04:39
The Spataussiedlers are mostly from the Soviet Union and were corrupted by Soviet mentality. Having German genes is not important - having German culture is
@Relaxed are the interviews actively trying to assess the persons degree of compatibility with German values? How many are rejected by the interview alone? In Russia at least they don’t even ask people whether they support Putin
3 hours later…
@Relaxed what? Of course there’s compatibility levels! Just look at what Russian cities look like compared to Japanese cities. The Japanese are way closer to German ordnung and will integrate easily. Russians are farther and will have issues.
@JonathanReez Uh? Decency and a little bit of squishiness. They had restrictions of all kinds. That's the one issue where the ECHR does have a bit of influence, you can filter all you want, it's not true they have any concerns about interviews being racist or anything like that but if you decide people are good enough to come and work, you cannot absolutely deny them any family life.
Go to Tel Aviv airport and you’ll see how interviews need to be done - profiling is a skill that can be taught and you can train people to quickly spot who’s likely to be well suited to your nation and who’s not. Won’t be 100% accurate of course but can be improved over time as you collect data and learn from past mistakes.
Ironically, that's exactly the kind of things you heard about Italians in France in the 1920s and 1930s (cultural incompatibility, etc.) It wasn't true then, it's not true now and obsessing with the language ability of the parents only makes sense if you assume integration is only a function of the person's personal characteristics and willingness to integrate. It just isn't.
@JonathanReez No it's not, context and the conditions you find in the local society are a lot more important than all this. If anything, among personal characteristics, social capital and income are more important than this fantasy of IQ + character, which is based on nothing else than unreconstructed racism and a desire to just find scapegoats.
@Relaxed my own family integrated extremely well in several different countries, all starting out from near poverty as they came from the former Soviet Union in the 1990s. Zero social capital either at the beginning. Our only difference was having the right culture that we’ve managed to keep by miracle despite living in the corrupt totalitarian world of the Soviets
@Relaxed racism has nothing to do with this. If you put a Syrian child into a German home, never tell them they’re Syrian and raise them as a German with no contact with Syria, they’ll be perfectly fine.
Same applies the other way around - as you correctly pointed out, Germans who were tainted by Soviet culture are struggling in Germany to this very day
2 hours later…
09:54
What is that based on? Where did I say anything about whiteness? You just invoked personal traits like desire to work hard, the notion that it's just inherently lower in some people than other is what I call unreconstructed racism. I also think the cultural essentialism is not much better as an explanatory framework but that's not what we are talking about if we talk about personal traits.
There is also a lot of irony in all this, you talk about integration a lot but you praise a country (the UAE) and policies that are explicitly trying to prevent exactly that. You talk about looking for people who want to work hard as if it was a novel idea but that was exactly the basis for selection in the 1960s onwards.
11 hours later…
20:35
it’s based off working in an extremely international environment with coworkers from dozens of countries. The more successful someone is, the more likely they are to be able to integrate perfectly well among the locals - of any country. You can keenly observe this with Indian citizens - ask them what their percentile was on the centralized college admissions test and you can very accurately predict how integrated they would be into the rules of American life.
I have no idea where racism comes into play here at all, as I’ve pointed out several times how my own ethnicity (Whites/Slavs) are h…
I have no idea where racism comes into play here at all, as I’ve pointed out several times how my own ethnicity (Whites/Slavs) are h…
You’d not believe me but I have friends of every ethnicity, from every continent and from every background, what unites them all is compatibility with my own values of wanting to be an upstanding citizen, of respecting the local culture and traditions, of trying to contribute to your community and of being “civilized” in general.
@Relaxed you can be a good factory worker but the problem is that most people cling on to their national identity and end up creating a household that puts emphasis on your home country values. If these values are in conflict with the values of the host country, you’ll end up with children who might speak the local language but fail to fully integrate due to being surrounded by kids of their parents friend group who all received toxic cultural values as part of their upbringing
This is where the C1 language test is important and why id require it for both spouses before the family is granted permanent residency (let alone citizenship): you want to ensure that the immigrants are above a certain intellectual and work ethic threshold (studying languages is hard - I’ve done it three times and appreciate that) to minimize the odds of them raising their kids in a way incompatible with the Western rules of life
If someone is from Japan or South Korea this is not a problem - them absorbing Japanese or Korean values will cause a bit of tension with locals but fundamentally they won’t cause any trouble to the locals around them
This is also where IQ comes into play - at a certain threshold you become free of delusions about national identity and can appreciate the fact that we’re nothing more than primates fumbling around on a small planet spinning around one of the billions of stars in this galaxy, making all “culture” fundamentally pointless with the exception of core principles that support the flourishing of technological prosperity.
We’ve discussed this on many other Politics questions: I’m genuinely baffled by (say) the Irish people wasting their time on the Irish language because for me personally language is of zero importance and I’d be happy to switch to Mandarin or Hindi or Klingon if necessary because it’s merely a tool of communication, not something that needs to be respected.
20:57
The more successful someone is, the more likely they are to be able to integrate perfectly well among the locals That part is broadly true and well documented… and that's exactly why it has very little to do with any distance between cultures or any cultural group being inherently unable to integrate and a lot more to do with the opportunities immigrants and their children have in the host society.
you can be a good factory worker but the problem is that most people cling on to their national identity and end up creating a household that puts emphasis on your home country values. There is very little evidence of that and it flies in the fact of what you just wrote…
@Relaxed integration is primarily about being respectful to the law, to your neighbors, to your city and to your host country. It’s about things like always being respectful of the property of others and leaving every place you visit better than how you’ve found it.
21:25
You seem to be confusing integration with assimilation and even then that's a very superficial view. Integration is a two-way process and take a couple of generations. The notion that it is all about what individuals (in this case migrants) are or do is empirically unwarranted and politically useless.
On the other hand, I already acknowledged that economical success (and therefore access to schools, employment discriminations, etc.) is important, that part is well-documented.
Access to public resources typically improves that so there is no contradiction and also no surprise that people who face various difficulties in accessing it on a par with natives would face worse outcomes.
Ultimately, I don't see any coherence in your policy proposals beside establishing meanness as a goal and making things as hard as possible just for the sake of it. You seem to be in love with UAE policy but it seems entirely designed to prevent integration, which you purport to value.
The importance of economic integration is another reason why it makes no sense to discuss refugees together with other migrants. Outcomes for refugees are still better than many people give them credit for but they clearly face a lot of challenges, starting with the fact that in Europe, they are not even allowed to work when they arrive, often for years.
@JonathanReez And the things you just mentioned are exactly why the German government adopted the policies it did back in 2015. They didn't particularly welcome Syrian, that's just a urban legend. When people were boarding trains in Hungary, they were still trying to invoke the Dublin system or negotiating a repatriation agreement with Turkey.
But they also understood that once they arrived in Germany with no realistic way to send them back to Syria, the only way to give them a chance to get on a path to integration is to offer various type of support, from housing to language courses, schooling for the kids, etc. Yet you seem to have a particular scorn for these policies.
1 hour later…
23:28
@Relaxed yes, I was convinced about this back in ~2017 (I think?) by your great response to an old question of mine. I do think Merkel should've openly started a conversation on amending the ECHR rules to explicitly excluded non-EU and non-NATO citizens from being covered by any protections, but otherwise, yes, they did do their best within the confines of the system.
@Relaxed integration can be achieved anywhere extremely quickly once/if you know the local language. It's not about knowing the national anthem or dressing up in dirndls and lederhosen, its purely about being a net-positive taxpayer, able to solve basic bureaucratic hurdles and a pleasant person to interact with as far as the locals are concerned
Took me about 2-3 years in Czech Republic due to the language barrier and maybe 2 months in the US because I already spoke fluent English + had an understanding of how Western bureaucracy works
the policy proposal is very simple: divide people into three categories and don't deviate from the plan
a) Temporary workers: you get to come in, work, change employers, but have zero access to any public funds, no family migration, no path to stay permanently under any circumstances
b) High-added-value workers with a strong promise for integration: members of academia in STEM and those in the top 25% of workers by income. Allowed to bring in spouse and children, but both spouses and kids over 13 must pass the C1 test to become permanent residents followed by citizenship.
a) Temporary workers: you get to come in, work, change employers, but have zero access to any public funds, no family migration, no path to stay permanently under any circumstances
b) High-added-value workers with a strong promise for integration: members of academia in STEM and those in the top 25% of workers by income. Allowed to bring in spouse and children, but both spouses and kids over 13 must pass the C1 test to become permanent residents followed by citizenship.
Re: refugees in Europe, the ECHR really doesn't have much to do with it, not even sure many cases make their way there and it doesn't have much enforcement power. There are international conventions, EU rules, EUCJ rulings but even that isn't terribly constraining and hasn't prevented bouncing people left and right at the EU's borders and within the EU.
The real problem is the sheer costs and optics of flying people back to Syria. For anything else, you need some other country to agree to take care of the people who made it to your territory. It makes no sense from any point of view but it's not like EU countries haven't been trying with Turkey, Tunisia, even Libya.
there are ~1m (?) Syrian refugees in the EU. That's ~3,500 flights, upper estimate of cost is $1b in plane charter costs.
Remember than 1 **billion** passengers are transported by plane in Europe alone (obviously not unique people), 1m is a drop in the bucket
Remember than 1 **billion** passengers are transported by plane in Europe alone (obviously not unique people), 1m is a drop in the bucket
Enforcement would be costly for the first ~10 thousand, after that people will see that you're serious and would show up for flights voluntarily if you give them a few thousand dollars as a reward. Let's say $10k/person * 1m people = $10b + $1b in charter costs = $11b. That's at least 10x less than what the EU has spent on the refugees so far
For proof see: Australia and Nauru. Once people have realized Australians will send them to a hellish island in the Pacific, the boats have stopped entirely
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