Friday, 28 December 2012

Germany's new masterplan

I certainly hope David Cameron doesn't get wind of this as I suspect it is something that would appeal to his "caring" nature.

In fact I don't know why he hasn't already thought of deporting the elderly himself because there are only so many spaces available on his NHS care pathways (a dying person still occupies a bed) and he'll need something to do with the surplus.

Apparently researchers have found that an estimated 7,146 German pensioners are living in retirement homes in Hungary in 2011.

More than 3,000 were in the Czech Republic and more than 600 in Slovakia. There were also unknown numbers in Spain, Greece and the Ukraine, as well as Thailand and the Philippines.

They cannot afford the cost of retirement in Germany - a situation which also applies to pensioners in this country thanks to Cameron and his cronies.

It also seems that it is not only politicians in this country who are incapable of simple mathematics and logic.

Artur Frank, the owner of Senior Palace – which finds care homes for Germans in Slovakia – said:
It was wrong to suggest senior citizens were being ‘deported’.

Many are here of their own free will, the results of sensible decisions by their families who know they will be better off
Well when I was at school:
All - many = some
Therefore some Germans are not abroad of their own free will
And if not of their own free will then what? I can maybe understand going to Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia because the beer is strong and cheap and the girls are extremely pretty. I can also understand Spain and Greece because of the weather. Maybe also Thailand and the Philipines for the warm climate although the food is abominable.

But who on earth would "voluntarily" go to the Ukraine? That sounds far more like being put on a train with a suitcase and prevented from getting off before your allotted destination.

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