piotr35 napisał(a):lorak napisał(a): są jednocześnie tacy, którzy tego nie czynią i do nich należą przede wszystkim ci, którzy emigrują "po zasiłki"
Wbrew genpatriotycznej propagandzie to tylko niewielki promil tych, którzy w zdecydowanej większości i w pocie czoła płacą wysokie podatki na chwałę nowej ojczyzny. Większość zapierdala tak, jak im się w starej ojczyźnie nawet nie śniło, ze tak można.
nie za bardzo. na przykład tu masz o raporcie z wysp:
Cytat:Immigrants who came to live in Britain from outside Europe cost the public purse nearly £120 billion over 17 years, a new report has shown.
The major academic study also found, however, that recent immigration from Europe – driven by the surge in arrivals from eastern European – gave the economy a £4.4 billion boost over the same period.
(...)
It found that migrants from outside the European Economic Area (EEA) made a negative contribution to the public purse of £117.9 billion because they consumed more in public expenditure – including NHS costs, welfare hand-outs and education – than they contributed in taxes.
nie jest to wcale jakaś wyjątkowa sytuacja, choćby w modelowej szwecji jest podobnie:
Cytat:“There has been a lack of integration among non-European refugees,” he told me. Forty-eight per cent of immigrants of working age don’t work, he said. Even after 15 years in Sweden, their employment rates reach only about 60 per cent. Sweden has the biggest employment gap in Europe between natives and non-natives.
In Sweden, where equality is revered, inequality is now entrenched. Forty-two per cent of the long-term unemployed are immigrants, Mr. Sanandaji said. Fifty-eight per cent of welfare payments go to immigrants. (a stanowią jakieś 16% populacji - dop. lorak.) Forty-five per cent of children with low test scores are immigrants. Immigrants on average earn less than 40 per cent of Swedes. The majority of people charged with murder, rape and robbery are either first- or second-generation immigrants. “Since the 1980s, Sweden has had the largest increase in inequality of any country in the OECD,” Mr. Sanandaji said.
(...)
Sweden’s generosity costs a fortune, at a time when economic growth is stagnant. The country now spends about $4-billion a year on settling new refugees – up from $1-billion a few years ago,
....jak łatwo wywołać echo w pustych głowach.