Edi wrote:You are awfully big on saying you don't accept that things are running up to capacity and soon beyond,
I'm just stating my opinion.
But I very much doubt that Europe has yet reached its capacity. Compared to much of the world, much of Europe is still very wealthy and secure. So this comes across like a rich Republican whining that taxes to help the poor are ruining the country.
I accept that their is a theoretical limit beyond which Europe simply can't cope, obviously, but I think that limit is farther than the frightened, the prejudiced, and the self-interested would have us believe.
Their may also be a bit of a "boy who cried wolf" thing going on. I've heard enough fear-mongering about immigrants ruining the country in my life that I'm inclined to regard such arguments with a great deal of suspicion.
and that you don't accept that other countries are passing the buck,
Well no, I don't. Inability to do more would be one thing. Refusing to do more and justifying it on the basis of some other country's actions is simply dishonest and cowardly.
but guess what? The reality does not give a fuck about what you accept.
No shit.
But it also doesn't give a fuck weather Germany or anyone else is willing or able to take more people. Realistically, they're going to keep coming, so you can either learn how to somehow accommodate them like human beings or you can start jailing or killing people for the "crime" of being foreign and desperate.
Thing is, when shit starts running into capacity limits, then societies like Germany, Sweden, Finland and others will start taking measures to protect themselves, and people who are threatening it WILL get the sharp end of the stick in some form, even if the ultimate causes of the refugee crisis are elsewhere. And the response will get more and more draconian the longer things are left to go stagnant at the current rate.
Perhaps.
But again, I question that those limits have been reached. Europe is still very, very well-off compared to much of the world in many ways. So this sounds a lot like a rich man whining that he can't possibly afford to give any more to help the poor because he'd be somewhat less rich and secure.
If that means closing the borders and mass deportations, then that's what's going to happen on some timetable. Let's hope it doesn't require something more drastic.
Exactly what "more drastic" measures are suggesting might be necessary?
Your comparison to the world wars is also very inapt.
I acknowledged the situations aren't identical.
Sure, both world wars and their aftermath entailed some forms of population transfer,
I'm thinking not simply in terms of population transfer, but more generally in terms of the World Wars being massive crises that required large-scale mobilization of resources and a great deal of sacrifice (on both the national and international levels).
Though its certainly true that the Second World War caused a major refugee problem. I've seen it said that the number of refugees now is the highest its been since World War II or thereabouts, so...
but the rebuilding and reconstruction and reshaping of the societies that took place dealt with countries whose populations already had an existing social system where the democratic republic form of government was recognized and that had structures in place to handle things.
While I would not call them a good model to follow, I must point out that a lot of the nations that participated in the world wars, including some of the winning side, were not in any way democratic. You know this of course, so I'm not sure why you're using their having a democratic system.
Perhaps you're arguing that the refugees are incapable of understanding and functioning in a democratic society/are trying to play the old "Muslims will bring Sharia Law" card, in which case I would call you condescending and prejudiced.
Certainly, some of the refugees may think that way, but a lot of them are going to be people who came here, at least in part, because they do not like the despotic, theocratic societies they're fleeing. And I assume that most of them, being intelligent human beings, are aware that Europe is democratic and that that is the society they're signing up to live in.
It did not involve wholesale cultural assimilation of foreign populations, which takes a far longer time.
I'm curious as to what you mean by assimilation. Do you meant ensuring that the refugees are, by and large, able to function and support themselves in Germany or wherever? Or do you mean that you demand nothing less than a total abandonment of their culture and beliefs and conforming to mainstream/traditional European culture? Or somewhere in between?
I'm honestly curious.
So if anything, this is going to be a lot harder to do.
I am deeply skeptical of the claim that handling the refugee crisis will be more difficult and costly for Europe than winning and rebuilding from the world wars, even if its a different problem. This sounds like typical apocalyptic anti-immigrant fear-mongering.
Yes, the EU can do more, and it will do more, because Germany and some of the other countries who are now bearing the brunt of the crisis are going to pull the velvet glove off the iron fist soon enough if others don't start pulling their weight. Problem there being that those things happen more slowly than the events are moving. But regardless, you should not confuse a theoretical obligation to help with some utopia where Europe just needs to passively accept the current state of affairs.
Passively accepting the current state of affairs would hardly constitute a utopia. The question is not weather we should accept the status quo, but how we should try to change it.
I'm not talking about a utopia (nice straw man). And I'm not talking about accepting the status quo. I'm talking about accepting the simple fact that, short of turning Europe into a hell hole, more refugees will probably come, for the near future at least. And accepting the fact that these refugees are no less human and no less deserving of help than the people of Europe. That is the heart of the issue.
What I am saying, in short, is that Europe is far from a utopia, that it is in a very difficult situation, and that it has to find a good way to deal with it, with courage and decency. Its their, its not going away, and saying "we've had enough" won't make it go away. So Europe has to act, but the question is, should that action take the form of making some hard sacrifices to accommodate millions of desperate human beings, or clamping down like a good old fashioned xenophobic police state? I know which one I prefer.
We have a very long history of killing each other on this continent for sometimes very trivial reasons and nobody wants to go back to that. It still doesn't mean that the other options are necessarily pleasant ones for those at the pointy end of the stick, and that's just how it is.
They're going to keep coming. That's just how it is.
And rather than risk turning on each other, you prefer to turn on the refugees? That hardly seems much better. People are still getting fucked over.
As I said before, the mess in the Middle East isn't going to sort itself out by dithering, or by the people who should be fighting for their own running away and then whining about how the food they are getting in emergency shelters somehow isn't good enough (when it's good enough for the school children of the recipient countries) and all this other bullshit that is being seen.
Wow.
Ah, victim blaming. Its the fault of those cowardly whiney refugees for running away.
Here's a thought: if you're not prepared to sign up to go fight in the Middle East yourself, why not stop judging others (many of them civilians and even children) who have left because they don't want to be their either?
And this sounds so much like the rich Republicans in the US who rant about how the poor are hurting them and ruining the country by taking all their money.
Anyone with that attitude can fuck off right back into the frontlines between the ISIS and whoever is fighting them and if they die there, good riddance.
More callous, vicious victim blaming. You fear what the refugees may do to your country, so you turn on them and tell yourself that they're cowards who deserve death.
Shame on you.
If you want to argue that it is necessary to treat refugees like shit, at least have the decency to argue that it is a painful necessary evil, not pretend that the victims have it coming.
If you are going somewhere to get help, it pays not to bite the hand that (literally) feeds you, because if you do, that hand is liable to reach for a stick and beat the living fuck out of you in the worst case.
Yeah, Europe's going to beat the fuck out of those disgusting refugees. What a big tough man you are.
At its heart, it is a military conflict for supremacy and the only way it is going to be solved is by whoever is going to be the biggest dog in the yard killing enough of the other, weaker dogs that they won't get challenged again. Or a number of regional big dogs killing enough of their regional rivals and then establishing territorial borders that keep them from butting heads all the time.
Just to be clear, I trust you are referring to the fighting in the Middle East and not the refugee crisis as "...a military conflict for supremacy..." that can only be solved by killing?
Outside interference can alter that equation somewhat, but the only way it will have any lasting effect is if the outsiders pick sides from viable winning candidates, then stick to them and then get serious about the business of killing the other guy dead so that the low level conflict boil comes to an end and settles down.
I thought you weren't a fan of Middle East intervention?
Also, if you consider fucking Syria low level, I'd hate to see what you think qualifies as a real, serious war.
As long as it's "humanitarian intervention" with limited engagement etc, you might as well not bother.
What are you suggesting?
A full-scale, possibly decades-long ground deployment? Some sort of total war where we throw niceties like human rights out the window?
In any case, when both the US and its allies and Russia are involved in Syria, they're likely going to be cancelling each other out, escalating the fighting, and risking the whole thing blowing up into World War III. So someone needs to back the fuck off for their to be any solution.
The unfortunate side effect of that is that a lot of people are going to get dead in the process, but that is a given no matter what option is chosen.
Maybe so, but their is nonetheless a moral obligation to minimize the number of people killed as much as possible. I hope you can agree with that.