Diego Carbonell | Well, it has been a while since I post something here!
As usual, Marc has this style that you could easily consider as arrogance, but that after a while living in Germany you start to find is a national feature, and almost a virtue: frontality. It takes a time, though, to understand that kind of discurse, and it can be even harder to catch with it than to learn German!
On some sense, Marc has more than a point: the whole idea of this great social system -a system I still believe should serve as a mirror for the world, and as one of the last real examples that liberalism and democracy may still be the best of options, though far from ideal- is based in the fact that we are now paying for a fair life to those who built the country in which we live now.
Also, I believe it may be a political mistake to go pressing on this "strictly money" approach, if at the same time we would like to push a "let us do our job" agenda. I think is not a good idea to start throwing numbers on how much we should receive and when, at least not now. If we are serious on fighting for our chance to work and live in the land in which our kids are growing (which is many a case), or in the land we are struggling hard to integrate to, or pick your case, then, we should not start talking beforehand of robbery, however unfair the situation may look like.
Even at risk of infuriating some of our colleagues here from India, guys, I must point that your size, numbers and undoubted skills are already freaky enough for the whole world; to push extra numbers on that direction would mean to add more timber to the wrong political pyre, in my opinion. A class action, a suit, whatever, based on such calculations is from my perspective a political suicide. Of course, if we finally get the boot out of here, then it will be a whole other league. But in this games, timing is all.
Having said that, Marc, let me point -again- that you forget always a big chunk of the picture:
-True, the system is based on pay now for the fair retirement of those who worked hard to build this country and this system. Therefore, if we are now paying, let us keep on doing so, and get to the end of the deal as well; that's the whole trick. Also, at this point, Germany cannot allow to lose any taxpayer. Not to mention potential fathers of new generations, something that Germans seem really reluctant to be. This is, too, a great part of the system. -This system was built by the efforts of generations, but also -and in a big part- by the generosity of the whole world. Debt forgiveness, huge investment AND the craftmanship and marvelous work capacity of the German nation made the miracle possible. Don't forget,though, about the other part of the deal, Marc. -and even more: this system is also the product of the basic hypocresy of the freemarket world. The CE, USA, Japan enjoy their position due to the biggest unfairness of them all. They push for free market, but protect themselves behind licenses, subventions and environment destruction somewhere else. Not to mention the debt policy into which the Third World is forced to fall.
Marc, believe me: very few will leave friends, family, and that thing difficult to define that is to "belong" to a place if the world was a fair place as a whole. On equal opportunities -why, even giving a good chunk of handicap- most of us will choose to stay where we were born. Which guy from India will leave the Monsoons, the best mangos, the cricket games, for this cold country, however beautiful it may be? Who of us, Southern guys, will leave the steaks, the sea, the easygoing life of our southamerican countries to come to this overstructured and often sad cities?
We are here because the world now works as a whole, and we go where we are payed to have a fair life, true. But Germany is a senior team member in that order of things that makes that for earning a decent living we must look somewhere and not at home.
Look at it as you want, Marc. Or you allow us to compete here, or you allow us to compete from there, but fairly.
You are lucky to be on the part of the world that still can choose on this matter.
Greetings to all,
Diego aka Sudaca. |