Do You seriously believe that masses of desperate people who realize that they are stuck in a country like Greece, with basically no social benefits and noMiguelito wrote:Please tell me what exactly I'm naive about, and how the "migrant crisis" would negatively affect your retirement in Greece, or your life as an expat owning a local moped rental shop on the island of Rhodos.
Yes, I said "registered" - I'm sure sure the exact technicalities, and they may not claim asylum in Greece but they still need to check in somehow to get the free ferry to Athens.
hope of ever getting a steady job, being dependent on food stamps and stuck in tent camps or left over barracks, are not going to create social disorder?
In Sweden, with arguably the world's best care taking of even hopeless people, this fact is now being debated every day on the front pages of mainstream
media. Two years ago any such discussion carried a heavy stigma but today is is the norm. Everyone can see what happens. Google "Moroccan street kids
Stockholm" and You see one example. And I don't talk about right wing media here, this is not freak reporting by some extremist organisation but normal
facts in today's Sweden. And of course the public bath houses have introduced gender segregated visit times to cater for certain groups and their non-contemporary
views on gender relations, hospitals need police guard after every shooting to prevent relatives from entering and settling the score inside etc etc etc.
The common factor in all these problems is too many people with no future. And Greece is accumulating more of them, especially since northern Europe is plugging
the exit from southern Europe. Unfortunately Greece is in no position to do much about this since they are on the verge on bankruptcy. My guess is that
the rich will lock themselves up in gated communities and the masses will have to fend for themselves.