Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Good will Bashing & Narcissistic Proxy Assimilation

#1
RainbowUnicorn Offline
Can't Work Can't Leave
http://edition.cnn.com/2017/03/14/europe...index.html

Quote:"You're not looking for work, or to start a new life. You're just saying, 'I want to save myself,'" he says, remembering his desperation.

Quote:"The biggest mistake I made in my life was to demand asylum in the Netherlands," he says.

Soo... they have not deported him yet so he is still alive... ?
Have they stopped feeding & housing him ?

i am not sure of the audiance for this board however thought i would post this inspite of not being too sure of how well educated/worldly you/they might be.
Those who have grown up over decades knowing Dutch people will be extremely alarmed as i am with this recent attack on their reputation & culture.

who and/or what is behind this ?
I cant see any country agreeing to allow an offshore political group(more soo a soverign power) to mount Political Rallys on their soil.
Reply
#2
C C Offline
Doesn't matter who's running a government, there will usually be layers of bureaucracy in place catering to accumulated decades of complex mandates, and trying to sort fraudulent applicants from legitimate ones.

If a seeker is from a remote village or community, and was dependent upon a network of human smugglers for transportation across borders (who thereby don't keep or issue records)... Then upon finally arriving in the destination country and lacking sufficient evidence which the latter's bureaucracy requests, one could be swallowed up and soon wasting away in the indefinite limbo of their red tape and sporadically aborted / restarted or permanently terminated procedures.

We Are Here: . . . You flee, because your life is in danger. You leave all that is dear behind. It is a long, arduous and perilous journey. But eventually you'll arrive in the Netherlands. You're happy because you've heard that the Netherlands has respect among human rights countries. Finally, you are safe. You've lost a lot. But here you go to build a new future.

You will be interviewed. You're tired, suffering from the trauma of everything you've been through and you're scared. What do you say to that lady on the other side of the table? In your country you will be prosecuted; you're always very careful what you say. [...] Yet you tell her what you've been through.

[...] She asks you where you come from [...] if you can designate your village. But you've never seen a map. She asks you proof of your journey, but the smugglers have never given tickets. It also requires a lot of data. You get confused. The truck was dark. How long were you there? One day? Two? Three? A week? [...] You realize suddenly that they use a different measure in the Netherlands than in your own country.

Then you have to wait. You get a bed in a refugee center. As you meet people and you gently start to think again about your future. You wanted to do a course - you had all kinds of plans for your life. Perhaps you can now start picking up again. But for now, you just wait.

After a while you get a message. "Unfortunately, sir, your asylum application has been rejected." You do not understand - didn't I tell you everything? "Yes, you have told your story, but you can not prove it." [...] How could you prove it? [...] Where should you go? The lady doesn't know, either [...]

http://wijzijnhier.org/who-we-are/
Reply




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)