If the whole point of coming to Europe was fleeing tyranny and seeking asylum. And now that tyranny has been overthrown and its time to start the rebuilding of the nation. Then its up to you as a citizen of your nation to return and help build that nation up like Europe did after ww2. But if they say no we don't want to leave , then the question is were you using tyranny as a free ride to live of the hard working people of a prosperous nation ? And does that nation you migrated to have the right to protect itself from being used ?
I'm genuinely confused about this. My impression was that most Syrians who came to Europe from 2015 onwards were fleeing ISIS, not the Assad regime. If that's the case, then it doesn't seem right to deport them back to Syria given that the new government there are Islamists similar to ISIS. On the other hand, many Syrians in Germany at least (where I live) seem to support the new government, as I've seen them on the streets celebrating. If the new government on Syria does turn out to be hardline Islamist in nature, then it would be very unfair to deport Christians, Druze, gays and lesbians, moderate Muslims, atheists or even women back to such a country. It's all very complicated.
*An Arab man just attacked Magdeburg Christmas market, and we are debating if Syrians should stay*
Facts
@@MaximDL1410 No need to. No matter if you don´t like. If words are off no use we solve by other way 😁
If the whole point of coming to Europe was fleeing tyranny and seeking asylum. And now that tyranny has been overthrown and its time to start the rebuilding of the nation. Then its up to you as a citizen of your nation to return and help build that nation up like Europe did after ww2. But if they say no we don't want to leave , then the question is were you using tyranny as a free ride to live of the hard working people of a prosperous nation ? And does that nation you migrated to have the right to protect itself from being used ?
I'm genuinely confused about this. My impression was that most Syrians who came to Europe from 2015 onwards were fleeing ISIS, not the Assad regime. If that's the case, then it doesn't seem right to deport them back to Syria given that the new government there are Islamists similar to ISIS. On the other hand, many Syrians in Germany at least (where I live) seem to support the new government, as I've seen them on the streets celebrating. If the new government on Syria does turn out to be hardline Islamist in nature, then it would be very unfair to deport Christians, Druze, gays and lesbians, moderate Muslims, atheists or even women back to such a country. It's all very complicated.
the rebels are called HTS not ISIS
@@oussamaalaoui9121 But are they Islamists or not?
Free Europe of Islam. Yes its safe. Safe trip back.