Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Outsourcing

Vyrde Lesar.

Et verktøy for oss avislesere ?




I er det noen med xtra store forventninger. La oss se om de innfris ! Lettest blir det å spørre barna : Hvilken mat fikk dere i dag da ?

Og svaret blir kjøttkaker, lapskaus, fersk suppe, fiskeboller i hvit saus, bankekjøtt, svinestek med surkål, fiskegrateng, lettsalata torsk, kokt laks ... så er løftene innfridd.

Om det blir "Et eple" eller "en gulrot" så må man forklare hvorfor politikerer er noen løgnhalser, og at løgnhalser vil vi ikke at folk skal være så poden får finne seg et annet yrke. Sånn som Espen Lie ?

Vi må nå flytte vårt landbruk til Afrika. Jobbene i landbruket er innsourcet til østeuropeeere og asiater, så da drives det av "fremmede" hender uansett.

Det er 100tusner unge uten framtid i Algeri og i Tunis og i (det er 53 land i Afrika), og om man synes det er trist med opptøier i Frankrike, så har man noe å se fram til når millioner av unge uten framtidsutsiker xploderer i Afrika. En verdensdel så mishandlet og som skriker etter arbeid og utvikling, fortjener hjelp. Fortjener handel, fortjener respekt og å gi u-hjelp er ikke å vise respekt.

Den Europeiske matindustri, kønn og kuer, må flyttes til Afrika. Norsk Hydro har kommet lenger, de har flyttet alminiumsproduksjonen til Quatar, så da slipper man langreist råstoff (bauxitt).

Har du lest om Kong Leopold, den belgiske massemorder ?

og dette, dette er intet verktøy for Afrika ?



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MADRID, March 18 — Spain's deputy prime minister began an emergency visit to the Canary Islands on Saturday to discuss ways to control a record flow of African migrants arriving in boats from Mauritania that has led to at least 25 deaths in the last week.

The Spanish government says more than 1,000 migrants have been detained at sea in the last 10 days while trying to reach the islands from Mauritania on North Africa's western coast, a voyage of 500 miles.

The migrants, mostly sub-Saharan Africans, crowd into boats carrying dozens of passengers in hopes of reaching the islands and thereby gaining entry to the European Union.

The detentions have overwhelmed government and Red Cross officials on the islands, prompting them to ask residents to provide clothes and mattresses and to ask Spanish and European Union authorities for help.

"We've never seen anything like this," said an official in the central government's offices on the islands, who followed Spanish protocol by requesting anonymity to avoid upstaging his superiors.

The government of Mauritania has said that without aid from abroad it is practically helpless against the vast numbers of migrants who are collecting within its borders in hopes of going to the islands.

Before traveling to the islands on Saturday, Spain's deputy prime minister, María Teresa Fernández de la Vega, said the Spanish government would do all it could to help stem the flow of migrants and to help care for those who had been detained, many of whom arrive malnourished, dehydrated and in serious need of medical attention.

Juan Antonio Corujo Machín, a Red Cross official on the islands, said, "Most of them are completely disoriented when they arrive."

The Canary Islands, which are 70 miles off Morocco's southwestern coast, have been drawing boatloads of illegal migrants since 1995. They became a particularly popular destination in 2002, when close monitoring at the Strait of Gibraltar persuaded many migrants to look for an alternative route to Spain.

Immigration to the islands slowed over the last couple of years, partly because of a crackdown by Moroccan authorities.

In 2005, more than 4,700 migrants were detained while trying to reach the Canary Islands, down from 8,500 the year before, according to figures from the Spanish government.

The trend appears to be reversing itself this year, however. After less than three months, the number of detentions has already surpassed 3,500.

According to Spanish officials, the resurgence suggests that the Moroccan crackdown has been less effective than previously thought, because the migrants have responded by pushing their departure point south to Mauritania.

The change can add hundreds of miles to the journey, increasing the chances that the boats will wander off course, capsize or otherwise be lost at sea.

Even for migrants who are relatively well prepared, the journey can be hazardous.

All of the 25 bodies found off the coast of Mauritania this week were wearing life jackets, and one had a Global Positioning System navigator, the Spanish government said. The majority of the migrants appear to be departing from Nuadibu, in the north of Mauritania, Spanish officials said. Mauritania has estimated that more than 10,000 potential migrants have gathered in the city in hopes of reaching Spain.

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se forøvrig Folk og Forsvar

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Roger Larsen

Ps : De RødGrønne lover oss at kollektivtransport blir like viktig som vei. Bra, da tar de et tak med egne filer for kollektivtransporten i tettbygde strøk, og sørger for godt med parkeringsplasser ved langpendlernes ruter. Dvs xpressbussene, jernbanestasjonenen, billigere parkering ved flyplassene .... etc etc .

Pss. Skattedirektoratet får ikke lov til å sette ut vasken på anbud. Den handlekraftige RødGrønne regjering legger ned forbud, da de mener at vask er noe Skattedriektoratet kan mye om, bør drive med og er en naturlig del av skattedirektoratets daglige virke. Da kan renholderne gå på momskurs å greier, mens kursa om renhold (holdt av ISS) kan jo andre gå på (og så er det jo bare skattepenger som brukes allikevel!!).

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