Most of our local Muslims are 2nd or 3rd generation descendants from 20th century labour immigration. In recent years the immigration laws have become considerably more strict (which predates the PVV/Wilders agitation about this issue.). Currently it's mostly Eastern European "immigrants" (from fellow EU members that is) that are causing concern in certain circles - but, ofcourse, once again these are labour migrants. (Unemployment in the Netherlands is at the highest level since 30 years, and not likely to go down in the near future, although there are some economic indicators that things might improve.)
Originally mostly Morocco and Turkey. Though the current bunch is homegrown.
Stopping Eastern European immigration would require significant downscaling of our integration within the EU to a point which few Dutch people would support, even PVV voters.
I meant the Muslims that Geert and the PVV tend to rant about.
Which makes the Dutch political consensus regarding immigration idiotic beyond belief: Because of poorly integrated people of Moroccan and Turkish people who have Dutch citizenship, it is supposedly sensible to keep and even tighten immigration barriers.
Wilders has shifted his focus to being anti-EU now - for a trade country (as the Netherlands is) about as inane as his anti-Islam stance.
I think stricter immigration rules are mostly intended to keep poor refugees out - a clear violation of international human rights treaties, but who cares nowadays?
Sure, but our monarch is not supposed to express opinions of a political nature unless such opinions are in agreement with government policy. (If he does, it's the government that has to answer for it; something Thorbecke wrote into the constitution mid-19th century, and referred to as "ministerial responsability".)
That's basically a dead law. The ministerial responsibility was intended to compromise with the Absolute Monarchy that existed before the 1848 constitution that included this particular stipulation. The idea was that monarch would actually be able to wield some power, because he would have a legal way to blame the democratic political system for his failures.
I'm not Dutch, but may I answer this one? I do speak Dutch...
German and Dutch are probably closer related to each other than to any other language. There are a lot of similarities, but they are not mutually intelligible, like the Scandinavian languages are. However if you make a little bit of an effort, at least understanding the other language isn't that difficult. Speaking is something very different, as I have noticed
It also depends a bit on the German dialects. The dialects along the border with Holland and Belgium (for instance Aachen, Cologne,...) have more similarities with Dutch, making it easier for those people to understand us.
The irony is that German and English are more closely related than Dutch and either.If I had to say dutch was close to any language, it would be english. If I knew neither language, I would certainly mistake one for the other.
The irony is that German and English are more closely related than Dutch and either.
Old German and old English (and old Frisian) have common roots in old-Saxon, old Dutch in old-Frankish. (If I'm not mistaken)
Of course modern languages are a lot more complicated due to cross-fertilization and such.
It is therefore not a "limited liability company". In Dutch, that would be called a "Besloten Vennootschap" (BV), which is more restricted form of company (typically for smaller businesses)
Hmmm, doesn't quite fall within Argentine law then, the 'Sociedad Anónima' and 'SRL' (a.k.a. LLC) are distinct entities.![]()
indeed, in Belgium a "BV" would be called a "BVBA" ("besloten vennootschap met beperkte aansprakelijkheid" or "closed partnership with limited liability").Isn't that BVBA in Belgium?![]()
wouldn't it translate as "(business-)partner"? For instance, a lawyer can be a "vennoot" or partner in a law firm.his is because the "vennoten" - a very strange Dutch word that does not have a precise translation in English