of the “paradoxical” situation regarding
why Germany continues to lack so many workers despite taking in nearly
13 million people since 2015, citing data from the Federal Statistical
Office.

The problem, the paper notes, is that the migrants who are coming are
simply not filling the needs of Germany’s high-skill economy. Of the
800,000 working-age Syrians and Afghans who arrived during the 2015
migrant crisis, only a third of them actually have a tax-paying job.
Unemployment among foreigners stands at 12 percent, while for Germans
it is 5 percent, and as Remix News has also reported in the past,
those migrants who are working often work in low-skilled and
low-paying jobs that require the state to continue paying out welfare
benefits.

    “Many refugees are ill-suited for the German high-skilled labor
market,” the paper writes, and Germany is also “not good at training
them.”

The Wall Street Journal argues that Germany is unsuccessful at
attracting labor migrants. The paper writes, “Labor migrants currently
only make up one in 10 new arrivals to Germany, compared with one in
three to Canada. An earlier European program to draw skilled
foreigners, known as the Blue Card, attracted about 70,000 workers to
Germany in total over the past decade.”

Germany is looking to introduce reforms to attract more workers, but
it faces a major problem. It is a country already dealing with the
blowback from a huge migrant influx that has seen 1.2 million arrive
in 2022 alone; any attempt to increase labor migrants will also come
as Germany takes in more asylum seekers.

Berlin is planning to introduce a points-based immigration system
modeled on Australia’s or Canada’s next year, hoping to woo
better-qualified foreigners, but migration experts are skeptical. Even
if it succeeds, Germany will likely continue to receive large numbers
of asylum seekers it can’t employ, who will fill the ranks of welfare
recipients or boost crime statistics, where they are already
overrepresented.

The paper details a number of employers who have struggled to bring in
foreigners, all the way from Deutsche Bahn to local plumbing
businesses in Berlin. A professor of social work, Ingo Neupert, began
a training program in 2016 for 25 young refugees to become nurses and
medical assistants, but only three graduated from the four and half
year program, and a shorter version only saw a third graduate. The
project has since been placed on hold.

Germany’s population has reached a record high of 84 million, and
unemployment is not the only concern; education, social services, and
housing are all suffering the burden.

The German government is arguing that the country needs to take in
400,000 migrants a year, but if the past is any guide, this plan faces
serious roadblocks. Countries like Japan and Hungary, which are facing
demographic issues but are focused on increasing their own native
birth rate, may offer an alternative path that Germany should begin
considering.


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