Ok. Let's go with the first one.
- Europe has an aging, dwindling population. If it weren't for immigration, that would've been a very, very serious problem by now.
Wrong twice.
1) It is needed to stop population from dwindling, not increase it
2) The age issue (number of old vs number of young) remains
Wrong again. They're moving because there isn't enough resources.It also frees up resources in the countries the migrants left behind, potentially sustaining or even increasing the already high population growth there; in sum pushing the Earth even closer to its global population capacity.
All European countries suffer from that problem. Migrations within Europe won't change that.For most or all of Western Europe, inter-European migration is more than enough; if we are at all to believe in its "necessity". Many non-Western immigrants are also often poorly qualified for quite a few jobs where workers are needed.
Refugees from war zone should have precedence over economic migrants who can be put on hold for a few years.There is not much of a reason to assume that the immigration will drop dramatically in the future. It might even rise, if certain countries see a rise in living standards.
It's short term vs. long term security.In return, those who are recruited don't have go much further than outside their own houses to the bidding of the terrorist entities; like in Paris recently.
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