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This is a very telling news report. It gives us an unintended glimpse into the profound negative impact that the jew has had upon Germany’s number one claim to fame, their engineering prowess. In a White controlled world, to say that Germany is having an engineer shortage would be as absurd as saying that American inner city ghettos are having a nigger drug dealer shortage.
But, unfortunately this report is true, there is indeed an engineering shortage in Germany.
Engineering is to Germans like water is to a duck. This news report tells us that something is seriously wrong there. Germany must be sicker then any of us can imagine.
brutus
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Germany alarmed at lack of engineers
By Isabelle de Pommereau, Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor Thu Aug 10, 4:00 AM ET
FRANKFURT - When high school junior Daria Schirmer conducted scientific experiments with 8-year-olds as part of a school project this year – building a periscope or a compass with a magnet – she became not only an inventor of sorts but also part of the solution to what looms as one of Germany's greatest challenges: how to keep its sterling
reputation as the world's leader in engineering.
For centuries, Germany led the world in technological prowess, from the motorcycle to the refrigerator. In the 19th century, inventors and entrepreneurs like Gottlieb Daimler, Carl Benz, and Carl Wilhelm Siemens developed products for brands still respected today. But over the past few years, young Germans have dramatically turned away from engineering – and now, the country needs 18,000 engineers – a third more than last year, according to the German Association of Engineers in Berlin. Alarmed that this gap could endanger Germany's engineering creativity, businesses are trying to stem the tide by launching a publicity campaign to make engineering sound like fun from kindergarten through university.
"The image of engineers has never been so bad," says Markus Roeser of Do Things, a coalition of 80 businesses, universities, and research institutes created five months ago to fill the engineering gap.
The group sponsors school projects, gives awards to youths making special scientific discoveries, awards scholarships, and helps engineering students find internships and young researchers commercialize their inventions.
potential
"If we don't succeed in making young people enthusiastic about technical jobs again, we're running the risk of losing our place as the world's leading exporter," of manufactured goods and technologies, says Mr. Roeser.
"The lack of engineers is Germany's No. 1 hindrance to innovation," says Roeser. "At stake is to keep Germany's creative potential."
"Little Einstein Experiments," the pilot project that had pupils like Daria visit grade schools to do experiments every week, is the crux of this publicity campaign. Sponsored by the German state of Hessen's entrepreneurs association, it is meant to awaken scientific thirst early on.
"Children are naturally curious about learning. It's important to encourage their enthusiasm so that the fun doing experiments lasts," says Monika Zieleniewicz, Daria's physics teacher at the Albert Einstein High School in suburban Frankfurt who supervised the program. "That's how you help develop children's motivation for those fields."
"The focus has to be on the schools," says Benjamin Burde of the Berlin-based Mathematics and Science Excellence Centers in Schools, which supports mathematics, computers, science, and technology education. He notes that in Germany, those disciplines have almost disappeared from the school curriculum.
How engineering lost its cachet
Being an engineer no longer has the high status it once enjoyed.
In the mid 1960s, 41 percent of Germans said engineering was a job they had a lot of admiration for. In 2001, only 22 percent said so, according to the Association of Engineers.
A study by the Allensbach Research Institute, Germany's leading polling firm, found in 2003 that being an engineer ranked seventh among young people as a prestigious career behind pastors, doctors, and university professors.
Part of Germany's engineering decline started in the 1970s as the environmental movement grew and people started questioning the impacts of ever-faster energy-hungry technologies on society and the environment.
By making people skeptical about technological progress, it gradually hurt the prestige of engineering jobs, says Joerg Feuchhofen, head of the Association of Entrepreneurs in Hessen, which represents 100,000 entrepreneurs in the state of Hessen. "The Germans often looked at it as something that endangered the environment," says Mr. Feuchthofen. "That's a reason why the fields covering ... technology have lost ground in the education system."
Ten years ago, there were twice as many engineering students at universities than today according to the German Association of Engineers.
The problem isn't new. But attention was focused on the dearth of engineers this spring when Airbus-Germany announced it couldn't find 600 engineers needed as they gear up to expand their production over the next two years.
"That Germany can't fulfill a major order in China that would have created many jobs was a big shock for the nation," says Roeser.
Indeed, Airbus isn't the only firm hindered by Germany's current lack of engineers. Thirty percent of German employers say they are short engineers, according to a survey by the German Association of Engineers.
"At least four or five years ago, people came to interviews," says Andrea Gossel of the Schunk Group, an international car-part manufacturer headquartered in the small village of Heuchelheim. "Today they don't ever bother to show up."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20060810/wl_csm/owunderkind
The ink of the learned is as precious as the blood of the martyr. For one drop of ink may make millions think.
My guess is that, as in America, jews and idiotic wimin now rule German universities, and are specifically discriminating against White Men -- not admitting them in the first place, and, then, if admitted, blocking their advancement in the professional and more remunerative post-graduate disciplines -- displacing White Men for inferior jews, wimin, and non-whites.
Just an educated guess.
There's only one answer. When will our people raise the question?
My guess is that, as in America, jews and idiotic wimin now rule German universities, and are specifically discriminating against White Men -- not admitting them in the first place, and, then, if admitted, blocking their advancement in the professional and more remunerative post-graduate disciplines -- displacing White Men for inferior jews, wimin, and non-whites.
Just an educated guess.
There's only one answer. When will our people raise the question?
Not a guess , a certainty !
They ( shadow lurkers ) know very well that White Males excel in technical subjects and with ever advancing technology they will excel to an even greater degree . Also , engineering disciplines will become more highly compensated . Many White engineers have become millionaires and more before they are 30 . These are the principal reasons to block White Males from this career choice .
I suspect the next move in this sinister chess game will be , bring in engineers and engineering students from India, China and Pakistan , just as it has happened in the US .
.
[color="Red"]"sneaky 'GD' Jews are all alike." ......Marge Schott
" I'd rather have a trained monkey working for me than a nigger,"
the reason the engineers are all Muslims and Hindus and Asians in the universities is because of their culture of chastity. Only a Chaste mind can tolerate the mental rigors of engineering fields. A sensous, sexually polluted mind is a weak mind, incapable of precise thought.
Why should German men choose an engineering career? They have little incentive to start a family, so they don't need a secure well paying career to provide for a wife and family.
If they do take up engineering as an occupation, what does their employer do with their talent? Build state-of-the-art nuclear submarines as gifts for Israel or design modern troop-carrier planes for China.
"Israel's values are Canada's values" Canadian PM
"An attack on Israel is an attack on Canada" Canadian PM