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More and More Leave Germany Behind (BYE BYE DEUTSCHLAND)
Der Spiegel (online English Edition) ^
| 10 NOvember 2006
| Julia Bonstein, Alexander Jung, Sebastian Matthes and Irina Repke
Posted on 11/10/2006 4:53:31 PM PST by shrinkermd
Faced with poor job prospects, high taxes and an intrusive bureaucracy, more and more Germans are choosing to emigrate. Most of those who leave, though, are highly qualified -- which could mean devastating economic consequences.
They are fed up, truly fed up. Fed up with the constant bickering over the costs of wage benefits, social reforms, elimination of subsidies, store closing hours and all the other symbols of a country stuck in bureaucratic and legislative gridlock.
They are tired of living in country where landing a job is like playing the lottery, a country where not even half of citizens live from gainful employment and a country in which even academics in their mid-40s are already considered problem cases when it comes to job placement. In other words, they are fed up with living in a country where all opportunities already seem to be taken: opportunities to succeed in one's career, to own property and to achieve prosperity...
(Excerpt) Read more at spiegel.de ...
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Germany
KEYWORDS: adolphshrugged; demographics; emigration; eurabia; germany
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To: verum ago
undocumented Germans: doing the rocket science Americans
won't can't do...
Thank you, NEA.
To: dhs12345
My husband came over in 1982. Just became an American Citizen March of 06 and Voted here for the first time this election... Straight Repub of course. I came to the States 1960. But not from Sweden. Korea. Been married 20 years... about time he took the oath.. Don't you think?
22
posted on
11/10/2006 5:07:25 PM PST
by
Strutt9
To: shrinkermd
23
posted on
11/10/2006 5:07:44 PM PST
by
Screamname
(Tagline: (optional, printed after your name on post):)
To: shrinkermd
I see a ripe opportunity for a Abduela Mohamad Hitler to rise to power. Its all the Jeeeeews fault will be the next mantra.
24
posted on
11/10/2006 5:07:44 PM PST
by
MaDeuce
(Do it to them, before they do it to you! (MaDuce = M2HB .50 BMG))
To: dhs12345
"My ancestors came over around 1850.
Mine, also. The story I heard is that it was the potato famine which affected lots of europe, not just Ireland.
25
posted on
11/10/2006 5:07:54 PM PST
by
dynachrome
("Where am I? Where am I going? Why am I in a handbasket?")
To: shrinkermd
First I read about the Dutch, now the Germans. If you folks are coming here, don't bring your crappy ideas that ruined your countries.
26
posted on
11/10/2006 5:07:58 PM PST
by
Right Wing Assault
("..this administration is planning a 'Right Wing Assault' on values and ideals.." - John Kerry)
To: Virginia Ridgerunner
27
posted on
11/10/2006 5:08:27 PM PST
by
dhs12345
To: shrinkermd
I remember thinking during the last election between Angela Merkel and Gerhard Schroeder how similar their lifestyles were.
Merkel had one previous marriage and no children. Schroeder had 3 previous marriages with no children but when he remarried the fourth time (1997 or 1998?) he adopted two and his new wife had one. Essentially, both were narrowly oriented boomer careerists who represented their respective political parties.
To: shrinkermd
Paging Mel Brooks...
29
posted on
11/10/2006 5:09:38 PM PST
by
Ukiapah Heep
(Shoes for Industry!)
To: shrinkermd
Sounds suspiciously like the Weimar Republic that stabbed Germany in the back to end World War I...perhaps after a period of unrest, marked by riot and inflation, a strong, charismatic leader will arise to smash these Musl...oh, sorry, I think that scenario is a bit too familiar.
30
posted on
11/10/2006 5:11:45 PM PST
by
meandog
(This is the day that the Lord has made, let us rejoice and be glad in it!)
To: Strutt9
Congratulations!
Both, becoming American citizens and your marriage of 20 years.
Make sure that you document your ancestry. Makes it a lot easier for future generations to trace back to Korea and Sweden.
31
posted on
11/10/2006 5:14:02 PM PST
by
dhs12345
To: shrinkermd
This is how the seeds of war are planted.
And this is not just happening in Germany. Add France and Russia to this list.
32
posted on
11/10/2006 5:17:33 PM PST
by
finnman69
(cum puella incedit minore medio corpore sub quo manifestu s globus, inflammare animos)
To: dynachrome
"The story I heard is that it was the potato famine which affected lots of europe, not just Ireland." The introduction of the potato to Europe caused a population explosion...the potato fungus had the opposite effect. The potato is from Peru and there are over 2,000 types there.
If the Europeans had picked more than one type of potato, the famine wouldn't have been so severe. Other types of potatos in Peru weren't sensative to the fungus.
33
posted on
11/10/2006 5:17:35 PM PST
by
blam
To: Strutt9
NOTE: For the last couple of hundred years there have probably been more people of Swedish descent (in whole or part) in the US than in Sweden. It got worse in the mid 1800s of course.
34
posted on
11/10/2006 5:18:31 PM PST
by
muawiyah
To: shrinkermd
That is why they want to leave -- as fast as they can, in fact -- and move to places where they believe there is hope for a better future. One of those places is the Third World -- India, to be more precise. René Seifert, 35, still raves about Bangalore, India's booming metropolis, where young computer programmers spend their nights crowding into the city's dance clubs and where, during the days, cars share the streets with rickshaws and cows. And where, despite the seeming chaos, every thing has its place. "I'm fascinated by the pulse of Asia, the upbeat prevailing mood and the wealth of opportunities," he raves.
Shows what capitalism can do - if it can revive India's economy after decades of crippling Socialist policy, just imagine what it could do for Germany.
To: dhs12345
Well thank you. I can't trace my ancestory... they are all dead.. (Korean war). But my husband can and I can say with all honesty... I truly have the most wonderful in-laws.
36
posted on
11/10/2006 5:19:46 PM PST
by
Strutt9
To: Chi-townChief
Doesnt matter, they would be coming to the soon-to-be, US of Americamexicostan, anyway.
37
posted on
11/10/2006 5:22:12 PM PST
by
doc1019
To: Right Wing Assault
You mean like, an Aryan race and the yoooss are the problem of all wars, we don't want that kind of c@%$
38
posted on
11/10/2006 5:22:18 PM PST
by
BlueJ7
To: muawiyah
"NOTE: For the last couple of hundred years there have probably been more people of Swedish descent (in whole or part) in the US than in Sweden. It got worse in the mid 1800s of course."
39
posted on
11/10/2006 5:23:19 PM PST
by
Strutt9
To: dhs12345
Yep, my mom's ancestor was a soldier from Saxony serving in Gustavus Adolphus's army who came over to protect New Sweden but ended up getting co-opted by the Dutch and then the English.
My dad's ancestor was a Mennonite who got the heck out of heavily Catholic southern Germany because of religious persecution and ended up in Germantown, Pennsylvania.
I only found this stuff out last year and was floored by it all. It's really cool knowing that both sides of my family were here almost at the beginning of the colonization period:)
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