White Flight: Young Professionals Flock to Conservative, Mass Migration-Free Czech Republicby CHRIS TOMLINSONBreitbart Mar. 18, 2016 |
Report: Hamas Says Witkoff Promised to Lift Gaza Blockade in Exchange for Edan Alexander
Ben Shapiro, Mark Levin and Laura Loomer Warn of Foreign Influence... From Qatar
Eloy Adrian Camarillo, 17, Arrested in Shooting Death of Infowars Reporter Jamie White
NYT: Trump Ended War With Houthis After They Shot Down U.S. Drones, Nearly Hit Fighter Jets
'If Iran Abandons Its Nuclear Program, Will Israel Do The Same?': Israeli Spox Launches Into Tirade Over Pointed Question
![]() ![]() In a development that could be seen as amusingly ironic were it not for the backdrop of migrant crime, Czech news site Novinky reports Prague is seeing its own flood of migrants trying to find a safer home. Yet the influx is not Syrians or Iraqi, but rather German, British, French, and Spanish. Pravo Mario is one such person who says that his native Spain isn't what it used to be. "Not only do we have high unemployment, but at home it's no longer safe. We have our radicals and part of the country strives for independence," said the 25 year-old originally from Barcelona. "In this unpredictable climate Islamists who are here and elsewhere in Western Europe had studied for years, [gave the impression] they had integrated, and now unceremoniously sow death," Mario said. It was also the women of the Czech Republic that got his attention. The real estate broker said he fell madly in love with a Czech college student from eastern Bohemia who had been studying in Spain. "She came as an exchange student. We thought we'd stay in Spain, but after what's happening, we decided to go to Prague. It's safe there. You can meet a lot of people from different cultures," he said. He added that he thought it would be no problem for him to find a well-paying job in the Czech capital, unlike in Spain where youth unemployment sits at around 45 per cent. "You'll find all the major international corporations in Prague," he explained, "banks are always looking for young people to hire for interesting positions." Read More |