terça-feira, 16 de junho de 2026

Meio-caminho andado para a criminalidade e a constituição de gangues

 

 

"Immigration should only be allowed for people with the same values and culture as the people of the country they are immigrating to—the Judeo-Christian culture and the values of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The result of importing people wiht values that are opposite of our values - like the muslims - will produce "no-go zones", islamic guettos and racially-based organized crime, like in Rotherham. 
The disastrous immigration that António Costa generated will have very negative consequences in the short term. These more than 80% of students of immigrant origin who failed the 9th-grade exam are the breeding ground for future criminals and gangs as they fall behind in the education system.
Identical phenomena occur in schools across Europe, where immigrants are not only close to the majority but also become a criminalized group against whom the authorities do little or nothing, out of fear of being labeled as racist.
However, the available statistics do not compare percentages of immigrants and percentages of school violence. 
Three examples have some indications about what is the situation on Germany, Vienna and Stockholm.

--------------------------------- 

(1) Germany: Nationwide Surge and Knife Crime Focus

Germany has experienced a highly publicized escalation in school-based crime.

    Surge in Cases: Government tracking indicates that violent crimes at German schools rose by nearly 40% between 2022 and 2024, reaching roughly 29,000 cases before scaling up to 35,570 recorded violent incidents annually. This equates to nearly 100 cases per day across the federal states.

    Weapons and Knives: Over 740 of these crimes specifically involved knife attacks on or near school grounds. High-profile incidents—such as the severe stabbing of a 13-year-old student in Hamburg—have placed school security at the center of political debate. 

    Impact on Teachers: According to the representative Schulbarometer (School Barometer) survey, 47% of German teachers report persistent problems with physical and psychological violence among students at their institutions. Furthermore, cases of verbal and physical abuse targeted directly at educators have doubled over the last decade.

    (2) Vienna: Doubling of Incidents and National Intervention

The Austrian capital is grappling with a steep increase in classroom conflicts that has triggered federal policy overhauls.

    Doubling of Crime Data: Official police data reveals that reported violent crimes in Viennese schools more than doubled within a short period, jumping from roughly 300 to over 600 annually. This includes physical assaults, property damage, and localized cyber-bullying.

    Extreme Violence Anomaly: While localized secondary school violence in Vienna generally consists of fistfights and intimidation, the country was shaken by an extreme anomaly outside the capital—the devastating mass shooting in Graz.

    Mandatory Safeguards: In direct response to the spike in urban school violence, the Austrian Ministry of Education enacted a mandatory child protection concept across educational facilities to identify behavioral patterns early and enforce localized anti-violence projects.

    (3) Stockholm: Gang Recruitment and Age Threshold Debates

Unlike the broad statistical spikes seen in Germany and Austria, the focus in Stockholm centers heavily on the intersection of school environments and organized gang exploitation.

    Stable Baseline, Higher Stakes: Comprehensive studies by the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention (Brå) indicate that the baseline percentage of 15-year-olds experiencing regular schoolyard violence has remained relatively stable over a 15-year trajectory. However, the nature of the threat has intensified due to systemic gang trends.

    Criminal Age Adjustments: Stockholm and surrounding municipalities are grappling with criminal networks actively recruiting teenagers. Because minors under 15 face youth care homes rather than standard prosecution, Sweden’s center-right government drafted legislation to lower the age of criminal responsibility to 14.

    Extreme Measures: Precautionary school closures have filtered into the educational landscape. For example, regional authorities took the extreme step of temporarily closing 16 public and secondary schools following digital, localized threats of targeted school shootings

    ----------------------------------------------- 

    (1) Germany Across Berlin, 57.4% of all children under 18 have a migration background. In specific inner-city school districts like Berlin-Mitte and Neukölln, this proportion surges past 80% to 90%.

    (2) Vienna - 42% of students in schools of Vienna are immigrantsThe demographic transformation is heavily apparent in elementary and public middle schools, where Muslim students now make up roughly 41.2% of total enrollment. 

    (3) Stockholm - In Stockholm City, roughly 30% of primary and secondary students have a foreign background. However, Sweden's school-choice system means local segregation is high; some neighborhood schools exceed 85% foreign backgrounds, while others sit below 10%.

    Portugal - In 2015, the public education system recorded 42,878 students of foreign nationality. The number of foreign students skyrocketed by 283% in 2024. With this change, the number of foreign students reached 164,492—15% of the total number of students in the Portuguese education system."

     

     

Sem comentários:

Enviar um comentário

Meio-caminho andado para a criminalidade e a constituição de gangues

    "Immigration should only be allowed for people with the same values and culture as the people of the country they are immigrating t...