Iamnothere000
Veteran
★★★★
- Joined
- Nov 13, 2019
- Posts
- 1,303
Dear refugees,
I know it must be a life changing and horrifying experience to flee your home country, I really do.
Cruel regimes and brutal terrorists persecute you just for your faith, your ethnicity or your nationality. If you, and you family, do not leave immediately, you will likely become the victim of incarceration, torture or massacre.
Under such circumstances it is only natural that you seek safety in more stable and peaceful countries.
Therefore it pains me immeasurable to tell you:
You are just not entitled to seek safety in another country.
Please don’t misunderstand me: Of course you deserve a life free from fear, persecution and terror. Everybody does.
But you are just not entitled to have that life within any specific country. You have to gain the consent of the corresponding government first.
If you don’t understand that, please educate yourself on the concept of Consent. It’s very important.
Here are a few tips that will help to increase your chances of gaining the right to enter another country consensually:
Learn useful skills and gain an education that will make you attractive to the society you want to enter. No one likes a leech. Be better. Also, learn the local language(s) flawlessly before you ask for entrance. That will surely make a good impression.
Increase the reputation of your fellow refugees by policing and rebuking them if necessary. Horrible things have happened already and every nation has the right to be suspicious of you.
Accept that different country may have different cultural preferences. Some nations just don’t have a preference for Arabs or Africans. And that is ok. There is no use in shaming them with accusations of “racism”, in fact it will only have the opposite effect. You will be seen as entitled and no society likes that.
Don’t be aggressive. You might be desperate and fearing for the safety of your family. But that does not give you the right to literally overstep our borders. Be GENUINELY nice and you might get a chance.
Never force your way in. It does not matter how much you think you are in the right, nations have the right and ability to defend themselves. Never forget that. No one is obligate to take care of your creepy ass.
Lastly, and that is the hardest part, learn to accept rejections. Life is not fair and everyone has to play the cards that have been dealt.
So, in conclusion, if you want safety and peace within a foreign country, you have to WORK FOR IT! It’s not so difficult really. I personally know many former refugees who have made it. It is definitely possible.
Thanks for coming to my ted talk
!!!Refugees welcome!!!
I know it must be a life changing and horrifying experience to flee your home country, I really do.
Cruel regimes and brutal terrorists persecute you just for your faith, your ethnicity or your nationality. If you, and you family, do not leave immediately, you will likely become the victim of incarceration, torture or massacre.
Under such circumstances it is only natural that you seek safety in more stable and peaceful countries.
Therefore it pains me immeasurable to tell you:
You are just not entitled to seek safety in another country.
Please don’t misunderstand me: Of course you deserve a life free from fear, persecution and terror. Everybody does.
But you are just not entitled to have that life within any specific country. You have to gain the consent of the corresponding government first.
If you don’t understand that, please educate yourself on the concept of Consent. It’s very important.
Here are a few tips that will help to increase your chances of gaining the right to enter another country consensually:
Learn useful skills and gain an education that will make you attractive to the society you want to enter. No one likes a leech. Be better. Also, learn the local language(s) flawlessly before you ask for entrance. That will surely make a good impression.
Increase the reputation of your fellow refugees by policing and rebuking them if necessary. Horrible things have happened already and every nation has the right to be suspicious of you.
Accept that different country may have different cultural preferences. Some nations just don’t have a preference for Arabs or Africans. And that is ok. There is no use in shaming them with accusations of “racism”, in fact it will only have the opposite effect. You will be seen as entitled and no society likes that.
Don’t be aggressive. You might be desperate and fearing for the safety of your family. But that does not give you the right to literally overstep our borders. Be GENUINELY nice and you might get a chance.
Never force your way in. It does not matter how much you think you are in the right, nations have the right and ability to defend themselves. Never forget that. No one is obligate to take care of your creepy ass.
Lastly, and that is the hardest part, learn to accept rejections. Life is not fair and everyone has to play the cards that have been dealt.
So, in conclusion, if you want safety and peace within a foreign country, you have to WORK FOR IT! It’s not so difficult really. I personally know many former refugees who have made it. It is definitely possible.
Thanks for coming to my ted talk
!!!Refugees welcome!!!