• emmanuel_car@fedia.io
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    2 days ago

    This sounds like an integration and assimilation problem. People have capacity for change, but if you stick all these refugees in one place without encouraging and requiring them to integrate into the new culture, you’re going to have a bad time. It doesn’t even have to be as extreme as your example to cause issues. But simply deporting isn’t the answer. If they’re refugees then they could be fleeing the exact type of beliefs and behaviours you’ve mentioned, sending them back to their country could be a death sentence.

    • Fedditor385@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I agree. And I think the push for remigration is not because people inherently want them out, as much as we simply can’t handle that influx of people properly, and we risk creating ghettos and parallel societies that can’t live with the domestic society. Also, a lot of those people simply refuse to integrate and some said in interviews that they head we will just give them everything and they can live in our countries same as they did at their home, in terms of culture. This is a false narrative that was fed to people.

      We need to set boundaries and enforce them, and the entire topic is created because we didn’t have boundaries upfront and we are still not enforcing them as we should. We can set up strict integration requirements, and send back everyone who refuses or is unable to meet them. This is fair and would quickly filter out the bad apples as they would be first to refuse.

      In the end, people want to know they are safe if they walk outside at night, and this was not the case in many places since 2015.