1/13/2016 -
Rachel Marsden Townhall.com
PARIS -- Western Europe's mindless and zombie-like prioritizing of
humanitarianism over self-preservation is beginning to have alarming
consequences.
More than 500 women filed police complaints after a New Year's Eve
celebration in Cologne, Germany, with about 40 percent of the women alleging
sexual assault. Of the 32 suspects identified by police, 22 are asylum seekers,
mostly North African or Arabic, according to the German Interior Ministry.
More than a million asylum seekers, primarily from the Middle East
and North Africa, arrived in Germany last year. For a country small enough that
you can drive across it in about six hours, this is tantamount to cultural and
demographic revolution.
The argument often heard is, "What are a few million
newcomers to a country of more than 80 million people?" Well, there are
bound to be problems when some of the newcomers to the henhouse are wolves.
How do you even begin to integrate people who have a different
cultural perspective on women? Never mind that integration services teaching
the new arrivals basic language skills and civics are completely overwhelmed.
It's an immense challenge to change the mindset of a person whose established
values are disruptive to society in his new country.
In the wake of the New Year's Eve attacks, the popularity of
German Chancellor Angela Merkel's party actually increased by 2 percentage
points, according to one poll, and the number of Germans supporting a limit on
immigration fell from 72 percent in December to 61 percent.
Meanwhile, Germans who are frustrated with immigration policy and
have taken to the streets in protest are being dismissed by police as
hooligans, with more than 200 of them arrested during a demonstration in
Leipzig. With Merkel, the purported defender of German conservatism,
spearheading this cultural disintegration, frustrations are boiling over.
These days, it seems as if anyone who speaks up against mass
immigration is automatically dismissed as a racist or nativist, but this is an
oversimplification that hinders an open and honest discussion of how
immigration should be handled worldwide.
If the United Nations can lecture member states about the need to
alleviate global suffering, then it should be able to offer recommendations for
doing so in a way that allows people living in developed nations to maintain
their cultural coherence.
And yes, there is a solution.
Guess which country took in more than a quarter-million refugees
during the first half of 2015, according to the United Nations High Commission
on Refugees. No, not the United States. It's Russia, which took in more than
300,000 asylum seekers. Imagine that: The nation often maligned as being
unfriendly to migrants actually has been a beacon of humanitarianism.
But when I was in Moscow recently, I didn't feel the same sense of
insecurity and demographic fragmentation that I often feel in Paris. Not in the
least. It turns out that most of the migrants that Russia took in last year
were Ukrainian. With Ukraine similar to Russia with regard to culture and language,
the transition for Ukrainian refugees is a relatively seamless one. That
clearly isn't the case for Syrian refugees in Germany.
Both refugee and local populations are best off when they mesh. It
helps alleviate the burden of integration. Yes, there may still be local,
provincial prejudices toward refugees, but that's not exactly uncommon. Heck,
there are prejudices between classes of people of the exact same origin. People
are tribal by nature and will always cast a suspicious eye towards an outsider.
But the pains of integration can be minimized through better matching of
refugees with new environments.
The solution is a matchmaking service between migrants and host
countries. Instead of world leaders trying to outdo one another by seeing who
can accept the most refugees, there should be far more emphasis on ensuring
that it's a good fit for everyone involved. Being a humanitarian hero doesn't
have to result in the unraveling of a functional society.
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