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"This exodus "swarm" is directly linked with Libya. " You've got to love how no media outlet or prominent politician is pointing that out. | |||
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"The law states that asylum seekers should seek refuge in the first safe haven. As they have travelled half way across Europe to get to Calais the UK they should have asked for asylum elsewhere. Many of them are economic migrants not political refugees and this country has no political, legal, economic or moral obligation to accept them. That is down to France. Perhaps if the people who are voicing opinions about accepting the residents of the jungle would like to sponsor one and feed, water and put them up in their own home, I might see the situation differently. We already have a surplus of unemployed adults causing a glut in the jobs market keeping wages low. Allowing all and sundry will only force that balance even further the wrong way. The next wave will probably be from Tunisia as the tourist trade collapses (15% of the country's GDP comes from tourism) because people are too frightened to holiday there. Next time you visit London, take a trip around Marble Arch and view all the Romanian beggars sleeping in the subways and on the benches in Hyde Park. People are quick to criticise Greece for the generous welfare state but citizens are only entitled to unemployment benefits for 6 months and only if they have worked for a full 6 months prior to that. One very good reason why the refugees aren't flocking to Greece for asylum. Accepting all and sundry and doling out freebies and handouts is not the answer to the problem, it only exacerbates it. C..." By and large i agree but its a much more complicated issue which we as a nation need to also look at with some of the decisions we took as a 'democracy' in the last couple of decades. Unless the mistakes made are learnt from then it will just roll around again and again.. The current situation needs addressing now both in this part of the world and on a global perspective in the future.. it sickens me that some on here are advocating 'culling the vermin'as a way of solving the issue.. they are humans.. | |||
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"The law states that asylum seekers should seek refuge in the first safe haven. As they have travelled half way across Europe to get to Calais the UK they should have asked for asylum elsewhere. Many of them are economic migrants not political refugees and this country has no political, legal, economic or moral obligation to accept them. That is down to France. Perhaps if the people who are voicing opinions about accepting the residents of the jungle would like to sponsor one and feed, water and put them up in their own home, I might see the situation differently. We already have a surplus of unemployed adults causing a glut in the jobs market keeping wages low. Allowing all and sundry will only force that balance even further the wrong way. The next wave will probably be from Tunisia as the tourist trade collapses (15% of the country's GDP comes from tourism) because people are too frightened to holiday there. Next time you visit London, take a trip around Marble Arch and view all the Romanian beggars sleeping in the subways and on the benches in Hyde Park. People are quick to criticise Greece for the generous welfare state but citizens are only entitled to unemployment benefits for 6 months and only if they have worked for a full 6 months prior to that. One very good reason why the refugees aren't flocking to Greece for asylum. Accepting all and sundry and doling out freebies and handouts is not the answer to the problem, it only exacerbates it. C... By and large i agree but its a much more complicated issue which we as a nation need to also look at with some of the decisions we took as a 'democracy' in the last couple of decades. Unless the mistakes made are learnt from then it will just roll around again and again.. The current situation needs addressing now both in this part of the world and on a global perspective in the future.. it sickens me that some on here are advocating 'culling the vermin'as a way of solving the issue.. they are humans.. " . Yes I concur but on the whole nobody actually listens to those that spout massacre, most of them are people who've had enough/can't see a solution. There views are pandered to by a political system that seems to do very little too solve the problem | |||
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"The law states that asylum seekers should seek refuge in the first safe haven. As they have travelled half way across Europe to get to Calais the UK they should have asked for asylum elsewhere. Many of them are economic migrants not political refugees and this country has no political, legal, economic or moral obligation to accept them. That is down to France. Perhaps if the people who are voicing opinions about accepting the residents of the jungle would like to sponsor one and feed, water and put them up in their own home, I might see the situation differently. We already have a surplus of unemployed adults causing a glut in the jobs market keeping wages low. Allowing all and sundry will only force that balance even further the wrong way. The next wave will probably be from Tunisia as the tourist trade collapses (15% of the country's GDP comes from tourism) because people are too frightened to holiday there. Next time you visit London, take a trip around Marble Arch and view all the Romanian beggars sleeping in the subways and on the benches in Hyde Park. People are quick to criticise Greece for the generous welfare state but citizens are only entitled to unemployment benefits for 6 months and only if they have worked for a full 6 months prior to that. One very good reason why the refugees aren't flocking to Greece for asylum. Accepting all and sundry and doling out freebies and handouts is not the answer to the problem, it only exacerbates it. C... By and large i agree but its a much more complicated issue which we as a nation need to also look at with some of the decisions we took as a 'democracy' in the last couple of decades. Unless the mistakes made are learnt from then it will just roll around again and again.. The current situation needs addressing now both in this part of the world and on a global perspective in the future.. it sickens me that some on here are advocating 'culling the vermin'as a way of solving the issue.. they are humans.. " Sigh, if only our beloved Forces weren't involved in the deliberate killing of "vermin/humans" in places like, say, Kosovo, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria and maybe a few others. A causal factor? Almost certainly. | |||
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"This is a terrible idea they would pop em out for shits and giggles then how about we do to them what Britain did to prisoners back in the day ship them to a mother fucking island, look at Australia if of loved to be a sheep thief back in that day a free lifetime trip to an amazing island " As an Irishman I think that is a bloody great idea COLONISE THE COUNTRY BEAT THE PEOPLE INTO SUBMISSION THEN SHIP THE FATHER OUT TO A PENAL COLONY sorry people but this is different the country is falling apart dad's army did a better job of protecting the borders | |||
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