Pakolaisina tulee enemmän lapsia ja kouluttamatonta väestöä. Sitten taas esim. Virosta maahanmuuttajina tulee tänne nimenomaan siirtotyövoimaa. Lisäksi turvapaikanhakijat eivät saa tehdä maassa työtä vaikka haluaisivatkin, eivät ennenkuin byrokratian koneisto on pyörähtänyt hiiitaaasstiiii. Tämä ei koske työn perässä esim. uusista EU-maista tulijoita.
Pitäisikö laittaa ovet kiinni pakolaisilta top-tykkänään ja ottaa vain työikäisiä ja haluisia maahanmuuttajia... Mitä SUOMI hyötyy kouluttamattomista lapsista, jotka tulevat maailman konfliktialueilta perheineen pitäytyen omassa kulttuurissaan ja uskossaan, luoden sulkeutuneita maita maan sisälle? Nämä perheet koetetaan sopeuttaa, kouluttaa ja elättää meidän rahoillamme, kunnes he mahdollisesti ovat valmiita antamaan jotakin yhteiskuntaamme takaisin.
Jokaisessa Euroopan maassa, jossa tätä integrointia on yritetty, se on epäonnistunut surkeasti. Mikä tekee Suomesta poikkeuksen? Ei kai suinkaan poliittinen korrektius johda Suomea samalle tielle?
Otetaan vaikkapa tämän päivän Britannia. Voisiko siinä nähdä saman kehityksen, minkä alussa Suomi on? TÄMÄN päivän uutisia
www.guardian.co.uk
Anti-terror critics just don't get it, says Reid
John Reid yesterday accused the government's anti-terror critics of putting national security at risk by their failure to recognise the serious nature of the threat facing Britain. "They just don't get it," he said.
"Sometimes we may have to modify some of our own freedoms in the short term in order to prevent their misuse and abuse by those who oppose our fundamental values and would destroy all of our freedoms in the modern world," he said.
The European human rights convention had been drawn up 50 years ago to protect against fascist states but now the threat came from "fascist individuals" unconstrained by such conventions, agreements or standards. Everyone across the political, media, judicial and public spectrum needed to understand the depth and magnitude of the threat.
The majority of the public understood its seriousness but there were those who "just don't get it", whose opposition was undermining the struggle.
Mr Reid argued that
since 2000 almost 1,000 people have been arrested for terror-related offences, with 154 of them charged and 60 suspects now awaiting trial. Four significant terrorist plots had been disrupted. But the
opposition from politicians, media commentators and judges had left the government ill-prepared to tackle the threat.
He said at a time when a single terrorist with access to weapons of mass destruction could cause irreparable damage, their opposition meant he could not always prosecute, deport or detain foreign suspects.
'Mass murder terror plot' uncovered
A terror plot to kill thousands of people by detonating explosives on up to 10 transatlantic flights from the UK was disrupted by police and the security services overnight, it emerged today.
If successful, the alleged plot would have caused "mass murder on an unimaginable scale", Paul Stephenson, the Metropolitan police deputy commissioner, said.
Sources said those arrested were
British-born (mahtaisiko olla uskonnoltaan muhamettilaisia
)and had been detained as part of an operation that has been ongoing covertly for several months.
Some experts said it appeared to be the most ambitious plan since the September 11 2001 attacks on New York and Washington killed around 3,000 people.