Darwin |
3 januari 2004 15:02 |
Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Wanne
Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Cynicus
In de standaard van 3 en 4 januari 2004 zetten Franck Vandenbroucke en Johan Vande Lanotte hun visie uiteen over de vergrijzing. Daarin zeggen ze o.m. ook wat volgt : "In België is 30,7 procent van de niet-Europese bevolking van 15 tot 64 jaar aan het werk; in Europa ligt de werkgelegenheidsgraad van niet-Europeanen gemiddeld op 52,6 procent. (...) in België bedroeg de werkloosheid onder niet-Europeanen in 2002 33,5 procent (...)".
Uit deze cijfers kunnen we duidelijk besluiten dat die vreemdelingen absoluut niet nodig zijn voor onze economie. En zeggen dat er ook lieden zijn die de pretententie hebben om te beweren dat we die vreemdelingen nodig hebben om onze sociale zekerheid overeind te houden.
Die vreemdelingen kosten ons alleen maar veel geld : er zijn in ons land meer vreemdelingen werkloos dan dat er werken!!!!
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Hieruit kunnen we misschien besluiten dat vreemdelingen minder gemakkellijk aan werk geraken !? En hoeveel van die 'vreemdelingen' hebben een Europees paspoort ? Die kan je niet zomaar wegsturen.
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Moeilijk gaat ook :
Citaat:
By 1582 expulsion was proposed by Philip II's Council of State as the only solution to the conflict between the communities, despite some concern about the harmful economic repercussions -- the loss of Moorish craftsmanship and the shortage of agricultural manpower and expertise. But as there was opposition from some noblemen and the King was preoccupied by international events, no action was taken until 1609-10 when Philip III (r.1598-1621) issued edicts of expulsion.
Royal legislation concerning the Moriscos was dictated at every stage by the Church. Juan de Ribera (1542-1611), the aging Archbishop of Valencia, who had initially been a firm believer in the efficacy of missionary work, became in his declining years the chief partisan of expulsion. In a sermon preached on September 27th, 1609, he said that the land would not become fertile again until these heretics had been expelled. The Duke of Lerma (Philip III's first minister, 1598-1618) also underwent a change of heart when it was agreed that the lords of Valencia would be given the lands of the expelled Moriscos in compensation for the loss of their vassals.
The decision to proceed with the expulsion was approved unanimously by the Council of State on January 30th, 1608, although the actual decree was not signed by the King until April 4th, 1609. Galleons of the Spanish fleet were secretly prepared, and they were later joined by many foreign merchant ships, including several from England. On September 11th, the expulsion order was announced by town criers in the Kingdom of Valencia, and the first convoy departed from Denia at nightfall on October 2nd, and arrived in Oran less than three days later. The Moriscos of Aragon, Castile, Andalusia and Extremadura received expulsion orders during the course of the following year. The majority of the forced emigrants settled in the Maghrib or Barbary Coast, especially in Oran, Tunis, Tlemcen, Tetuan, Rabat and Sale. Many travelled overland to France, but after the assassination of Henry of Navarre by Ravaillac in May 1610, they were forced to emigrate to Italy, Sicily or Constantinople.
There is much disagreement about the size of the Morisco population. The French demographer Henri Lapeyre estimated from census reports and embarkation lists that approximately 275,000 Spanish Moriscos emigrated in the years 1609-14, out of a total of 300,000. This conservative estimate is not consistent with many of the contemporary accounts that give a figure of 600,000. Bearing in mind that the total population of Spain at that time was only about seven and a half million, this must have constituted a serious deficit in terms of productive manpower and tax revenue. In the Kingdom of Valencia, which lost a third of its population, nearly half the villages were deserted in 1638.
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