![]() 12/16/2015 at 18:07 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
It’s a good day when I get to submit a final project with this on the cover.
One more paper and I’m done for the semester... anyone know of a way to sneak excuses for pictures of a 930 into an analysis of Syrian refugees’ economic and social effects on host countries?
![]() 12/16/2015 at 18:16 |
|
Um... not spending any money to deal with refugees frees up more money for 930s? Or refugees who work hard in their host countries could eventually buy a 930?
![]() 12/16/2015 at 18:30 |
|
They dont have 930s in syria so they are evil and will only destroy us from the inside and our souls will dry up like dusty raisins.
![]() 12/16/2015 at 18:36 |
|
“Japan, a country that has refused to open its borders to refugees of the ongoing conflict, currently has a working age population that puts its purchasing power to questionable, potentially detrimental use, doing less to advance icons of valuable historical significance and instead supporting a socially damaging counter-culture movement [Figure 1]. As newly settled refugees become properly integrated into the host economy, their new disposable income will tend to be put toward purchases which bolster more culturally-aware versions of expression, providing an excellent basis for building strong social ties with the host society [Figure 2].”
Figure 1: Detrimental use of economic resources
Figure 2: Socially and personally engaging use of income