Strawman argument - you are disingenuously misrepresenting what I said. The problem of mass sexual assaults in places like Cologne, etc? That's something we need to act upon, and I proposed a whole bunch of things we could do. The problem (if there is one) that many Islamic cultures have with attitudes toward women? That is for them to fix. As an alternate example - many Europeans think that America's love affair with guns is crazy. But wagging your fingers at them and saying 'You guys really should listen to us and stop it with the gun stuff' - does that work? Will they listen?
If a culture's attitudes are to change, it needs to come from within.
Oh, it's hard, that's for sure. But given that we cannot keep immigrants out without excessive and questionable means it will continue to be our problem until we do something about that culture.
Also these people are already here. It's not like they might become our problem sometime in the future, they're our problem
now, with all the culture and everything else they brought with them.
What the hell are you talking about, 'slaughtering immigrants'? I think there's some middle-ground between 'Get weapons and slaughter immigrants' and 'Continue as we have, changing absolutely nothing', right? To even bring up 'slaughtering immigrants' is at best an extremely dishonest shock tactic, and a horrible thing to say.
I think the art of hyperbole is lost on you.
Immigrants are running away from really bad stuff. I don't think anything less than stuff human rights forbid us from doing would deter many of them. I think many people in our country underestimate the severity of what makes people become economic refugees.
That is the whole point of border controls. That's why we have things called passports, right? Why we can't just get on a plane and fly wherever and they say 'Hey stranger, how's it going? Come on in, no need for a name or documents'. I advocate using border controls to keep out illegal immigrants, the same way the vast majority of countries in the world do. Are you saying that's unreasonable?
First: Most illegal immigrants we have hardly come via plane, do they? As far as I got to know there's three major modes of transportation: per foot, via boat or on trains. You have a point with that last one, but they'Re mainly using that as soon as they're already inside the EU, right?
And of course we're actively doing something to get them in! We give them free housing, a weekly allowance, free medical care, paid for by taxpayers.
You assume that they wouldn't come if we didn't give that to them?
Okay, there would be less of them, for sure, but I guess taking it away would cause more problems in the long run.
Are you saying that there's no kindness and charity in that, that the immigrants are just entitled to it?
No, they're not entitled to it, but
our culture depends on people having access to these things. Well, at lest the part of our culture I want to preserve. So I am in favor of giving it to them, because it is necessary (and certainly not sufficient) to do so if we ever want them to grasp what our culture is about.
I'd say the art of metaphor is lost on you, but I don't doubt that it's intentional. And we do have walls. They're called borders.
I got the metaphor. That's just it: It's a metaphor and it certainly is not "art" in this instance.
Walls offer a physical reason for nobody to pass through. Borders don't. You can even cross a border without knowing it. The same would be pretty damn unlikely with a wall.
My point is that the idea of having borders does nothing to anyone who chooses to ignore them for whatever reason. Borders don't only consist of checkpoints, you know?
I admire how you manage to make taxpayer-funded accommodations that these refugees are receiving for free (and are regulated to be clean, comfortable and secure - something that you can't say about the homes of many poorer citizens, who have to take what they can get) sound like a prison cell. It's truly impressive.
Where did I say they weren't allowed to leave these houses? Where did I make them sound like a prison cell?
What I
am saying is that location matters. If you're living in a huge house that's just full of other immigrants you're much less likely to get in contact with anyone who's been living in Germany for a long time. Given with how much disdain they are often exposed to in the streets it is hardly a surprise when hey have additional incentive to stay inside. That's why I used the phrase "holing up".
Disperse them more and you get more integration. It's not really hard to understand but it's a bit more expensive in the short run. I guess
that's why people are against it, not because it wouldn't work.
Or perhaps it would save some lives. Remember the famous picture of the dead child on the beach, that sparked so much attention in the summer and drew the world's attention to the refugee crisis? He and his family were coming from Turkey, trying to reach Canada (despite the fact that their asylum application had been rejected).
So, you take an example where someone
wasn't deterred by the kind of policies you are proposing and try to use that to convince me these policies would help to deter people from coming and thus "save their lives"? Maybe you should try and use another one.
Now, Turkey may not be as nice a place to live as Canada, Germany, or Sweden, but it's not a war-zone.
Erdogan is obviously preparing for a ethnic purge or even already busy with it, depending on who you ask. That doesn't qualify as "safe" for me.
Also, you yourself said that the perils of the journey ahead and the fact that they hadn't even been accepted didn't deter them, yet you propose these as the solutions to the migrant crisis.
Convicted of rape, murder, assault, theft, etc?
No one ever was convicted of these things for political reasons.
In conclusion: Yes, there will be problems, there already are problems, this will not be easy and generally we'll be worse off than before.
We had it coming for a long time. We have been living above the sustainable standard for decades now and other countries had to bear the burden of that. Now we get to see a
glimpse of it and act as if we could go on like before, if only we built huge walls around us. That's ridiculous – this way you'll delay the problem until it comes back even worse.
We need to take in the people who come, we need to deal with them according to
our values and culture and we'll need to adapt to what we cannot deal with according to our values and culture. If we actually manage to turn back people to the places they came from we'll just manage to make the situation there worse – much worse than it is now and certainly the resulting problems will be worse in the long run than the problems we get from taking them in. And yes, these problems will just fall back on us again in a few years.
We live in a globalized world. Forget "turning people away". Their problems will reach you one way or another.