8Mud
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Central Germany
Just a couple of things to take into consideration. The general animosity towards immigrants, illegal or legal, does create a backlash. It may not affect you personally, but then again who can say for sure where you'll be working in a few years time.
There are something like three million Americans working and living in Germany, a like number in France, actually more in Spain. When you add it all up, it's way more people than the entire population of Montana or Wyoming.
There are actually more first and second generation Germans living in Los Angeles than in say Frankfurt Germany.
Baja California is much like a suburb of L.A. (maybe San Diego), I wonder how many of the neighbors hate the American born residents because of the way they were treated in the US. The world is a whole lot smaller than you suppose and a whole lot bigger than your tiny life experience.
People IMO have way to narrow view of the world, parochial at best, selfish by degrees. And the perceived benefits of narrow agendas, may be the sorriest position of all.
I've got nothing against immigration personally, with a few stipulations, that the immigrants try to integrate at least to a degree, there traditions (food, dress etc.) will likely be incorporated into the whole anyway. If they try to move in and take over and try to change there new home into the paradise they ran away from in the first place, I can understand some animosity.
My last few comments, the status quo is the most unstable social structure of all (Sociology 101).
Most Governments are more a control mechanism than servants (no matter how they spin it), And they fear the importation of new or different ideas.
The Germans actually offer me way more social help than I'm prepared to accept. The vast majority of immigrants value there independence and it's likely the majority doesn't milk the system with vigor, but likely takes advantage of programs that are promoted or freely offered. I'm confronted with racism on a daily basis (I have an accent), I know how it feels to be on the other side of a racist idiot.
I recently went to court for a traffic accident, the others guys lawyers argument was that his client had to be right, because I had no business being here in the first place. Funny, comparing my pedigree to the other guy or even his lawyer and likely the Judge, I was likely the more German of the bunch genetically. What has where you were born and where you went to school actually have to do with any of it? Immigration, naturalization and citizenship law, is a really thin facade for a largely synthetic system of law, where right and wrong play a really small part. What does a Quota system and the phrase "All men are created equal" have to do with each other. Quotas are governmental racism. People spout the word "Law" like it was the Gospel or the "Ten Commandments". And imply that because it's the law, it is actually rational and makes sense.
If anybody has any trouble opening there mind a little, I'd be happy to lend them a chisel and hammer.
There are something like three million Americans working and living in Germany, a like number in France, actually more in Spain. When you add it all up, it's way more people than the entire population of Montana or Wyoming.
There are actually more first and second generation Germans living in Los Angeles than in say Frankfurt Germany.
Baja California is much like a suburb of L.A. (maybe San Diego), I wonder how many of the neighbors hate the American born residents because of the way they were treated in the US. The world is a whole lot smaller than you suppose and a whole lot bigger than your tiny life experience.
People IMO have way to narrow view of the world, parochial at best, selfish by degrees. And the perceived benefits of narrow agendas, may be the sorriest position of all.
I've got nothing against immigration personally, with a few stipulations, that the immigrants try to integrate at least to a degree, there traditions (food, dress etc.) will likely be incorporated into the whole anyway. If they try to move in and take over and try to change there new home into the paradise they ran away from in the first place, I can understand some animosity.
My last few comments, the status quo is the most unstable social structure of all (Sociology 101).
Most Governments are more a control mechanism than servants (no matter how they spin it), And they fear the importation of new or different ideas.
The Germans actually offer me way more social help than I'm prepared to accept. The vast majority of immigrants value there independence and it's likely the majority doesn't milk the system with vigor, but likely takes advantage of programs that are promoted or freely offered. I'm confronted with racism on a daily basis (I have an accent), I know how it feels to be on the other side of a racist idiot.
I recently went to court for a traffic accident, the others guys lawyers argument was that his client had to be right, because I had no business being here in the first place. Funny, comparing my pedigree to the other guy or even his lawyer and likely the Judge, I was likely the more German of the bunch genetically. What has where you were born and where you went to school actually have to do with any of it? Immigration, naturalization and citizenship law, is a really thin facade for a largely synthetic system of law, where right and wrong play a really small part. What does a Quota system and the phrase "All men are created equal" have to do with each other. Quotas are governmental racism. People spout the word "Law" like it was the Gospel or the "Ten Commandments". And imply that because it's the law, it is actually rational and makes sense.
If anybody has any trouble opening there mind a little, I'd be happy to lend them a chisel and hammer.
