Ukrainians and beetles make a guide to reporting to Poles

magnapolonia.org 1 month ago

Preview improvement of a guide for Ukrainian citizens residing in Poland sounds innocent: to teach how to respond to “hate” and alleged acts of aggression. The problem is, in practice, it doesn't look like a safety campaign, it looks like an instruction for moneymakers. It is created with the participation of lawyers, experts and even Polish (?) justice and police. In another words, a abroad state and its citizens co-create a tool for their citizens to destruct indigenous people. It's both grotesque and dangerous.

Ukrainians and beetles form a guide to reporting on Poles. Ukrainian Ambassador Vasil Bodnar said that the key challenge for Poland is now the scale of Ukrainian presence in our country. More than 2 million people and the “internal pressure” exerted on Polish society. He is right: mass migration in the short word is not a average and neutral situation. It overburdens public services, destabilises the housing and labour marketplace and generates the costs that taxpayers bear.

The problem is something else. alternatively of limiting immigration and even encouraging any displaced people to return to their homeland, the ambassador proposes something else. He wants any criticism of this situation banned and prosecuted. The increasing reluctance of Poles to Ukrainians is expected to be the consequence of the political movement to the right and “anti-immigration rhetoric”. It's a classical reversal of meaning.

Opposition to overburdening the health, education or social benefits strategy is no "hate". This is an simple consequence to the real consequences of political decisions. If Poles ask who funds treatment, education and transfers for foreigners, it is not aggression — just a average debate about how the state works. alternatively of talking about the limits of solidarity, the ambassador builds a communicative in which Polish citizens are to be a threat and the incoming group requiring peculiar protection and instruction. He proposed writing a peculiar guide for Ukrainian informers and moneymakers.

The most worrying is that the guide is created in cooperation with the Polish judiciary and services. In practice, this means that 1 national group is privileged to access organization support. Polish citizens do not get any “helpers” to defend themselves against the effects of uncontrolled migration, how to respond to real conflicts of interest in the labour marketplace or in public services, yet – how to assert their rights in clashing with institutions. For this, foreigners are to receive instructions on how to respond effectively to any criticism — even the legitimate one.

This shows a wider problem: Poland from the host and assisting country becomes a space in which foreigners are systematically protected from social criticism, and citizens disciplined morally and intimidated by the description “talk of hate”. It is adequate that individual calls social tensions "xenophobia" and the subject disappears from the debate, although costs remain. This was precisely the way the Western states went, where the fear of being accused of racism paralyzed institutions — and it ended with real pathologies sweeping under the carpet.

This case shows how Poland is losing control of its own territory under Tusk. From the host country it becomes a space where foreigners are protected from social criticism, and Poles become a group that can be pursued for “hate”. Won't Poles shortly become victims of their own naivety, like the Native British? This is simply a question that we will not gotta wait besides long for. The war is about to end and Ukrainian veterans from the PTSD will come to us. By then it will be besides late to awaken Polish society.

If the state does not start to make its borders clear, will not regain control of migration policy and will not reconstruct the balance between guest rights and citizens' own rights, tensions will only increase. Money books won't solve this. This will only be solved by a fair policy: hard enforcement of the law against foreigners and the right of Poles to ask questions without labelling them as a threat to the utmost left-wing ideology of multi-kulti.

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