Friday, July 1, 2016

The stork is busy

WA Post: Control over immigration was a major issue in the campaign over whether Britain would remain in the E.U. Polls closed there last week just hours after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to intervene in the controversy over President Obama's immigration policy.
 Demographers project more and more immigrants for decades to come. Last Thursday's events raise troubling questions about the ability of political institutions in the developed world to cope with their arrival. Annual net immigration into Europe is projected to increase steadily from current levels for another 20 years.
This year, just over 1 million immigrants will arrive in the Europe, according to Eurostat, the statistical agency of the E.U. That figure will reach an apex of nearly 1.5 million in 2036, the agency projects. If current trends hold, immigration to Europe will not subside below its current level until 2069. The continent will have seen net immigration of 77 million people in that time. The figure includes immigrants to the 28 members of the E.U. as well as Iceland, Norway and Switzerland.
This sort of bothers me because  we supposedly learned about the birds and bees a hundred  thousand years ago.   

The philosophy of the Middle East and Africa is to utilize natural childbirth, and migrate north; while the Europeans rely on the stork.   Europe knows this, it is stated policy.  Economists brag about how the stork can reduce government liabilities.

But it still seems weird.  Sex and children seem so normal, its hard to believe the EU elites rely on the stork so much, like they never took a biology class.

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