MuscleMeat

EU/VK & NAVO

Bezoekers in dit topic

Met een stuk in je broek blijf je ook beter thuis, Jean.
 
[Link niet meer beschikbaar]

Bill Gates warns Germany's open door policy to migrants will overwhelm Europe. Will Europe take note, now it's coming from him?
 
De winnaar van 2002...

:orly:
 
Laatst bewerkt:
De een nog gekker dan de ander als ik het lijstje zo bekijk. En altijd weer die Kissinger.
 
Wat is de link tussen Kareltje en de EU?

:scratch:
 
  • 2002
    23px-Flag_of_Europe.svg.png
    The Euro
:roflol:
 
Gates zit er trouwens naast. Het is niet will overwhelm maar has overwhelmed. :)
 
De Block: ‘Wachtlijsten kunnen eindelijk naar beneden’

Daar is ze weer met haar 140 extra opvangplaatsen waar ze al 3 jaar over praat. Toevallig telkens als ze onder vuur ligt en niemand die even fijntjes opmerkt dat extra crisisbedden bij dezelfde totale capaciteit net voor langere wachtlijsten zullen zorgen.

Slap gelul over die foute financiering voor kinderpsychiatrie. Enveloppes worden verdeeld volgens erkenningscodes en maandelijks moeten de bezettingscijfers doorgestuurd worden naar de overheid. Men weet daar perfect wie waar hoe lang verblijft en op welke manier er gewerkt wordt.

Nog slapper gelul dat nachtopvang voor een dubbele werkingskost zorgt in vergelijking met een dagcentrum. Tijdens de avond en nacht zijn er géén speciale functies aanwezig zoals ergo, logo, therapeut... die de kosten omhoog jagen. 's Nachts is er welgeteld één opvoeder in de leefgroep, 's avonds 2 en verder niemand. Die maken echt het verschil niet. Blockie liegt dat ze zwart ziet.

Zo :)
 
Illegale migranten uit Afrika en het Midden-Oosten verspreiden besmettelijke en dodelijke ziekten.

[Link niet meer beschikbaar]

  • A new report by the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), the federal government's central institution for monitoring and preventing diseases, confirms an across-the-board increase in disease since 2015, when Germany took in an unprecedented number of migrants. RKI - Infektionsepidemiologisches Jahrbuch - 2016

  • Some doctors say the actual number of cases of tuberculosis is far higher than the official figures suggest and have accused the RKI of downplaying the threat in an effort to avoid fueling anti-immigration sentiments.
  • In an interview with Focus, Carsten Boos, an orthopedic surgeon, warned that German authorities have lost track of hundreds of thousands of migrants who may be infected. He added that 40% of all tuberculosis pathogens are multidrug-resistant and therefore inherently dangerous to the general population:

    "When asylum seekers come from countries with a high risk for tuberculosis infections, the RKI, as the highest German body for infection protection, should not downplay the danger. Is a federal institute using political correctness to conceal the unpleasant reality?

    "The media reports that in 2015, the federal police registered about 1.1 million refugees. Around 700,000 to 800,000 applications for asylum were submitted and 300,000 refugees have disappeared. Have they been checked? Do they come from the high risk countries?

    "One has the impression that in the RKI the left hand does not know what the right one is doing."

  • The German Society for Gastroenterology, Digestive and Metabolic Diseases recently held a five-day symposium in Hamburg to help medical practitioners diagnose diseases which are rarely seen in Germany. Those include:
    • Louse-borne relapsing fever (LBRF): During the past two years, at least 48 people in Germany were diagnosed with LBRF, a disease that was unheard of in the country before the migration crisis in 2015, according to the RKI report. The disease, which is transmitted by clothing lice, has been prevalent among migrants from East Africa who have been travelling for months to reach Germany on a single set of clothes. "We had all forgotten about LBRF," said Hans Jäger, a Munich-based doctor. "It has a mortality rate of up to 40% if it is not recognized and not treated with antibiotics. The symptoms are like in malaria: fever, headache, skin rash."

    • Lassa fever: In February 2016, a patient who had been infected in Togo, West Africa, was treated and died in Germany. After his death, a Lassa virus infection was confirmed in another person who had professional contact with the corpse of the deceased. The person was treated at an isolation facility and survived the disease. This was the first documented transmission of the Lassa virus in Germany.

    • Dengue fever: Nearly a thousand people were diagnosed with dengue fever, a mosquito-borne tropical disease, in Germany during 2016. This is up 25% from 2014, when 755 people were diagnosed with the disease.

    • Malaria: The number of people diagnosed with malaria jumped sharply in 2014 (1,007) and 2015 (1,063), but declined slightly in 2016 (970). Most of those affected contracted the disease in Africa, particularly from Cameroon, Ghana, Nigeria and Togo.

    • Echinococcosis: Between 2014 and 2016, more than 200 people in Germany have been diagnosed with echinococcosis, a tapeworm infection. This represents in an increase of around 30%. Those affected contracted the disease in Afghanistan, Bulgaria, Greece, Kosovo, Iraq, Macedonia, Morocco, Syria and Turkey.

    • Diphtheria: Between 2014 and 2016, more than 30 people in Germany have been diagnosed with diphtheria. Those affected contracted the disease in Ethiopia, Eritrea, Libya, Sri Lanka and Thailand.

    • Scabies: Between 2013 and 2016, the number of people diagnosed with scabies in North Rhine-Westphalia jumped by nearly 3,000%.
  • The incidence of Hepatitis B, for example, has increased by 300% during the last three years, according to the RKI. The number of reported cases in Germany was 3,006 in 2016, up from 755 cases in 2014. Most of the cases are said to involve unvaccinated migrants from Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria. The incidence of measles in Germany jumped by more than 450% between 2014 and 2015, while the number of cases of chicken pox, meningitis, mumps, rubella and whooping cough were also up. Migrants also accounted for at least 40% of the new cases of HIV/AIDS identified in Germany since 2015, according to a separate RKI report.

    The RKI statistics may be just the tip of the iceberg. The number of reported cases of tuberculosis, for example, was 5,915 in 2016, up from 4,488 cases in 2014, an increase of more than 30% during that period. Some doctors, however, believe that the actual number of cases of tuberculosis is far higher and have accused the RKI of downplaying the threat in an effort to avoid fueling anti-immigration sentiments.

  • Marc Schreiner, director of international relations for the German Hospital Federation (Deutschen Krankenhausgesellschaft), echoed Melter's concerns:

    "In the clinics, it is becoming increasingly common to see patients with diseases that were considered to have been eradicated in Germany, such as scabies. These diseases must reliably be diagnosed, which is a challenge."



    SqVDmga.gif
 
You're about to be culturally enriched!
KA6o1mvh.jpg
 
Zien er me allemaal hoogopgeleiden uit. Goed voor onze economie ook.
Ja jongen; de apotheken en ziekenhuizen zullen spoedig worden verrijkt. Alleen niet als werknemer zoals werd beloofd maar als patiënt.
 
Ja jongen; de apotheken en ziekenhuizen zullen spoedig worden verrijkt. Alleen niet als werknemer zoals werd beloofd maar als patiënt.

het aantal permanente leefloners zal ook wel versterkt worden.
 
Back
Naar boven