Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
August 10, 2016
French racists ejecting incoming tech workers.
Tens of thousands of Africans continue to pour into Italy, with the intent of getting jobs in the European tech industry.
None of them want to live in Italy, of course. They’re not fashion designers, people – they’re tech experts (some of them may also be fashion designers).
Italy fears “another Calais” on its border with France as desperate migrants and refugees are thwarted in their bid to cross the frontier and reach northern Europe.
Tighter border controls by the French authorities have created a bottleneck around the Italian town of Ventimiglia, just a few miles from the French border.
The Italians are trying to transfer migrants and refugees to reception centres in other parts of the country in order to prevent the development of ramshackle camps such as the notorious ‘Jungle’ in Calais and the tent village that sprung up earlier this year at Idomeni, along the border between Greece and Macedonia.
You can’t stop it.
Why would you even try?
These pension-paying tech workers will riot if you try to remove them from their shanty town or try to prevent them from building a shanty town. They will burn everything.
“Our border with France will not become another Calais,” Angelino Alfano, the Italian interior minister, told La Repubblica newspaper.
There is increasing frustration among the refugees and migrants stuck at the border, many of whom are living in charity-run centres where they are provided with basic shelter and food and drink. Others are living on rocky shoals on the Italian side of the frontier, hoping for an opportunity to make a clandestine crossing.
Hundreds of migrants are also stranded on Italy’s border with Switzerland, where they had hoped to claim asylum.
Blocked from crossing the frontier by the Italian authorities, around 400 are camping out in a park in the lakeside town of Como, which traditionally attracts well-heeled visitors during the summer months, most notably George Clooney and his British human rights lawyer wife, Amal.
Mario Lucini, Como’s mayor, yesterday[tue] said the situation was becoming “worrying”.
But the refugees and migrants are determined to do all they can to cross the border.
Many are in search of relatives already living in northern Europe.
“I had a small shop in Addis Ababa but I had to flee with my wife and three children,” Ahmed, an Ethiopian man, said.
“In Ethiopia they throw you into prison for no reason, they confiscate land from farmers and sell it to foreigners, we could not stay. It took us months and months to get here. We are refugees, the Swiss will help us.”
Yes.
Yes, I’m sure they will.
After all, that is the purpose of Switzerland: helping you and your family, because your country is poor.