Since the 70's, the Republic has poured around β¬200 billion in so-called urban planning policies towards "disfranchised groups". And that doesn't even include massive public subsidies for community organizing, the changing of our laws to accomodate low-impulse populations by enacting hate speech laws, etc. And don't forget immigrants live 45-minutes away (at most) from the largest employment and economic centers in the country.
Of course, it never made a difference. It didn't lower crime. It didn't improve the schools. They kept behaving like savages. It didn't prevent younger generations of immigrants from embracing Islam.
But I'm sure we'll start to see the effects once we throw another β¬200 billion down the drain.
I don't expect that money to make any difference, but I'm pretty sure that abolishing the CDI and prud'hommes, and perhaps some degree of school choice, would. Halving the cotisations et charges sociales would likely also help but largely conditional on the first two.
Reducing or restricting allocations might also help.
Backwards culture, both their own and France's, is indeed an issue.
But I do not see much evidence for the other points, in particular, "arabs" have in the past created large empires and sophisticated civilisations.
And yes, I see economic opportunities as an essential part of any solution.
Since the 70's, the Republic has poured around β¬200 billion in so-called urban planning policies towards "disfranchised groups". And that doesn't even include massive public subsidies for community organizing, the changing of our laws to accomodate low-impulse populations by enacting hate speech laws, etc. And don't forget immigrants live 45-minutes away (at most) from the largest employment and economic centers in the country.
Of course, it never made a difference. It didn't lower crime. It didn't improve the schools. They kept behaving like savages. It didn't prevent younger generations of immigrants from embracing Islam.
But I'm sure we'll start to see the effects once we throw another β¬200 billion down the drain.
I don't expect that money to make any difference, but I'm pretty sure that abolishing the CDI and prud'hommes, and perhaps some degree of school choice, would. Halving the cotisations et charges sociales would likely also help but largely conditional on the first two.
Reducing or restricting allocations might also help.