hill16bhoy wrote: » The Polish state has not existed since the 10th century. That's simply a historical lie.
demfad wrote: » Your continual assertion that the compact is to facilitate mass migration appears to be false at best.
11. With this comprehensive approach, we aim to facilitate safe, orderly and regular migration
13. To achieve this, we commit to facilitate and ensure safe, orderly and regular migration for the benefit of all.
18. We further commit to ensure timely and full implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, as well as to build upon and invest in the implementation of other existing frameworks, in order to enhance the overall impact of the Global Compact to facilitate safe, orderly and regular migration.
Could you stop repeatedly using the phrase "Mass migration"?
So States are soverign to determine their migration policy. The compact just insures that problems that cause migration are identified and minimized if possible.
hill16bhoy wrote: » Sweden doesn't record crime statistics based on ethnicity.
Sand wrote: » I had already read my post back and tweaked it to clarify. Many states of Poland emerged as monarchies and republics rose and fell, the first recognised example in the 10th century. Every time the last incarnation of the Polish state fell, it re-emerged as a political expression of the Polish nation and people, distinct from the peoples around them. In that context its incredibly ignorant to ask 'What culture' when Polish nationality and culture is what endured after kings and presidents failed.
hill16bhoy wrote: » I never said there was no such thing as Polish culture, and I don't think the poster you're referring to (from back on page 1 of the thread) was saying such either.
Poland and what is Polish has historically been a pretty nebulous concept, given that much of what is present day Poland was formerly part of Germany, while much of present day Ukraine, Lithuania and Belarus were formerly part of Poland.
Culture never stands still - it's a living breathing, constantly evolving thing.
There are all different types of culture, and much, if not most, of what we define as culture was driven or fertilised by immigration or cross-pollination of ideas.
My user name contains the word "bhoy" - which is a reference to Celtic FC, a massive cultural force in its own right in Scotland, and one which would not exist but for immigration. The immigrants which founded and supported Celtic FC faced massive prejudice and bigotry for decades in Scotland, and that can still spill over even today.
British culture, all of it, and all of it came about because of immigration.
Those who hold up the governments of Poland, Hungary and Italy as a model to be emulated talk of "Christian values". Yet they cannot tell us how these governments uphold so called "Christian values", and they are simultaneously totally blind to and ignorant of the best of "Christian values" - they work explicitly against them.
hill16bhoy wrote: » Ireland has national sovereignty. It has used that sovereignty to enter into agreements re internal migration as part of the EU. Ireland has complete national sovereignty over migration from outside the EU. Why are you implying it doesn't, when you know it has?
Why are you comparing the EU to the British empire, when any cursory reading of the situation could tell you the two things are entirely different, and that far from being an "empire", the EU is the exact opposite of such?
Do you support free movement within the EU?
If you don't, why not just come straight out and say you're in favour of Ireland leaving the EU, given that that would be the logical upshot of being against free movement?
If there is a causation effect between in-migration and wages going down, surely then, there should be a causation effect between out-migration and wages going up?
Surely then the USA, the world's greatest ever experiment in large scale in-migration, would thus prove that wages go down when there is large scale in-migration?
Surely the countries with significant out-migration would thus see the biggest rise in wages? How did that ever work out for Ireland?
Do you support internal migration within countries? I mean, Dublin has changed beyond all recognition in the last 100 years? Why do you think that is?
The main reason is because massive numbers of people have migrated to it - the vast majority from other parts of Ireland. In your language, that's "mass migration". It doesn't matter whether somebody moves to Dublin from Letterkenny or Lahore, they're still a migrant.
Was this a good thing or a bad thing for Dublin? How about Galway, which has grown massively in recent years? Is the fact that massive numbers of Dubs have moved to Navan, Drogheda and Portlaoise a good thing for those towns? They're "outsiders", they have migrated on a large scale to a different place. How about pretty much every major city in the world, which all grew because of massive in-migration from other parts of whatever country they're in?
Should Britain have abolished the Common Travel Area during the Troubles?
The Common Travel Area enabled/enables free movement for residency purposes from Ireland to the UK and vice versa. From the 1970s to the 1990s, Irish people carried out large numbers of terrorist attacks in Britain. Surely then, by the same rationale that you use above, Irish people should have been stopped from moving to Britain? Yes?
On the flipside of that, if one was to be paranoid enough, couldn't one have argued back then - hell, you could argue it now - that if enough British people moved here as a result of free movement, we could have ended up rejoining the UK? Would that have been a legitimate reason to oppose the Common Travel Area?
I'm just trying to get your angle on all these questions, because it appears to me you're just one more poster trying to claim that racism has nothing to do with your views when it appears bleedin' obvious that it has everything to do with it.
RobertKK wrote: » We live in a rather poor democracy if we have the government signing up to whatever...
oscarBravo wrote: » Has it somehow escaped your attention that we live in a representative democracy, which is explicitly designed around the idea that we elect a government to make decisions on our behalf?
Sand wrote: » No, the compact actually states it openly:
I find it a useful distinction to make. I'm not opposed to the concept of people travelling to, working in or settling in foreign countries. I am against mass migration: a level of migration which effects rapid demographic changes on the host country. If I didn't make the distinction, people would be wasting their time arguing against positions I don't hold.
The compact is a series of commitments which are made with the purpose of facilitating mass migration.
Sand wrote: » Weisses did respond to the notion of Polish (and Hungarian) culture with the response "What culture". It was a stupid thing to say. We don't have to dwell on it.
You are confusing the state with the nation - as I noted, the nation has been far more persistent than the state. The Polish nation largely inhabits the same territory it has done for over 1,000 years. Its ignorant to pretend that 'What is Polish' was historically a pretty nebulous concept.
Of course, but it typically develops organically over time by the people of that nation/culture. Its completely radical to deposit millions of people from entirely different places into that culture. To the extent it happened historically, it was always accompanied by strife and conflict: i.e. the fall of the Roman Empire.
If that were true, all cultures would be the same. That there are distinct cultures is because different groups of people developed different cultures. There was some 'cross-pollination' as you call it between neighbouring people, but cultural developments were largely driven by those people themselves. With the advent of globalisation, there is an increasing 'Americanisation' of cultures in the last 100 years. If that's a good or a bad thing is arguable.
Sure, and that explains the prism through which you view the issues of mass migration. You have a hammer, all problems are nails.
Uh yes and no. Firstly, its problematic to talk about a British culture or a British people. There is English, Scottish and Welsh people each with distinct identities and cultures. 'British' is an imperial/globalist identity, not a national one like the Polish one (or indeed English, Scottish or Welsh). A loyal subject of the Empire could be British, from Montreal to Cape Town to Bombay to Sydney in a way they could not be English. English, Scottish and Welsh culture did not come about because of immigration. They developed slowly over centuries. Even to the extent you might argue migrations played a role, that 'immigration' was resisted such as at the Battle of Hastings. The arrival of the Normans or the Saxons did change Britain, but the existing people did not welcome it.
RobertKK wrote: » Does it exclude them from having public debates on things they may or may not sign the country up to?
Chaos Marine wrote: » I never said it doesn't. Stop trying to put words in my mouth or change what I said so you can argue against a strawman of your own making. I said Ireland giving up it's national sovereignty makes my blood run cold. As in, at some point in the future, Ireland cedes it's ability to self govern to the EU.
Your ability to read and reply to someone's else's words and actually understand their words is astoundingly poor. I said, again, that Ireland was controlled by the British Empire for almost a thousand years. The idea that Ireland would at some point surrender it's national sovereignty and ability to self govern to the EU as Verhofstadt's aim to turn the EU into some kind of superstate or imitation of the US but ruled by the beneficent arm of the morally superior Eurocrat doesn't sit right with me. At all. Is that any more clear for you? Would you like me to try and replicate what I've said with a crayon drawing through MS Paint?
False fallacy. This is about mass migration from people outside of the EU. But for the record, not completely unchecked movement, no. I would expect at least a cursory examination of criminal records, reasons for travel etc.
Of course I'm in favour of Ireland leaving the EU. The EU is turning into authoritarian state.
Another fallacy. You're assuming that if a country was in such a great state to begin with that there would be mass migration out of it, that the wages would be in that good a state to begin with. Or if you mean migration out or into a country at manageable levels, you're erroneously comparing two different things. I have absolutely no problem with regulated migration.
That's because the US had a massive requirement for people to fill basic jobs when that was more prevalent due to a more simplistic industrialised system. There is nowhere near the amount of demand for unskilled labour now as there was back then. To compare the two is massively disingenuous but going by your reply, I'm starting to see a pattern.
Quite well actually. There weren't the jobs to support them and those that did work wouldn't have been able to support them with taxes etc. Again, the mass exodus from Ireland tended to happen back when low skilled labour was highly in demand unlike today. You can't compare the two without some serious mental gymnastics which you appear to be attempting in spades.
If you think this is a credible point to make I'm honestly amazed you can type to begin with. Dublin isn't Ireland and Ireland isn't Dublin. For your argument to make even a lick of sense to anyone who isn't a doddering imbecile, you'd have to think the rest of Ireland hasn't progressed past the 1900s.
Again, you're asserting things I've never said and you're arguing against strawmen to win victories against. You're comparing someone who "migrates" from Cork to Dublin who would move from, lets say an Islamic country to a Christian country. Do you understand how absolutely insane that is? Are you going to try to compare dust to magma next?
It's neither good nor bad because you have people from the same culture moving to different areas within the same culture. There will be regional differences of course but again, no where close to the differences you'd have from someone who moves an entirely different country to another. How old are you? I haven't seen incompetent arguing of this level since I was in primary school.
Considering the amount of terrorism going on from both sides in the North of Ireland, yes.
If they failed a background check or had a history of violence, then yes, then Britain should have denied them access. Would that have stopped terror attacks in the UK? No but it would limited some of them.
Considering the volume of sexual assaults, crimes in countries like Sweden, Germany and France, it's not paranoia, it's simply looking at the observable results and saying "I don't want that."
Tell me, do you at all feel even the smallest amount of guilt for watering down such a serious accusation? Just the littlest bit of guilt? Actual racists tend to not care about being called racist for some reason and the likes of you calling everyone who doesn't kowtow to your banner for legitimate reasons only gives them ammunition to fob off accusations of racism as hyperbole to get their foot in the door. It's because of people like you trying to shut down discussions about legitimate concerns with cries of racism, homophobia, islamophobia etc at the drop of a hat against people who aren't any of those things that far-right wing political parties on the rise across Europe because the "woke progressive" lefty governments have abandoned the common man and woman on the street who have to suffer the lack of jobs, housing and food that the government seems only too happy to give foreigners at the demands of our European overlords. Before you respond, I want to make one thing abundantly clear, if you reply to me with more strawmen or arguments against things I have not said, I'll not bother to reply as there's no point.
oscarBravo wrote: » It explicitly removes any obligation to do so, yes. Do you want the government to ask the public's permission before it makes any decisions, or just decisions that you personally feel strongly about?
RobertKK wrote: » I am not asking them to ask the public, we have the Dail, was this discussed in our national parliament? If not, then they are using the ignorant is bliss approach towards the public.
hill16bhoy wrote: » This article systematically demolishes the Sweden rape myth propaganda narrative being pushed by the extreme right. It's particularly well sourced. I'd advise you to read it.
RandomName2 wrote: » As I said, I find it slimy to ignore sexual molestation and assault in order to demonstrate that rape levels have been fairly level, despite sexual crime having a distinct rise in recent years. That is to say, that, to the letter, the assertion that Sweden is the rape capital of Europe is not proven, but one can't help but feel that the motives for clinging to that specific interpretation are themselves suspect. Furthermore, although convictions for rape have not increased in the last number of years, as the source that I posted from the bbc said, over 80% of reported stranger rape was purportedly perpetrated by individuals coming from outside the EU. Brushing that under the carpet for political reasons is hard to defend.
hill16bhoy wrote: » You clearly haven't read the article I posted. Feel free to post whatever Trump-style alternative reality narrative you want, but don't expect it to be taken in any way seriously. I think it's pretty clear that your use of the word "slimy" is projection and gaslighting, as it usually is with those who buy into the bogus anti-immigrant narrative. Anti-immigration blowhards tend to be the most flagrant misogynists around. **** sticks to other ****.
First of all, the graph does not just represent rape, but a wide category called “sexual crimes.”
RandomName2 wrote: » As I said, I find it slimy to ignore sexual molestation and assault in order to demonstrate that rape levels have been fairly level, despite sexual crime having a distinct rise in recent years. That is to say, that, to the letter, the assertion that Sweden is the rape capital of Europe is not proven, but one can't help but feel that the motives for clinging to that specific interpretation are themselves suspect.
RandomName2 wrote: » Percentage stating they were victims of sexual crime 2006–2017, BRÅ NTU Or to quote your source ****, indeed, sticks to ****.
demfad wrote: » Sexual molestation and rape are wrong whether perpetrated by Swedes or those from outside Sweden. The definition of rape is fairly consistent worldwide. You believe this definition was invented to try and hide Swedish rape figures? If you are accusing groups of people of heinous crimes and explaining it because of their ethnicity then you had better be convincing. The reason is because if they are not convincing it means that you yourself are not convinced and your assertions are based on something else. If your assertions are not based on reason they are based on bias, or racism in this case. Stating that the definition of rape is somehow there to distort Swedish rape figures is bull. Do better or people will draw their own conclusions about you.
FreudianSlippers wrote: » All of this relies on the flimsy and likely flawed assumption that this has not or will not be discussed in the Oireachtas. Can you please provide a shred of evidence that this will be signed without Oireachtas approval or show us where you derive the assumption that the Government can sign UN Resolutions (or alike) unilaterally? I think you'll find, with a modicum of research, that signing these UN documents can be done at a Cabinet level following a joint Oireachtas committee (i.e. public) decision and ratification (making it law) requires a full Oireachtas vote, as with all legislation.
hill16bhoy wrote: » It really is amazing how you continue to ignore the fact that Sweden considerably broadened its definition of sexual crime in both 2005 and 2013.
Sweden broadened its definition of rape
hill16bhoy wrote: » Then, again, when you're desperately trying to spin a flagrantly racist narrative, I suppose it isn't at all suprising.
RandomName2 wrote: » It is pretty simple. There is a large increase in sexual crime in Sweden. This was used by right-wing pundits to criticize immigration policies in Sweden. The response to this is 'If you ignore sexual crimes except rape convictions then there has been no rise in crime rates' As slimy a position as you can get, and only used to undermine the right-wing pundits. I'm not saying that right-wing pundits are averse from using victims to suit their own agenda, but that does not make the response any less gross.
RandomName2 wrote: » Did it? Because I read your source and what it said was And yet the same source says that there hasn't been any increase in the number of rape convictions. This is very true. Indeed, rape is a small fraction of sex crimes in Sweden. Although reported rapes have gone up, and the majority of reported rapes by a stranger have been by non-nationals, you can, if you like, ignore both those things because the definition of rape has been widened. However, sex crimes as a whole (excluding rape convictions) have been increasingly significantly in the last number of years. The only statistic that I could find says that the majority of perpetrators for these crimes have been non-nationals.
demfad wrote: » Is Right wing pundits racially slurring immigrants based on unclear 'Statistics' and disinformation not the ultimate in slimyiness ? Your opinion, please.
demfad wrote: » "The only statistic that you can find"??? You are viciously attacking an entire group of prople. Is your statistic reliable? How do you know?
demfad wrote: » If it is not reliable you are using abuse based on race on a group with no substantiation. Please explain.
RandomName2 wrote: » I said that that the statistics in relation to crime and immigration are quite complicated. However, despite the fact that there is no single, all encompassing experience across Europe, Germany and Sweden have both experienced an increase in crime that has a connection to immigration.
My assertion has not been contradicted by any evidence provided.
I suspect that you would also be of the opinion that little research should be conducted into the entire topic though, because to do so could produce unwanted effects.
hill16bhoy wrote: » It really is amazing how you continue to ignore the fact that Sweden considerably broadened its definition of sexual crime in both 2005 and 2013. Then, again, when you're desperately trying to spin a flagrantly racist narrative, I suppose it isn't at all suprising.
demfad wrote: » despicable. disgusting Disingenuous nonsense.
Not the recent ones. There is a huge debate in Sweden about immigration and crime. And we know from earlier statistics that the foreign-born commit three times as many crimes on average as native-borns. But these riots and crimes in the suburbs, they are related mostly to drugs and gangs. Those people are born and raised in Sweden. It has nothing to do with the recent immigration. It’s the children of migrants and maybe people that came when they were young. There has been this issue of sexual harassment. And there is some evidence that the new refugees are somewhat involved in this. But there are no official statistics on it.
Gun violence is on the rise, with daylight shootings and without regard for bystanders. In the past nine years, reported and attempted murders involving guns have almost doubled. .. Yet it’s still hard for Swedish authorities to be frank about what’s going on. It’s widely known that gang members are mainly first- and second-generation immigrants, and problems are rampant in what police euphemistically refer to as ‘vulnerable areas’. Thus the gang wars serve as a constant reminder of Sweden’s failed migration and integration policies. This is a problem for the government (and even the opposition) in a country that prides itself on being a ‘humanitarian superpower’. And yet politicians, in government and opposition, seem particularly concerned that violence in immigrant suburbs is a PR problem, a threat to the image of Sweden, and that the remedy is spin.
Crime statistics show that violent offences have remained at broadly the same level for the past decade but that certain offences — particularly shootings — have increased in Sweden’s three largest cities, Stockholm, Gothenburg and Malmo. All three cities are home to significant numbers of immigrants — Sweden took in more immigrants in 2015 than almost any other European country relative to the size of population — with local police saying dozens have joined local gangs who deal drugs and have become increasingly brazen in attacking each other.
Of 100 people linked to murder and assassination of firearms, 90 have at least one foreign-born parent, shows DN's review.
Since crime is intimately linked to the country’s failure to integrate its immigrants, the rise in violence is a sensitive subject. When the Swedish government and opposition refer to the country as a “humanitarian superpower” because it opened its doors to more immigrants per capita during the migrant crisis than any other EU country, they mean it. This has resulted in some impressive contortions.
RobertKK wrote: » I read that it is non binding, yet there could in the future be legal consequences if some court made a ruling based on it.