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   alt.survival      Discussing survivalism for end-times      131,158 messages   

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   Message 131,082 of 131,158   
   Person Familiar With the Matter to All   
   German government has wasted billions of   
   03 Dec 25 12:04:09   
   
   XPost: alt.politics.immigration   
   From: PFWTM@cumcast.net   
      
   Germany’s Globalist Regime Has Spent $14.2 Billion on ‘Asylum-Seeking   
   Minors’ Since 2015   
      
   In what critics on the populist right and left decry as a profound   
   betrayal of its working and middle-class citizens, Germany’s globalist   
   governments have been revealed to have shelled out billions of dollars   
   into supporting welfare-dependent asylum seekers and illegal migrants,   
   even as everyday Germans grapple with skyrocketing living costs,   
   crumbling infrastructure, and eroding public services.   
      
   Newly released figures, reported by German portal NIUS, underscore the   
   scale of the expenditure. Since 2015—the start of a decade marked by   
   large-scale migration to Europe and Germany from the Middle East and   
   Africa—unaccompanied minor asylum seekers have cost German taxpayers at   
   least €12.2 billion ($14.2 billion).   
      
   Nationalist-conservative lawmakers warn that the astonishing figure is   
   likely an undercount, with several federal states withholding or   
   providing incomplete data, hindering full transparency and oversight.   
      
   Over the past decade, nearly 190,000 such ‘minors’ have been registered,   
   with their care proving far costlier than for adults due to specialized   
   needs like housing, medical services, language courses, education, and   
   youth welfare. In some regions, annual costs per minor soar to nearly   
   €100,000 ($116,000), while even conservative estimates hover above   
   €80,000 ($93,000)—figures that have stunned taxpayers witnessing cuts   
   social programs that benefit actual citizens.   
      
   “This isn’t just about numbers; it’s about priorities,” said one   
   opposition lawmaker, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “While   
   pensioners and low-income families see their safety nets fray, the   
   government has essentially created a lavish parallel welfare system for   
   newcomers, leaving many Germans feeling abandoned.”   
      
   The bulk of these unaccompanied minors are teenage boys from places like   
   Afghanistan, Syria, and Iraq, comprising over 85% of arrivals in certain   
   states.   
      
   Compounding the financial strain is chain migration, where recognized   
   minors can sponsor family members, extending costs well beyond initial   
   outlays. State youth offices have expanded into vast networks reliant on   
   ongoing migrant inflows, sustaining taxpayer-funded jobs in sectors tied   
   to migration management.   
      
   AfD lawmaker René Springer blasted the situation, arguing that the   
   government’s failure to provide complete figures on unaccompanied minor   
   arrivals is “nothing short of a scandal.” He said taxpayers deserve full   
   transparency, especially when more than €12 billion has already been spent.   
      
   Springer also pointed to the unusually high number of minors claiming   
   birthdays on January 1st or December 31st, calling it a pattern that   
   “naturally raises questions about intentional misrepresentation.”   
      
   AfD co-leader Alice Weidel echoed the criticism in a post on X, warning   
   that the €12.2 billion price tag over nine years is “exorbitant” and   
   made worse by CDU-led states that offer no usable data. She urged an   
   immediate end to the “asylum chaos” to ease the growing financial   
   pressure on German taxpayers.   
      
   Data inconsistencies plague the system—and undermine its   
   credibility—even more, with some states delaying billing by two to three   
   years, complicating budgeting and accountability. Alternative for   
   Germany (AfD) officials have lambasted this opacity, demanding “full   
   clarity for taxpayers on these billions vanishing into the asylum   
   apparatus.”   
      
   For many working-class Germans, the contrast could not be more stark.   
   Families contend with soaring rent, rising cost of living, and limited   
   childcare, while schools, hospitals, and housing initiatives remain   
   overburdened by the never-ending stream of migration from the Third World.   
      
   “How can the government summon endless funds for migrants but claim   
   austerity for us?” asked Maria Schultz, a Berlin factory worker and   
   mother of two, echoing widespread sentiment that globalist elites are   
   completely out of touch with the economic realities of working people.   
      
   As public frustration mounts, costs escalate, and the political and   
   economic system becomes increasingly untenable, Germany stands at a   
   crossroads. Will leaders realign to safeguard the nation’s working and   
   middle classes, or persist on a path that risks further eroding trust   
   and stability? The debate intensifies, with calls for accountability   
   growing louder amid an ongoing reckoning over the true cost of compassion.   
      
   https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2025/12/germanys-globalist-regi   
   e-has-spent-14-2-billion/   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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