No word yet on when rich Middle East nations will open their borders to refugees.
don't have to live like a refugee
European voters are boosting anti-immigrant political parties and governments are closing their gates to new arrivals. The refrain of Europe's migrant crisis has changed from "welcome" to "enough already."
Worried about their own weak economies, concerned that their national values are eroding, many say war in the Middle East and poverty in Africa are someone else's responsibility.
Then, the refugees kept coming, along with economic migrants from Senegal, people fleeing repression in Sudan, and many, many others. Amid the swelling tide was a handful of violent extremists, who found common cause with angry young men whose families arrived a generation earlier.
Now, resentment of the open-arms approach is driving support for a German nationalist party that made gains Sunday in three state elections [FONT=Helvetica Neue, HelveticaNeue, helvetica, arial, sans-serif]Paris was attacked. Women were assaulted in Cologne. Attitudes shifted, creating a turning point in the crisis that has dominated Europe for the past year and will define its immediate future. [/FONT]
don't have to live like a refugee