Forcibly kicking them out is bigoted, close minded and spreads fear, while allowing every single person in for as long as they want is an impossible dream. — darthbarracuda
Why is kicking them out "bigoted, close minded and spreads fear"? Do not a sovereign people (Poles, Finns, Irish, Italians, Turks, Rumanians, Russians, Americans, British, French, etc.) have a right to say whether or not a million people from another part of the world can move in there, just because their own country has become a shit hole? — Bitter Crank
I would trust a refugee destination country more if they said, "Look: We don't really want you here, but we understand that you have been driven out of your own homes. We will admit you under two conditions: 1) You adapt to our lifestyle (rather than we adapt to yours) and 2) you will not become citizens here, no matter what. When your country gets itself together, back you go." — Bitter Crank
Kicking them out because they are, say, Muslim is bigoted. — darthbarracuda
Unless the refugees do not desire to become citizens, they should be allowed to at least try to become one. — darthbarracuda
Each one of us doesn't actually fit in perfectly in our own societies. Our thoughts may not resonate with that of others, our values may be rejected as undesirable. Our behavior may not agree with others. Etc. — TheMadFool
Why doesn't the EU negotiate a trade off of debt for settlement with Greece? — Cavacava
As I said, what Greece and Turkey are doing is immoral and unethical by transporting them across their own boundaries.
I would consider Greece and Turkey's actions to be an act of war. — YIOSTHEOY
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