Nuspliger 											(2014) gives a cursory overview of the debate on poverty-migration and on the feared 											predictions of mass migrations to Western Europe. He qualifies the images of right-wing 											conservatives who predict a strong west migration from Romania and Bulgaria in 											2014. Many residents of these countries migrated abroad in 2007 after the EU 											accession and did not wait for the unrestricted movement of persons. The 											statistics about the poverty-migration regularly treat seasonal workers and 											students as equivalent to real labour migrants and therefore create a distorted 											picture of migration movements. In addition it is observed that many would-be 											migrants go into countries with diaspora groups or related languages: “Against the backdrop of the northern 											European fears of a Romanian mass immigration it is remarkable that, according 											to Eurostat figures of 2012, over three quarters of exile Romanians have moved 											to Spain and Italy – for which there are also linguistic reasons. Half of 											relocated European Portuguese are living in France and three-quarters of the 											emigrants of Poland live in the UK and Germany, which attracted many immigrants 											from Eastern Europe before the end of the licensing restrictions in 2011.” 											Rroma are being disadvantaged as before. The funding provided by the EU is only 											insufficiently used. Additionally, Rroma slums in Western Europe are the evidence 											of the lack of integration of this ethnic group. In the debates on immigration, 											meanwhile, images of social abuse dominate the discourse, which is taken up 											readily by polemicists.
Lübberding 											(2014) discusses the TV program “Maybrit Illner” on the topic “poverty on the 											move: how much freedom of movement can we afford?” The participants of the 											discussion were the Bavarian interior minister Joachim Herrmann, the Green 											politician Cem Özdemir, the Councillor of Berlin-Neuköln Franziska Giffey, the 											head of the German police union  											Rainer Wendt, the Duisburger citizen Sabine Kessler and the Rrom Dzoni Sichelschmidt. They discussed the 											pro and cons of unrestricted migration in the European Union. Lübbering shares 											the opinion that most of the immigrants from Romania and Bulgaria are Rroma, 											although the ethnicity is not recorded in the statistics. He states that in the 											city of Duisburg, with around 500,000 inhabitants, the 10,000 new immigrants 											are of Rroma origin. Lübberding takes side with the critics of unrestricted 											migration in the European Union when making fun of the integration targets of 											the European Union. He claims that the Union lacks sense of practice: “The error of the Brussels bureaucracy is not 											in their ambitious plans, but in the ignorance of their ambitiousness. On 											power-point slides just everything looks better than in the neighbourhood of 											Mrs. Kessler.” On the other hand it is a positive aspect of European 											networking that the problem of Rroma integration has now become a pan-European 											issue and no longer just concerns the countries with significant Rroma 											populations. Additionally, Lübberding qualifies the dimensions of immigration, 											which are anything but dramatic. Compared with the 1.2 million refugees who 											have fled from the civil war in Syria to Lebanon, the immigration to Germany is 											very modest. Dzoni Sichelschmidt emphasised the important fact that the Rroma 											have emerged in large part as losers from the events of 1989: the hostility 											towards them has risen. This circumstance is often neglected in Western Europe 											(compare ZDF 2014).
In 											debate about immigration, Kelec (2014) takes a right-wing conservative position. 											Additionally, with respect to Rroma, she present cultural arguments. She sees 											an unrestricted immigration as a failed policy of ignorance. Kelec accuses the 											left parties of downplaying the problems of reality and accusing right-wing 											populism of being responsible for everything. The Christian Democrats are 											supposed to insist stubbornly on their values. On Rroma she pretentiously 											claims: “The children of Sinti and Roma 											are left alone, in the Clans, medieval conditions often prevail [ … ]. Roma 											children are sent by their parents and clan chiefs to beg or work on the street 											– they are supposed to be in school. They also have an EU-wide right to 											childhood and education. In Roma families child-marriages and forced marriage 											is common – the right to independence and integrity must also apply for young 											girls and women. There can be no tradition of being above the constitution, 											even if some believe that medieval manners as “culture” are worthy of 											protection.” With these unwise generalizations Kelec discredits herself. She 											represents traditions and media cases as if they were deadlocked and universal. 											Her remarks are racist and offensive to a majority of the Rroma who do not 											follow these practices. Kelec reproduces uncritically polemical ideas about 											backwardness and exploitation that have nothing to do with the identity of the 											Rroma. Accusing Rroma living in poverty of their poverty as a crime is arrogant 											and stupid. Criticism of the traditions, which are no traditions, is no 											intelligent criticism.
Teigeler 											(2013) points out the important fact that the debate about unrestricted migration 											in the European Union is dominated by fears and irrational predictions. Before 											Poland’s accession to the Schengen area there were similar fears of a mass 											migration, which turned out to be unfounded. The discussion also often tends to 											forget the fact that with the immigrants also important needed professionals 											are recruited. Labelling immigrants sweepingly as poverty immigrants and 											benefit-freeloaders simplifies the complexity of reality too much: “With the multiple accusations that 											immigrants and in particular Roma from South Eastern Europe “will subvert the 											social system, old racist stereotypes are stoked”, criticized the speaker of 											the Green Party parliamentary group, Jutta Velte, on Tuesday (31/12/2013). “We 											need a more objective debate”, the representative urged.”