How Western countries can confront the challengers of growing unassimilated immigrant populations.
By Neville Berman
Despite the enormous improvement in the material lifestyle of the 21st century, millions of people have not shared in the abundant wealth created by technology and innovation. Many countries are in reality failed states, unable to provide jobs, sufficient food for their population and repay loans to international aid agencies such as the World Bank. With no foreseeable prospect of a better life in the countries of their birth, millions of people are risking their lives in attempting to immigrate to other parts of the world. The vast majority of these immigrants are economic migrants seeking better opportunities for themselves and their families. They normally have low marketable skills, little or no financial resources, and are unfamiliar with the language, culture or religious practices of the countries that they are desperately trying to reach.

Most countries in the western world are running on financial deficits that are reaching alarming proportions. Interest payments on debt have become a major issue in the budgets of almost all western countries. Countries are cutting social services to their own population, while at the same time providing new immigrants with free housing, health care, educational assistance, and direct financial aid. The inevitable clash between the local population and the new immigrants is tearing countries apart. Hatred is on the rise. Immigration has become a hot topic that will play an important role in future elections in the western world. There is almost zero immigration going the other way.

What is happening all over the Western world is that new immigrants usually live in low-income areas just outside major cities. Many of these new immigrants cannot find jobs. The areas that they live in soon take on a different character to what existed before, and end up becoming a no-go area for local police. This scenario is replicating across the Western world.

Children born in a country normally enjoy a right of citizenship. While exposed in their home environment to the language of their parents, they then spend their formative years in local schools that inculcate the language, culture, values and heritage of their adopted country into their lifestyle. At the age of 18, they are granted the right to vote in local and national elections. On the other hand, what happens with immigrants is that five years after they are granted the legal right to live in the country, they are granted citizenship. Provided they are over the age of 18, they are entitled to vote. After five years of living in a country, they usually still communicate with their family in the language of their birth, and are probably not fully integrated into the local customs, values and culture of the country. In many cases their religious beliefs are foreign to the accepted religious practices of the majority of the local population.
All Western countries are democracies that hold elections for public office. The increase in the proportion of the immigrant population with the right to vote, can be the determining factor in who gets elected. In the case of France, President Sarkozy banned the right to wear full-face veils known as burqas in public spaces. The result was that over 90% of the Muslims, who made up 8% of the population, voted against him in the 2012 French presidential election. Sarkozy lost the election by a 3.2% margin. Clearly the Muslim vote determined who became President of France. Political parties across Europe took note of what happened in France. They started pandering to the Muslim community in their countries, in order to have a better chance of being elected. The question that arises is what can be done to alleviate the problems described above?

The first suggestion that I would like to make is to introduce a new Purple Passport available to all legal immigrants who wish to travel in and out of the country. This passport will not grant citizenship to the holder of the passport. The second suggestion is to grant citizenship only to people who have lived in the country for 18 years. After eighteen years of living in the country, they will probably be more integrated into the country and more acclimatized to local norms, values and customs than after only 5 years of living in the country. If locally born citizens need to wait 18 years before they get the right to vote, it seems reasonable that foreign immigrants should also need to wait for 18 years before acquiring the right to vote. Another important suggestion is that during the 18 years of acclimatization, they will be subject to mandatory deportation if convicted of a crime that involves a prison sentence of more than 2 years. This will act as a deterrent against engaging in criminal activity by the immigrant population.

Almost all countries are increasing the amount allocated in their defense budgets. They are doing this in order to deter and to be better able to defend themselves in the event of an attack by a potential enemy country. They are also increasing their budgets to defend against cyber-attacks that can cripple the smooth running of the country. What they are not taking into account is that one of the main threats facing many countries is not external but internal. There are many factors that lead to dissatisfaction, hatred and anarchy in a country. The right to free speech has become a license for hate speech. A disproportionate amount of hate speech can be attributed to the changing makeup of the country caused by mass immigration of people with different beliefs and values. It is time to think outside the box and adopt new measures that are aimed at preventing the disintegration of Western society from within. Across the Western world, democracy itself is under threat!

INTO EXTRA TIME
While the suggestions expressed above may alleviate more than resolve, they will at least provide additional time for countries to formulate policies and programs that will seriously tackle the internal problems that they face. Like climate change and artificial intelligence that have the potential to lead to job losses and economic hardships for millions of people, so too will mass immigration of unskilled people that will not disappear in the near future. If anything, it is likely to increase.
Planning and managing this process needs to start now.
About the writer:

Accountant Neville Berman had an illustrious sporting career in South Africa, being twice awarded the South African State Presidents Award for Sport and was a three times winner of the South African Maccabi Sportsman of the Year Award. In 1978 he immigrated to the USA to coach the United States men’s field hockey team, whereafter, in 1981 he immigrated to Israel where he practiced as an accountant and then for 20 years was the Admin Manager at the American International School in Even Yehuda, Israel. He is married with two children and one granddaughter.
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