Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Migration des peuples: Bref manuel pour comprendre la crise migratoire actuelle

Rate this book
La vague d'immigration illégale dans les pays de l'Union européenne bouleverse le quotidien de centaines de millions d'Européens. Sur ce sujet explosif, les auteurs veulent "affronter l'omniprésente propagande des pro-réfugiés". "Faire entendre une autre voix dans le bruit de la propagande actuelle" : telle est l'ambition de ce texte. Pour cela, nulle digression exhaustive, comme l'indique la présentation. Un commentaire qui se veut "original" sur la crise migratoire.

106 pages, Kindle Edition

Published January 15, 2017

6 people want to read

About the author

Václav Klaus

67 books13 followers
Vaclav Klaus was born in the Vinohrady district of Prague on June 19, 1941. He spent his childhood and youth in the neighbourhood of Tylovo namesti square.
He obtained his university education at the University of Economics, Prague (majoring in the Foreign Trade Economics and graduating in 1963), and economics thus became his specialist field for his entire life. He took advantage of the relative liberalisation in the then Czechoslovakia in order to study in Italy (1966) and the USA (1969). As a research worker at the Institute of Economics of the Czech Academy of Sciences he completed his postgraduate scientific studies and in 1968 was awarded the title of app. PhD. in Economics.
In 1970 he was forced to abandon his research career for political reasons, and left to work at the Czechoslovak State Bank for many years. In 1987 he returned from the bank to his academic work at the Prognostic Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences at the end of 1987.
Immediately after the events of November 17, 1989 he entered politics, but did not lose contact with the world of economic science. He continued to lecture and publish occasionally, and in 1991 he was engaged as a lecturer at Charles University in the field of economics. In 1995 he was appointed professor for the field of finances at the University of Economics, Prague.
He embarked on his political career in December 1989, when he became Federal Minister of Finance. Later, in October 1991 he was appointed vice chairman of the government of the Czechoslovak Federal Republic. At the end of 1990 he became the chairman of the then strongest political entity - the Civic Forum. Following its demise in April 1991 he co-founded the Civic Democratic Party, of which he was chairman from its inception until December 2002. He won a parliamentary election with this party in June 1992 and became Prime Minister of the Czech Republic. In this role he shared in the "Velvet Divorce" of the Czechoslovak Federation and the foundation of an independent Czech Republic. In 1996 he successfully defended his post as Prime Minister in election to the Chamber of Deputies. Following the collapse of the governing coalition he tendered his resignation in November 1997. Following a forced general election in 1998 he became chairman of the Chamber of Deputies of the Czech parliament for a four-year period.
On February 28, 2003 he was elected President of the Czech Republic. On February 15, 2008 he was elected President of the Czech Republic.
Vaclav Klaus is married to the economist Livia Klausova and has two sons and five grandchildren. His son Vaclav is the headmaster of a private grammar school in Prague, and his son Jan works as a financial analyst.
For many years in his youth Vaclav Klaus was top sportsman, playing basketball and volleyball, and also enjoys skiing and playing tennis. In his free time he enjoys reading fictitious literature and listening to music, in particular jazz.
He has published over 20 books on general social, political and economic themes, and has been awarded a number of international prizes and honorary doctorates from universities all over the world.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
1 (9%)
4 stars
4 (36%)
3 stars
2 (18%)
2 stars
3 (27%)
1 star
1 (9%)
Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Andreas.
631 reviews44 followers
March 11, 2020
Die beiden Autoren nehmen das Thema "Massenmigration" sehr kritisch unter die Lupe. Ich war sehr lange der Meinung von Angela Merkel und fand, dass das Asylrecht zu den Menschenrechten gehört. Die Menschen verlassen nicht umsonst ihre Heimat, wenn sie nicht den Tod fürchten oder im eigenen Land keine Zukunft mehr sehen.

Hier unterscheiden die Autoren jetzt sehr genau zwischen Einzelschicksalen, die sehr wohl unsere volle Unterstützung genießen, und einer Migrationswelle mit ihren völlig eigenen Problemen. Wenn viele Menschen hereinströmen dann kann von einer schnellen Assimilierung nicht die Rede sein, d.h. wir werden über längere Zeit einen Zusammenprall der Kulturen erleben mit der Erwartung, dass sich die Migranten anpassen. Aber tun sie das, wenn sie in einer großen Gruppe kommen, oder werden wir nicht eher eine Ghettobildung erleben? Multi-Kulti muss man auch aushalten können und das ist etwas, was man nicht zentral bestimmen kann. Hinzu kommt die Angst, dass viele Kriminelle einfach so in unsere Länder strömen.

Ein weiterer Punkt ist die soziale Grundversorgung. Es ist selbstverständlich, dass die Migranten davon profitieren werden, und eine Eingliederung in den Arbeitsmarkt bleibt ohne eigene Hilfsprogramme eine Utopie. Es wird auch das Argument entkräftet, dass Migranten aus demografischen Gründen notwendig sind.

Nicht so richtig habe ich die Verbindung zu den Nationalstaaten verstanden. Vaclav Klaus meint, dass durch eine noch stärkere europäische Zentralisierung die Nationalstaaten an Einfluss verlieren werden. Aber schneidet sich die EU damit nicht ins eigene Fleisch? Die Menschen werden sich noch mehr den Populisten zuwenden und DANN ist die EU komplett in Gefahr.

Wie immer gilt, dass sich jeder seine eigene Meinung bilden sollte und hierbei leistet das Büchlein einen enorm wichtigen Beitrag. Kritische, intelligent vorgebrachte Ansichten zur Migrationskrise findet man in den Medien leider nicht besonders häufig.
Displaying 1 of 1 review

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.