Source (Croatian): https://tribun.hr/dobri-ljudi-kako-njemacki-gradani-placaju-tude-hirove/
Copy/Paste:
"Good people" - how German citizens pay for other people's whims
November 4th 2023
We will all agree that good people help those who need help according to their capabilities. Today, therefore, we will talk about good people who helped the most needy with their own, not other people's, money, helped asylum seekers.
It is a story that takes us to Germany after the migrant crisis and the changes in the asylum laws and procedures there. In short, our story begins in 2017, and for the most part it will stay there.
The story actually begins in 2013, when the first legal changes took place. This is the period when Germany and other Western countries are trying to overthrow the legal Syrian government by helping the Islamists . As Germany supports the then "Syrian opposition", it brings changes to the asylum law. With these changes, she made it possible for Syrians in Germany to bring their families as well, on the condition that they provide financial guarantees for them.
In short, the law requires that those who bring Syrians guarantee with their own money that they will not be a burden to Germany. Since Syrians in Germany usually do not have enough money for a letter of guarantee, good people came forward and gave guarantees.
One of these good people was the psychiatrist Klaus-Dieter Grothe, who signed the letter of guarantee and persuaded about thirty other people to do the same. According to him, the Ministry of the Interior assured them that their financial obligations to the migrants for whom they have given a guarantee will end when they achieve asylum status.
It is about nice money, since the financial obligations of Klaus and Dieter and Grothe and others amounted to 28 thousand euros per year for a Syrian family of 4 members . In the meantime, Germany changed the regulations so that all those who signed the guarantee letters become practically life-long financiers of those Syrian families. Since Grothe and others do not want to fund the Syrian families they have given guarantees for life, they have decided to sue Germany. In short, as a final result, German citizens, not those who brought them to Germany, should fund migrants for life.
Another such German example is given to us by Christian Osterhaus, who sued Germany for the same reason. Regarding the lawsuit, he shows the journalists a payment slip for 7,239 euros, which should be paid for two people for whom he is a guarantor.
The third example we cite is Farid Hassan, who after 20 years of living in Germany decides to bring his parents and brothers. That's why he was their guarantor, so the state is "pursuing" him because of a debt of 85,000 euros that needs to be paid on the basis of the guarantee.
After the courts ruled that guarantors should continue to pay for migrants, the then government of Angela Merkel decided to "suspend the law". With this, in addition to Hassan, for example, she also saved an 80-year-old German who owed 80,000 euros.
In short, the obligations assumed by these good people are ultimately transferred to the backs of all German citizens, whether they want it or not. With this decision on suspension, they are also trying to "kill" and talk about how much asylum seekers really cost the countries that receive them.
All in all, there are differences between those few thousand good people and NGOs for migrants. The first were ready to spend their own money, let's say 10 thousand euros, for their beliefs, while the others never did such a thing. However, in reality there are no differences between the former and the latter, since they all expect ordinary citizens to finance the life of asylum seekers instead of those who originally brought them to Germany.
(post is archived)