A CULTURE NEARING AN END--EUROPE'S LACK OF NATIVE WORKERS LEAVES NO CHOICE BUT TO LIBERALIZE IMMIGRATION

"We need more children to support our societies
into the future, but it is very clear now: No
children are coming."
German
urban-affairs expert Albrecht
Goeschel
If you are not yet
convinced that the battle to save Europe is NOW-- and
not in the year 2050 when the demographics have
inalterably taken hold of the continent, then here is
a bit more information to bring any skeptics up to
speed.
A recent report shows that
Germany's birth rate continued to
decline in 2006. The
government's socialistic incentives designed to
increase baby-making have failed, and the upbeat
predictions of a baby boom are now bust. There
were more deaths than births which means that
Germans failed to replace themselves. There are
now widespread reports of a loss of workers to do
menial labor throughout Europe. Without native
born workers Europe is left with no choice but to
liberalize immigration laws in order to sustain
its economy. This is a quandry since many fear
that a liberalization of immigration laws may
bring terrorism, or worse yet, the creation of
Eurabia.
The battle to save Europe is now because the only way
to prevent the seemingly inevitable disintegration of
civilization as we know it-- is for the inhabitants
of the continent to return to the faith--not to mere
christianity, but specifically to the only religion
that stands against the sins that have brought about
this crisis --Catholicism. Nothing else can pry the
contraceptives out of the hands of Europe's populace.
Here is a report from
McClatchy:
Last
spring, as farmer Gerald Simianer was preparing to
harvest white asparagus, one of Germany's culinary
delicacies, he followed the instructions of his local
labor office and employed at least 20 percent German
workers. Simianer, a fourth-generation asparagus
farmer in this village near Berlin, hired 30 Germans
among his 150 field workers. He paid $5.50 an hour,
increasing that to about $10 an hour depending on
production; a decent wage, he thinks, in his rural
community. Within a month, 27 of the 30 Germans had
quit, he said. His father, Hugo, scoffed: "They quit
within days, within hours almost."
Reserving German jobs for German workers might sound
reasonable in a country with 9 percent unemployment.
But Germans won't accept menial jobs. And that
problem is so big that no politician wants to
articulate the answer: more liberal immigration
policies.
Even more than in the United States, immigration is
one of the most significant issues of this generation
in Europe. The native-born population is in a
long-term decline, but resistance to immigrant labor
is growing. Amid fears that more immigrants spell
more terrorism, there's no political will to tackle
the issue.
The
demographic crisis first became apparent a decade
ago, when birthrates plummeted below the level needed
to maintain the population, leading governments to
institute longer maternity leaves, cash incentives
and more child care to deal with the lack of
children. But nothing has
worked.
The Czech Republic's population is expected to
decline 40 percent by 2050, Italy's by 28 percent.
Germany is expected to decline from 82 million
residents to 59 million, and from 41 million
working-age residents to 26 million.
The European Union population, now 455 million, is
expected to shrink to 430 million during the same
period, while the United States, with 295 million
people now, is expected to grow to 420 million.
Demographers are convinced that the birthrates won't
bounce back, meaning that the centuries-old European
culture is on a path of slow death.
"We call it a will for collective
suicide," German
urban-affairs expert Albrecht Goeschel
said.
"We need more children to support our societies
into the future, but it is very clear now: No
children are coming."
Which
means that Europe - still struggling to integrate
immigrants who arrived a generation ago - will have
to open its borders to more immigration. It doesn't
want to, however, even to support age-old traditions
such as putting fresh white asparagus on the table.
Since the 1500s, spargel has been as much a part of
German culture as sauerkraut or beer. But it's a
labor-intensive crop, raised under mounds of
soft-tilled earth and sometimes reflecting foil. It
never sees the sun and never photosynthesizes. It has
to be picked fresh to retain its light, almost sweet,
taste. From April, when the harvest begins, to June
20, when, by tradition, the harvest must end, much of
German culinary life revolves around spargel.
Germans love everything about the white asparagus.
Except, of course, harvesting it. At the same time,
they put up obstacles to others arriving to do the
work, arguing that they're taking jobs that should go
to Germans, even if Germans won't take the jobs.
"The
work, they said, was too hard, so they quit to claim
unemployment benefits," Simianer
recounted of his German employees.
Of the other 120 workers - Poles, Croats and
other eastern Europeans - "no one ever quits, unless
they get seriously ill."
This year he obtained an emergency exemption from the
government to hire non-German labor to bring in the
harvest. Croatian Pavo Kovacevic has been coming for
the harvest for 15 years, for a very simple reason:
"There are no good jobs in Croatia. Many times, there
is no work at all."
He may not feel entirely welcome in Germany, but he's
sure he'll be back.
"Who else would they find willing to do this work?
Germans?" he said, and laughed. "They may not want
us, but they need us."
Experts think that the mood shift against immigration
is gaining momentum because of such events as the
international protests over Denmark's Islamic
cartoons, the murder of Theo van Gogh in the
Netherlands by a Muslim immigrant and the London and
Madrid mass-transit bombings, carried out by
"non-natives," or immigrants.
Dutch historian Maarten van Rossem of Utrecht
University notes that since November 2004 - when a
man dressed in Islamic robes shot and stabbed to
death van Gogh, a Dutch filmmaker who shared a name
with his great-great-grandfather, the brother of
artist Vincent van Gogh - the traditionally open
Dutch have clamored for closed borders.
"It's
a symbol of what immigration has done to the
Netherlands, of how it's failed," he said of public
perception, "of how we've stupidly invited 1 million
murderers into our home."
Martin Potucek, the director of the Center for Social
and Economic Strategies in Prague, Czech Republic,
describes
Europe's population decline as having "negative
effects on all facets of life. We won't be able to
support pensions or health care or education. We'll
be a much older society. ... We'll simply cease to be
a vibrant, and at some point viable, society."
Demographers
often talk about 2050 as the crisis date, but the
pain will be felt much sooner. Death rates already
have passed birthrates in several nations, and fewer
employees are entering the job market than are
retiring from it.
"We all joke that we don't want to live past 2010,"
said Jitka Rychtarikova, a demographer at Charles
University in Prague.
Meanwhile, nationalism - along with nativism,
anti-immigrant sentiment - is gaining ground. In the
Netherlands, officials insist that new immigrants
pass Dutch history tests, and bookshelves are filled
with memories of life in wooden shoes, back on the
canals and flat farmland that make up most of the
tiny nation.
Rob Boudewijn, who heads European studies for the
Netherlands' respected Clingendael institute, a
research center, said that 20 years ago a politician
who criticized immigration "was a kook, an outcast, a
fascist," he said. "Today, he's mainstream, and if
he's not anti-immigrant, he's a kook the other way."
In Beelitz, Germany, which is surrounded by the
white-tarp-covered ridges of spargel growing,
Simianer worries that one casualty of this might be
the spargel culture. In fact, many field workers from
Poland have found better-paying work in England.
"I have two children I hope will grow up with the
spargel culture," he said. "But I worry it might be
nearing an end."














