CoCage said:
Ohhh right that moment. Yeah they were douche-y against that walkthrough guy. Would not put that even remotely on the level of Jontron's rant though, at least they owed up to their screw-up and tried to fix it.
awesomeClaw said:
I absolutely agree that it's a very difficult thing to do, but the problem with the "regional camps" solution is that that's been going on already and is
far from a gentle solution. These countries have fairly little resources available to them to manage this, and a country like Lebanon already is hosting
well over a million refugees and that's just registered refugees. That's an extra
17% on top of their population, and it could easily be 20%. Imagine Sweden having to host 1.6 to 2 million people, and you're an affluent nation. They're already doing their part with hardly any recognition and with morally horrible low support. Conditions in those camps are absolutely appalling, it's our moral duty to do our part as rich countries. Do you know the amount of aid Turkey receives to help the over 2.6 million refugees they're housing? It's a disgrace.
Your essentialist diagnose why these refugees fail to integrate also seems quite off the mark. Clan-based rural societies? Countries like Syria and Iraq were modern nations before they were wracked by war. The article you yourself linked describes why these kids are drawn to radicalisation, and it has nothing to do with them being used to some clan-based society or something like that. No, the ones that are vulnerable are the kids that grew up in the countries their parents fled to. Those kids have to suffer a higher unemployment rate and horrible amounts of discrimination. They're uprooted and disconnected from both the culture they grew up in as well as the culture of their parents. And that's what jihadist recruiters prey upon. It has nothing to do with them having some kind of inherent essence that makes them unsuitable for life in Sweden, France or The Netherlands.
Speaking of The Netherlands, have you ever noticed that despite them also having to deal with an influx of new immigrants, and having a large history of Islamic immigration, there pretty much haven't been any terror attacks the last few years? That's because we learned a lesson after the death of Theo Van Gogh. We didn't close our borders, but we had authority figures go into immigrant neighbourhoods and
connect with them. Certain politicians here laugh at the 'tea drinking tactic' they employ but the positive effects are undeniable. When you connect with them, draw them into the larger community and give them a place they belong to you'll find that they're citizens just like everyone else. Now, our methods aren't perfect and there's a lot of work to be done, but I'll be damned if the Dutch situation doesn't prove that what we're doing is working.