on โ19-03-2015 06:28 PM
......under what "right" are people paid to exist without doing anything for their payment.?
Is it just because they exist?
on โ20-03-2015 09:06 PM
my good ole mate Baggy came here from Scotland in 1961 on a beat up old cruise ship that we saw a display of at the
maritime Museum. Known him since 68......only time i thought I was ever gunna see him cry....only it was a drought or he
would have... he's tight that baggy
http://waves.anmm.gov.au/Immigration-Stories/Immigration-history.aspx
ince the First Fleet dropped anchor in 1788, close to 10 million settlers have moved from across the world to start a new life in Australia.
They have arrived in waves, encouraged by developments like the 1850s gold rushes, or to escape adverse conditions at home such as the Industrial Revolutionโs social upheavals in 19th-century Britain, the two world wars and the aftermath of the Vietnam War in the 1970s.
Collectively these migrants have helped shape a unique British-based and now multicultural society on the perimeter of Asia.
on โ20-03-2015 09:10 PM
@debra9275 wrote:it would've been a hard thing to do- start out in a new country and I feel compassion for those who've had to leave a war torn country from way back then and till this day- even if tax payers had to fund it
It certainly would. At least did not have to stay in refugee camps for decades waiting.
on โ20-03-2015 09:28 PM
J you and a lot of you are missing the salient point. immigrants who have arrived using correct procedures can be integrated into the community in a very short time. Those who try to force their way in have to be locked up and are a non productive burden on taxpayers.
Golden years J;
I wouldn't even wish those "Golden years" on you.
May I suggest some research on those 'Golden Years'?
on โ20-03-2015 10:25 PM
on โ20-03-2015 10:33 PM
@poddster wrote:J you and a lot of you are missing the salient point. immigrants who have arrived using correct procedures can be integrated into the community in a very short time. Those who try to force their way in have to be locked up and are a non productive burden on taxpayers.
Golden years J;
I wouldn't even wish those "Golden years" on you.
May I suggest some research on those 'Golden Years'?
Not always and not exclusively. Plenty of "boat people" have "integrated into the community and made valuable contributions in a relatively short time. Some who arrived via an orderly process struggled and returned to their homeland or stayed and continue to struggle.
on โ20-03-2015 10:55 PM
I would venture to say that those successful 'Boat people' were well off in the first place, they must have been to pay for their illegal entry. They most likely were not seekers of asylum but opportunists seeking to make a good profit.
Being well off they could have applied for immigration but did not, wonder why that is?
on โ20-03-2015 11:03 PM
@poddster wrote:I would venture to say that those successful 'Boat people' were well off in the first place, they must have been to pay for their illegal entry. They most likely were not seekers of asylum but opportunists seeking to make a good profit.
Being well off they could have applied for immigration but did not, wonder why that is?
It's a carch 22 isn't it. If you arrive with nothing you are not a real refugee, you are just looking for a handout, If you arrive with money you are not a real refugee only an opportunist. Damned if you do and damned if you dont.
on โ20-03-2015 11:10 PM
It's a catch 22 and it's more myth than fact.
on โ20-03-2015 11:15 PM
on โ20-03-2015 11:17 PM