Thanas wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:Germany has plenty of land that is rural, semi-rural, or suburban. The population density is about 232 people per square kilometer, roughly equal to that of the state of Maryland.
Now, I've spent most of my life in Maryland, so I can tell you confidently that Maryland hasn't run out of places to put people. In the LONG term, increasing the population density a few percent further would put strain on the state's infrastructure, but it's not a question of "oh my god we have no room."
You mistake population density with "available housing".
I actually don't, but I did not address available housing in a manner you find satisfactory, so I will say more, to clarify what I think.
There are two separate issues here. One is whether, in the short run, space is available to physically place the immigrant population. The other is whether, in the long run, the nation can physically accommodate the immigrants without "running out of space" and becoming painfully overpopulated.
Germany has enough land, and a low enough population density, that (at least for a few years) it can bring in three quarters of a million immigrants a month, without facing long-term overpopulation.
This does
not mean Germany has housing for three quarters of a million people just standing empty waiting to be occupied. Or that it will automatically have an equal number of housing units available for next year's refugees. In the short term, it is certainly true that 750000 immigrants a year can place very serious stresses on a national government.
My analogy to the US is not, in my opinion, undermined by this.
The US did not have vast amounts of surplus available housing during the nineteenth century, either, after all. The housing had to be
built, and at the entry ports where most immigrants arrived in the US, the immigrants tended to bunch up and create very high-density enclaves of slums and extensively subdivided tenements.
My point was simply that Germany is not so overcrowded that it has run out of places to build new housing developments,
if the political will to do so is mobilized.
Note that in NO way am I claiming that Germany should have to take on more refugees than it is taking now. In no way am I claiming that other nations are taking enough. I am simply observing that Germany, specifically, can probably absorb this rate of immigration for several years and
eventually construct enough adequate housing and infrastructure to support its swelled population.