Post by sumaiyajannt on Feb 25, 2024 2:45:31 GMT -5
In December , the existence of , an unknown infectious disease caused by the coronavirus, was confirmed in the city of Wuhan, China. Surely this fact no longer seems so alarming to you since a year has passed since this event confined us to our homes for several months. Commercial, economic, tourist and recreational activities around the world stopped during the first months, and little by little we have been recovering normality, adapting to new cleaning habits that have changed our way of living. Today we are in the final stretch and the news of a vaccine against is now a reality. So let's take a look at what the Bloomberg portal says about the creators of the long-awaited vaccine, who are now an example for science in the world. Who are the creators of the vaccine? and are a migrant couple, but beyond this, they are co-founders of SE , the German company that, with its American partner Pfizer Inc. , has managed to create a vaccine against . Thanks to the experimental technology used by the couple of researchers, they managed to make this vaccine the first authorized by health authorities for use in the Western world and put an end to this pandemic.
The innovation of this couple would be enough to make them the heroes of this era, but it should also offer inspiration and generate reflection Phone Number List in another way, do you know why? Because they are both from immigrant families. Both are children of Turks who came to West Germany during its long postwar economic boom, when the country invited so-called “guest workers” —a program that allows resident foreign workers to work temporarily in a host country. was four years old when he moved with his mother from Turkey to Cologne, Germany to join his father, who worked in a car factory there. was born in Germany to a Turkish father who worked as a doctor in a small Catholic hospital. The difficult acceptance of Turkish immigrants The life of a Turkish-German is not easy at all, since young people suffer discrimination by German society, primary school teachers tend to give worse grades to students with Turkish-sounding names than to those with German names. Immigrants, and especially the large Turkish minority, are so often thought to represent a social burden, politicians and voters in many countries, not just Germany, tend to overlook the fact that immigrants achieve numerous advances for their adopted nations.
After long years of study, researchers show that immigrants tend to be job creators. That has also been the case in Germany, where an increasing proportion of new businesses since the 1990s have been started by people “with a migration background,” a phrase used by German bureaucrats to refer to anyone with foreign roots. Let's accept immigrants! Currently, phrases against immigrants should be completely eliminated from people's vocabulary to avoid discrimination, since without them we would not be able to enjoy some tools that we can now use frequently. Today we would not be able to read an article in The Huffington post, since its creator Arianna Huffington is one of the most powerful Greek women in the world who migrated to the US, nor would you be able to drive a Tesla car if Elon Musk had not decided to leave from South Africa, nor would you be able to use Google if Sergey had not left the Soviet Union. To protect the human rights of migrants, the United Nations General Assembly decreed International Migrants Day on December since then it has been celebrated every December 18. All migrants have the right to equal protection of all their human rights.
The innovation of this couple would be enough to make them the heroes of this era, but it should also offer inspiration and generate reflection Phone Number List in another way, do you know why? Because they are both from immigrant families. Both are children of Turks who came to West Germany during its long postwar economic boom, when the country invited so-called “guest workers” —a program that allows resident foreign workers to work temporarily in a host country. was four years old when he moved with his mother from Turkey to Cologne, Germany to join his father, who worked in a car factory there. was born in Germany to a Turkish father who worked as a doctor in a small Catholic hospital. The difficult acceptance of Turkish immigrants The life of a Turkish-German is not easy at all, since young people suffer discrimination by German society, primary school teachers tend to give worse grades to students with Turkish-sounding names than to those with German names. Immigrants, and especially the large Turkish minority, are so often thought to represent a social burden, politicians and voters in many countries, not just Germany, tend to overlook the fact that immigrants achieve numerous advances for their adopted nations.
After long years of study, researchers show that immigrants tend to be job creators. That has also been the case in Germany, where an increasing proportion of new businesses since the 1990s have been started by people “with a migration background,” a phrase used by German bureaucrats to refer to anyone with foreign roots. Let's accept immigrants! Currently, phrases against immigrants should be completely eliminated from people's vocabulary to avoid discrimination, since without them we would not be able to enjoy some tools that we can now use frequently. Today we would not be able to read an article in The Huffington post, since its creator Arianna Huffington is one of the most powerful Greek women in the world who migrated to the US, nor would you be able to drive a Tesla car if Elon Musk had not decided to leave from South Africa, nor would you be able to use Google if Sergey had not left the Soviet Union. To protect the human rights of migrants, the United Nations General Assembly decreed International Migrants Day on December since then it has been celebrated every December 18. All migrants have the right to equal protection of all their human rights.