MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
By Bruno Waterfield in Brussels, Telegraph.co.uk, April 11, 2011
Germany has threatened to reinstate border checks "against the interests" of the EU's free movement zone in an escalating row with Italy over Tunisian refugees.
Also see:
VIDEO: Berlusconi: 'Human tsunami' in Lampedusa
BBC News, April 10, 2011
The Italian Prime Minister, Silvio Berlusconi, has warned Europe of what he called a "human tsunami" arriving on the island of Lampedusa. Tens of thousands of migrants have reached the tiny Italian island in recent weeks amid fighting and political unrest in North Africa. Mr Berlusconi called on his European counterparts to do more to help with the worsening humanitarian situation. Will Grant reports.
And:
Comments
by artappraiser on Mon, 04/11/2011 - 3:48pm
Has the European community ever come close to practicing what it preaches? France bans full-faced veils, Switzerland restricts the construction of minarets, and now they are all fighting over who takes in refugees from those "other" places.
by Bruce Levine on Mon, 04/11/2011 - 4:06pm
I was thinking more along the lines of "states rights" given the lengthy discussion going on elsewhere on this website about a war to save a union.
they are all fighting over who takes in refugees from those "other" places.
I wish to pick a not inconsiderable nit here. I don't think any of them want to take in any refugees at all.
Hence the Libya intervention--aggressively by France, and agreed to by Italy even tho they had a lot of bucks & biz invested there, and mayhaps some animosity towards Germany way up nord having more luxury to not worry so much about Meditterenean Africa going to hell.
Don't get me wrong, one could easily argue it has caused more refugees than it is preventing, but I'm not attempting to get into that question. It was already seriously building up way before they decided on doing it, and a ruthless attack on Benghazi looked like it would really amp it up terribly.
by artappraiser on Mon, 04/11/2011 - 4:44pm
by artappraiser on Wed, 04/13/2011 - 4:22am
In the United States, we have debated unrestricted immigration since at least Millard Fillmore became the standard-bearer for the Know-Nothing Party in the early 1850s. For the most part, we welcomed people from around the world and now we truly are a nation of immigrants. It is something we should be proud of, notwithstanding some of the currrent rhetoric we're hearing in Washington or the infamous immigration restrictions enacted in the 1920s to limit the flow of "semites and slavs" in favor of the the more civillized "white folks" from Northern Europe.
Europe is not the United States of America.
by Bruce Levine on Wed, 04/13/2011 - 9:45am
And, keep in mind, that Europe's angst about the influx of foreigners comes at the same time when, as a general rule, the European population ages, and the natural population growth rate in many European nations, contrary to Malthusian predictions, is falling.
by Bruce Levine on Wed, 04/13/2011 - 9:48am