GERMANY: THE IMMIGRATION PROBLEM IS A CLASS (IQ), CULTURE (Class, IQ), AND INTEGRATION (Class, IQ) PROBLEM.
(That’s why it’s easily solved, just as uni costs are easily solved.)
1) Immigration Is an Anchoring Problem (w/o integration)
–“About radicalization: When people move out of their home countries, the knowledge of their country get forever frozen in that time, so they raised their kids with that frozen knowledge even after people in the home country are now more liberal. You find it everywhere. Indians practicing caste system in the UK, America. Pakistanis (and some other Muslim communities )still committing honor killing in UK, Female Genital Mutilation amongst African communities.”–
2) Immigration Is A Class Problem (no matter what)
–“my colleague comes from Turkey and this has been his observation as well. He says germany is a very easy country for a Turk to migrate to because there are so many Turkish touchstones and communities here, but he finds the German Turks very hard to deal with. … His belief is that it was the poor and less well educated people who took the opportunity to leave Turkey as Gastarbeiter while the more educated ones had better prospects and could afford to stay. He thinks the German Turks are a reflection of a poorly educated rather insular population from many decades ago that just perpetuated the culture it brought with it to germany and didn’t really change like society back in Turkey was changing.”–
FYI: ‘–“Gastarbeiter , German for ‘guest worker’, are foreign or migrant workers, particularly those who had moved to West Germany between 1955 and 1973, seeking work as part of a formal guest worker program (Gastarbeiterprogramm).”–
–“the people the came here in the 60s were poor and without much education (that’s basically the reason they left Turkey in the first place to start here). … And poor and uneducated is a really bad place to start in a foreign country. Even worsen the chance of the future generations, because sadly success in school largely depends on the parents education here in Germany. … Mix that with massive islamic propaganda through the Turkish government (most imans in Germany weren’t actually tought here, but in Turkey paid by the Turkish government) and you get a very conservative, very loyal followership for the Turkish government.”—
3) It’s an Ethnicity Problem (Greek-Turks vs Central Asian and Iranic Turks)
–“When workers were needed in the 60s people without jobs from central Anatolia and east Turkey came and brought their values. … They don’t understand current day Turkey, they don’t understand Europe they are kinda stuck in between places.”–
3) Integration is Political Problem (Necessary Regardless Of Class)
–“Germany did not pursue any integration at all until around 2000. The first Turks arrived in the 1960s. That is, among other things, a political failure. Another factor is who came here. Rather few educated people from big cities and also few persecuted communists, who were usually intellectuals. It is the same with Moroccans. Most of them are Berbers, peasants from the north without education. Their way of life is a strict interpretation of Islam.”–
4) Non Integration Is a Political Problem That Expands Rapidly (The jewish postwar efforts to destroy the west).
Jewish radicalism in America in particular and Jewish dominance in cultural destruction by the “March through the institutions of western cultural production of individual responsibility” using the seditious sequence of marxism, neoMarxism, Postmodernism, Neoconservatism, Libertarianism, Anti-Family-Feminism, PC-Woke Race Marxism, and the entire strategy of ‘multicutluralism’ is necessary for Jews.
5) Reversal (German Integration into South America)
–“Muslim minorities tend to integrate so poorly not only in Europe, but in any other place where their presence is considerable enough to be noticeable (France, Belgium, Germany, Spain, etc). … As a contrast: I live in South America, in a country that has seen (comparatively) massive German immigration in the last few years. But while some fail to integrate with the local society, the majority of them adapt quite well and fast, and if they bring children, they are almost indistinguishable from the locals in but a few years. … But still, there’s no “Anti local country sentiment” among Germans here, and many already feel and identify as locals, even with the heavy accent, it’s quite funny.”–
Source date (UTC): 2023-07-15 12:45:40 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1680196934479273985
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