Saturday 11 September 2021

No work, no benefits – Denmark’s sensible plans to make migrants work to earn welfare payments should be adopted across Europe

 

No work, no benefits – Denmark’s sensible plans to make migrants work to earn welfare payments should be adopted across Europe


No work, no benefits – Denmark’s sensible plans to make migrants work to earn welfare payments should be adopted across Europe
The Scandinavian country, once admired by socialists, now faces their ire for its crackdowns on immigrants and immigration. But its tough policies show the rest of the continent – and Britain – the way forward.

The Danish government this week announced that migrants will have to work for their welfare payments. Of course, this has caused uproar on the left, but these proposals are sensible and will, in the long run, be good for both the migrants and Danish society.  

The new Danish government policy states that “if you come to Denmark, you have to work and support yourself and your family … if one cannot support oneself, one must have a duty to participate and contribute what is equivalent to a regular working week to receive the full welfare benefit.”

If the policy is ratified by the Danish parliament, some migrants will need to work a 37-hour week for their state benefits. Justifying the move, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said“We want to introduce a new work logic where people have a duty to contribute and be useful, and if they can't find a regular job, they have to work for their allowance.”

Now I have to admit, I had to do a double take at this because it seems, for the first time in ages, a politician is speaking some good old common sense. I also can hardly believe Frederiksen is a Social Democrat and that her government classes itself as centre-left. I mean, can you imagine anything so sensible being proposed by the Democrats in the United States or by the Labour Party in the UK? No, I thought not.

Anyway, the Danish government argues that this new policy will have a number of benefits, and at the top of that list is integration. They claim that unemployment among migrants prevents them from integrating into Danish society. 

This is undoubtedly true, because, when people go to work, they mix with people who are generally not from the same community and with those who speak the native language. Therefore, in many ways, work forces integration, which can only be a good thing.   

Frederiksen also said the rules were directly aimed at women from “non-Western backgrounds” living on benefits. Indeed, in Denmark, six out of 10 women from North African, Middle Eastern and Turkish backgrounds are unemployed.

We have had a similar problem here in the UK for many years. Among Muslim women (both immigrant and native-born), as of 2015, only 28% were in work, and, as of 2016, 22% could not speak English with any proficiency. This is no good for community cohesion, as it prevents integration. I would also argue that it is no good for the women themselves. 

The Danish scheme will also be good for society as a whole. At the press conference launching the scheme, the Minister of Employment, Peter Hummelgaard Thomsen, argued that the point was to get migrants used to turning up for work. The job itself, he said, did not really matter, as “it could be a job on the beach picking up cigarette butts or plastic... (or) helping to solve various tasks within a company.” He is right, of course, it’s not about the job, it’s about the lifestyle. 

I used to see it in Brussels all the time. Young men – and it always seems to be young men – of either North African or Middle Eastern extraction hanging around during working hours looking like they had nothing to do. Now, I am not going to besmirch their characters, as I do not know their life stories, but surely it would be better for society if these men were working rather than standing idly around?

I also suspect that the Danish policy will reduce crime, and particularly petty crime. Indeed, if you look at crime statistics across Europe, you find that migrants are disproportionately arrested and charged. Take Denmark, as an example, where immigrants make up 10% of the population, yet commit 16% of crime. I would argue that, if they were put to work, then those statistics would fall, for, as the saying goes, “the devil makes work for idle hands to do.”   

Then there’s the moral aspect. I have never liked the fact that people can take from a society without ever putting in first. It has always seemed unfair to me that those who have just arrived can get as much out of the welfare system as pensioners who have paid tax all their lives. This new Danish policy, I believe, will go some way to righting this wrong. 

Denmark has taken a tough stance on immigration and asylum issues over the past few years, and the results are clear for all to see. In 2015, a massive 21,000 asylum seekers arrived in Denmark, yet, between January and July this year, it was a mere 851. 

The Danish parliament has also voted to process refugees in Africa rather than on Danish soil, and the country has the ambition of having zero asylum applications in the near future. So, in the space of five years, Denmark has been transformed from a soft-touch country into a nation of tough love.  

So, as you can guess, I heartily congratulate Denmark for this policy, and I wish other European countries and the UK would follow suit. But I won’t be holding my breath that it will happen anytime soon. The human rights lawyers and Labour politicians would be all over this in a flash. 

You see, unlike Denmark, the UK doesn’t seem able to control its own borders, and once you are here, it is your human right not to work and to access a welfare system that you have never paid into. So, while the UK’s immigration policy clearly stinks, there is definitely nothing rotten in the state of Denmark.

https://www.rt.com/op-ed/534474-denmark-migrants-work-welfare-payments/

Animals captured at their funniest

 

Some animals captured at their funniest


















https://edition.cnn.com/travel/article/comedy-wildlife-photography-awards-2021-scli-intl/index.html

Our World in Pictures: Week 36 of 2021

 

Our World in Pictures: Week 36 of 2021


 Workers lift the upper part of the statue at the Robert E. Lee Memorial during a removal September 8, 2021 in Richmond, Virginia. The Commonwealth of Virginia is removing the largest Confederate statue remaining in the U.S. following authorization by all three branches of state government, including a unanimous decision by the Supreme Court of Virginia. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)


Black Lives Matter activists gather around the statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee the night before it is scheduled to be removed in Richmond, Virginia, USA, 07 September 2021. Erected more than 130 years ago, it is the largest confederate statue in the US. EPA-EFE/JIM LO SCALZO
Aerial view of the pedestal where the statue of Christopher Columbus Statue was placed at Paseo de la Reforma avenue on September 07, 2021 in Mexico City, Mexico. (Photo by Hector Vivas/Getty Images)
In an aerial view, workers dismantle a 58-meter-high statue of Guan Gong weighing more than 1,200 tons on September 7, 2021 in Jingzhou, Hubei Province, China. (Photo by Getty Images)
A handout satellite image made available by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) of typhoon Chanthu as it churned the Philippine Sea, 09 September 2021 (issued 10 September 2021). EPA-EFE/NASA HANDOUT
Citizens use umbrellas amid rainfall caused by typhoon Conson as they cross a bridge in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines 08 September 2021. EPA-EFE/ROLEX DELA PENA
Villagers ride a backhoe on a flooded road in Cavite city, Philippines, 08 September 2021. Typhoon Conson made landfall in the eastern Philippines causing power outages, floods, and damage to properties from its winds that reached 120 km per hour. EPA-EFE/FRANCIS R. MALASIG
Villagers maneuver on a makeshift bridge at a flooded community brought by Typhoon Conson in Muntinlupa city, Metro Manila, Philippines, 10 September 2021.  EPA-EFE/FRANCIS R. MALASIG
A villager holding a baby maneuvers on a makeshift bridge at a flooded community brought by Typhoon Conson in Muntinlupa city, Metro Manila, Philippines, 10 September 2021. EPA-EFE/FRANCIS R. MALASIG
Cats sit on a makeshift bridge at a flooded community brought by Typhoon Conson in Muntinlupa city, Metro Manila, Philippines, 10 September 2021. According to reports, another Typhoon that threatens the Philippines after Typhoon Conson on September 08, brought devastation in the country. EPA-EFE/FRANCIS R. MALASIG
A train crossing railway tracks submerged in rainwater after monsoon rains in Lahore, Pakistan, 10 September 2021. According to Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD), the strong monsoon weather system giving rains in the country is likely to persist during the week. EPA-EFE/RAHAT DAR
Detail of two exposed bedrooms in a building of which part of the wall was knocked down after a magnitude 7.1 earthquake hit yesterday close to 9:00 pm on September 08, 2021 in Acapulco, Mexico.  (Photo by Raul Aguirre/Getty Images)
Inhabitants of suburbs affected by heavy rains remove debris from the mud, in the city of Tula, in Hidalgo state, Mexico, on 09 September 2021 (issued 10 September 2021). EPA-EFE/Jose Mendez
After a magnitude 7.1 earthquake hit on September 07, 2021 in Acapulco, Mexico. The epicenter was located 14 kilometers southeast of Acapulco and over 150 replicas followed through the night.  (Photo by Raul Aguirre/Getty Images)
A woman shows the damage to her home, today in a neighborhood in the municipality of Ecatepec, in the State of Mexico, Mexico, 08 September 2021. A 7.1 magnitude earthquake strongly shook southern and central Mexico, on 07 September leaving one person dead and minor material damage. EPA-EFE/Mario Guzman
Smoke rises as firemen and civilians try to extinguish a fire that broke out at a hospital for Covid-19 patients in Tetovo, Republic of North Macedonia, 08 September 2021. Multiple casualties have been reported by the Ministry of Health when a fire, thought to have been triggered by oxygen cylinders that provide oxygen to patients with a more severe clinical case of Covid-19, broke at the hospital. EPA-EFE/STRINGER
Flames are seen near to the Montesol urbanization in Estepona (Malaga), Spain, 09 September 2021. EPA-EFE/Antonio Paz
A woman wears a face mask as she worships Lord Shiva (Hindu god of creation and destruction) to mark the Teej festival amid the coronavirus pandemic fear in Kathmandu, Nepal, 09 September 2021. EPA-EFE/NARENDRA SHRESTHA
An Indian artist prepares Lord Ganesha idols for sale at roadside shop ahead of Lord Ganesh Festival in New Delhi, India, 09 September 2021. EPA-EFE/RAJAT GUPTA
Njazo Moyo, a painter and cultural artist walks the streets of Braamfisherville dressed in traditional attire on September 04, 2021 in Soweto, South Africa. (Photo by Gallo Images/City Press/Tebogo Letsie)
The humanitarian project ‘The Walk’ arrives in the alleys of the ancient center of Naples, Italy, 08 September 2021, bringing the gigant puppet Amal, symbolizing a Syrian refugee girl and created by famous Handspring Puppet Company, to numerous European cities. EPA-EFE/CIRO FUSCO
German Chancellor Angela Merkel looks at the painting ‘Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window’ as she attends the opening of the exhibition on the Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer in Germany ‘Johannes Vermeer. On Reflection’ at the Old Masters Picture Gallery of the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden (SKD), in Dresden, Germany, 09 September 2021. EPA-EFE/Jens Schlueter
A view of the sculptures project ‘Travellers/Les Voyageurs’ by French artist Cedric Le Borgneat as part of the contemporary culture forum ‘White Night’ in Riga, Latvia, 09 September 2021. EPA-EFE/TOMS KALNINS
Birmingham 2022 National Ticket Ballot Launch – The National Ballot is now open for next year’s Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games on September 07, 2021 in Birmingham, England. (Photo by Eamonn M. McCormack/Getty Images for Birmingham 2022 )
Volunteer Anre Bouguenon (L) cares for one of the 300 parrots at the Brainy Birds Parrot rescue and rehabilitation center in Johannesburg, South Africa, 08 September 2021 (issued 09 September 2021). EPA-EFE/KIM LUDBROOK
Despite being officially canceled due again this year to coronavirus concerns, a scaled-down version of the West Indian Day Parade moves down Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn on September 06, 2021 in New York City.  (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Iris Apfel sits for a portrait during her 100th Birthday Party at Central Park Tower on September 09, 2021 in New York City. (Photo by Noam Galai/Getty Images for Central Park Tower)
Jessica Chastain and Oscar Isaac attend the red carpet of the movie “Scenes From a Marriage (Ep. 1 and 2)” during the 78th Venice International Film Festival on September 04, 2021 in Venice, Italy. (Photo by Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images)
Visitors gather to look at the Dom Cathedral that is bathed in an artistic light mural during the Festival of Lights on September 08, 2021 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
The Mercedes-Benz Vision AVTR concept vehicle at the IAA Munich Motor Show in Munich, Germany, on Monday, Sept. 6, 2021. The IAA, taking place in Munich for the first time, is the first in-person major European car show since the Coronavirus pandemic started. Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg via Getty Images

A warm thank you to Kim McCarthy from Getty Images for her help in creating this gallery of images. DM/ M


https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2021-09-10-our-world-in-pictures-week-36-of-2021/

Slow-Cooker Thai Butternut Squash Peanut Soup


Slow-Cooker Thai Butternut Squash Peanut Soup

 

This seemingly exotic dish is simple, vegan, healthy and hearty. The peanut butter blends beautifully with the sweetness of the squash and Thai seasonings. You can also serve this soup without pureeing it first.


Ingredients

  • 3 cups cubed peeled butternut squash
  • 1 can (13.66 ounces) light coconut milk
  • 1 medium sweet red pepper, finely chopped
  • 1 medium onion, finely chopped
  • 1 cup vegetable stock
  • 1/2 cup chunky peanut butter
  • 3 tablespoons lime juice
  • 2 tablespoons red curry paste
  • 4 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1 tablespoon reduced-sodium 
  • soy sauce
  • 1 teaspoon minced fresh gingerroot
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon pepper
  • Optional: Chopped fresh cilantro
  • and chopped salted peanuts

Directions

  • In a 4- or 5-qt. slow cooker, combine the first 13 ingredients. Cook, covered, on low until squash is tender, 5-6 hours.
  • Puree soup using an immersion blender, or cool slightly and puree soup in batches in a blender. Return to slow cooker and heat through. If desired, garnish with cilantro and peanuts.

Nutrition Facts
3/4 cup: 181 calories, 12g fat (4g saturated fat), 0 cholesterol, 470mg sodium, 16g carbohydrate (5g sugars, 3g fiber), 5g protein. 

https://www.tasteofhome.com/recipes