Oct. 2nd, 2020

minsk007: (Default)


Продолжаю восточный цыкл :)
Пока пытливые умы на Западе изобретают компьютеры и роботов, пытливые умы на Востоке изобретают женщин-слоников.
Вот и ответ почему там не придумывают роботов - ведь заманаешься правильную конструкцию хобота продумывать, на робота уже не остаётся ни времени, ни сил...
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minsk007: (Default)
И вот почему:

Поддержка free speach by Race/Gender, General social servey 2000-2016
White male 56 %
White female 47 %
Black male 39 %
Asian male 39 %
Asian female 32 %
Black female 31 %
Hispanic male 31 %
Hispanic female 23 %
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Любо!

Oct. 2nd, 2020 07:22 pm
minsk007: (Default)
THU, SEP 17, 2020
Why Ukraine needs a new approach to refugees
If Ukraine were to invest more in refugee resettlement programs on the front-end, the country as a whole would inevitably benefit in the long run.
UNHCR, the UN’s refugee agency, reports that each year only about 100 individuals are granted protective status in Ukraine, while more than 6,000 individuals await a decision. The State Migration Service disputes this total, suggesting in 2019 that there were only 2,400 such individuals in the country.
The support services for refugees in Ukraine pale in comparison to those in countries like the US. American policymakers have largely continued bipartisan efforts to invest in these programs for decades. Advocates claim this is because they have proved time and again to be a low-cost, high-value investment for the country.
The reason for the broad bipartisan support in the US, excepting the current Presidential Administration, is because refugee programs are widely regarded as both a humanitarian and economic success. Refugees often fill labor gaps in their new home countries. In the long run, they pay more in taxes into the system than they receive during the initial resettlement period.
In a country like Ukraine, with its persistent labor shortages, this could be smart policy. But human rights advocates say that the barriers to integration go beyond the lack of public funding for social services. “One important step is to educate the public about refugees’ rights here in Ukraine. People are generally welcoming, and many businesses say they would be willing to hire a refugee, but they don’t understand the laws and they’re afraid they might be doing something wrong if they hire someone from, say, Afghanistan or Somalia, even if they have really valuable skills,” says Lukianenko.
In some countries, welcoming refugees and giving them a chance to succeed is widely regarded as a win-win. In Ukraine, it is likely that getting the public on-board is a necessary precursor to any viable progress.
https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/why-ukraine-needs-a-new-approach-to-refugees/
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