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Switzerland wil have a referendum to cap population at 10M

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309 points by napolux a day ago · 842 comments

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bapo a day ago

Swiss here and able to vote.

In fact, just posted my voting letter today, before taking a 1h bike ride through the biggest city in Switzerland, having lots of space and freedom biking around in our beautiful city.

When taking the train to my parents house, I pass several farms and landly smaller cities. Alot of free space in between those, train mostly has spare seats, depending on rush hour timings. There usually are several big commercials on private farmer land stating “NO to 10 Million Population”, prompting people to vote YES on the SVP/UDC initiative.

The initiative’s lancers seem to play a lot on people’s fear of overcrowding, which even in the most population-dense city in Switzerland seems like a joke. There’s a lot of space and quality of living is still amazing here.

Yes, during rush hours, you might have to stand for 15-30min in public transport. Yes, finding an appartment is getting harder and more difficult.

But is this a problem of more people coming here or the failures of the state preparing for future population growth? We have so much space, benefits from diverse cultures and love for human beings.

My letter was specifically voting AGAINST this initiative.

  • kuerbel a day ago

    Also swiss here. So many people seem to think that this is about refugees. Wrong. It's about Europeans. Mostly Germans. They are educated and highly skilled and for some swiss, that's a problem. They blame them for not finding a job or an appartement. Just read the comments on inside paradeplatz, you can translate with any llm, on a post about the referendum. A subset of the swiss Middle class has decided that they don't like competition, they want them gone. Of course they themselves are never the problem, the german with a middle management position is however, because quote "they are only hiring other Germans".

    Also voted no of course.

    • lqet 21 hours ago

      I am German and live near the Swiss border. My wife is Swiss. I always tell Germans: if you want to get a feeling for the life of an immigrant in Germany, go to a non-touristic region in Switzerland. It's definitely not open hostility, but many little things which quickly give you the impression that you are not welcome and seen as a threat. You are treated differently as soon as you are identified as a foreigner, and this treatment is completely independent of your own behavior.

      My wife really enjoys talking to Swiss people in German first (she has no accent anymore), and if the reaction is hostile, she seamlessly switches to full Swiss German in mid-sentence. The reactions are often priceless.

      • xinayder 13 hours ago

        > It's definitely not open hostility, but many little things which quickly give you the impression that you are not welcome and seen as a threat.

        Literally what most expats go through in Europe. I live abroad for 6 years and here, a Central EU country, this also happens. I am trying to learn the language and even then I got told implicitly several times that I will still be treated as a foreigner, no matter how much culture and language I learn from the local country.

        • port11 12 hours ago

          We can swap anecdata back and forth, but that doesn’t reflect my experience at all, now in my 4th European ‘expat’ (migrant, really) experience.

          Aside from a few somewhat racist remarks outside Berlin, I’ve always been treated fairly. Speaking the local language definitely helps, and living in 50k+ pop. cities.

          And then… you visit Switzerland. Very quickly you realise what GP is talking about. Switzerland is the only place where I’d love to live, but hate the feeling of being there.

      • myrmidon 18 hours ago

        That's interesting (and a really fun stunt to pull). I always had the impression that the situation is slightly better for other minority-dialect foreigners (Vorarlberg/Südtirol) compared to "vanilla" german speakers, but that might wrong...

      • kamma4434 16 hours ago

        Yes a “grützi” at the right moment is often priceless, especially when abroad.

      • reaperducer 11 hours ago

        It's definitely not open hostility, but many little things which quickly give you the impression that you are not welcome and seen as a threat. You are treated differently as soon as you are identified as a foreigner, and this treatment is completely independent of your own behavior.

        Sounds like Seattle in the 2000's.

        As soon as one of the locals found out you're not from there, you get the "Seattle Freeze."

        Fortunately, I read about it in a book before I moved there, so I knew it when I recognized it. But that didn't make it any less uncomfortable.

        I guess with SEA filled with expat tech people these days, it's either gotten much better or much worse.

    • jansport123 a day ago

      seems to be a common concern amongst the local population everywhere "X identity is hiring only X identity"

      • rayiner a day ago

        If you’re part of the majority group, you really don’t see how cliquish people in minority groups are. Every time I get into a cab with another “brown” person, there is a Q&A. When they find out I’m from a muslim country, it’s all “my brother,” etc. I’ve always found it distasteful.

        • BobaFloutist 13 hours ago

          Is it cliquishness, or is it genuine joy at an unexpected connection?

        • pstuart a day ago

          People in general tend to be very tribal -- it's in our DNA. When it's about "yay community!" its kinda nice but most the time it's "other tribe bad". I think this is a core to a lot of legislation.

          Not having a tribe to belong to I find the whole thing simultaneously amusing and horrifying looking in from the outside.

          • rayiner a day ago

            > When it's about "yay community! its kinda nice

            I don’t find it nice. I’ve gotten free stuff on multiple occasions from co-ethnics (lots of Bangladeshis working in hotels in the New York area). It doesn’t sit right with me, because at the same time we tell white people that ethnic favoritism is one of the worst social crimes. We would be very upset if they displayed the same kind of favoritism within their own group.

            For rules to have legitimacy, they must apply equally to everyone. So either “yay community” sentiment is acceptable, or it’s not. It’s in my interest for such sentiment to not be acceptable for white Americans, so it follows that it must be unacceptable for me as well.

            • pstuart a day ago

              I hear you, I'm trying to find the bright side in "community" where people who don't know each other at least treat them as "brothers". The insular part is fucked and we need need to evolve past that.

              > For rules to have legitimacy, they must apply equally to everyone.

              Preach, brother! For this to happen we need to be prepared to examine the rules and how they are applied and call out when that isn't the case. Color, gender, faith, sexual orientation, origin, etc should never be qualifiers in how one is treated.

          • fouc a day ago

            tribalism, Us vs. Them, racism, patriotism/nationalism, etc all seem closely related.

            In terms of social life, and romantic life, it's interesting how heavily we rely on shared/common background, which tends to cause this clustering effect.

          • soraminazuki a day ago

            I still can't believe we have hundreds of years of documented history to learn from, yet human intelligence is still blinded by bigotry.

            • broken-kebab 20 hours ago

              The irony is that virtue-signalling (which your comment certainly is) is a shared identity declaration. Which is a part of the same inherent human predisposition to form groups which we call "tribalism" when we like to don't like it.

              • soraminazuki 19 hours ago

                That's called the paradox of tolerance and it's not the gotcha that you think it is. If you think "mankind should overcome bigotry" is such a divisive statement that it splits people into "tribes," that reveals more about you than it does about me.

                • broken-kebab 10 hours ago

                  Did I even write anything about political contents of your signalling? I believe I didn't. I also didn't "reveal" anything particularly bad about you. I said that your urge to ring it is of the same social nature (aka tribal), we (humanity) have been exhibiting for all written and unwritten history, while the message itself expressing that you're above it makes it contradictory in ironic way. No matter what your signal proclaims, the process of tribal-building around it is most certainly divisive[1], with obligatory bit of outwards directed derision. So... then you reacted with suggesting I'm some sort of morally inferior outgroup voice. Which I think, proves the point you have missed.

                  [1] Which is not always bad. This is core mechanics of our competitive adaptiveness probably. It's just that being more aware of this gives us a chance to be better in more universal terms with other humans. Including in politics, of course.

                  P.S. If you felt offended, sorry! I can't say I care too much ngl, it's the internet after all, but it wasn't my intention either. I also didn't downvote you.

            • account42 18 hours ago

              That others have learned a different lesson from history compared to your beliefs does not mean that they are ignorant of it.

              • soraminazuki 18 hours ago

                You're projecting. I wrote a factual statement, that bigotry still exists in today's world, and you somehow took that as an assault on your values.

                So what exactly is the different lesson you're referring to? Given that bigotry still exists, I can only take that lesson to mean "bigotry good."

            • kansface 15 hours ago

              I will stake the claim, as an engineer never having studied sociology, that in group favoritism is the (only) stable political arrangement by and large… and further, the preservation of any culture necessitates discrimination of some sort.

              • soraminazuki 14 hours ago

                You've got it backwards. That's a defeatist take that results in the exact kind of misery and cruelty documented in detail throughout history. Society prospers when people look past their differences and work together to improve things. It suffers when demagogues successfully divide the public and exploit the chaos to loot the resources required to improve the lives of everyone. Making punching bags out of a group of people is sure way to create instability.

        • doctorpangloss a day ago

          The people who fixate on this stuff are projecting.

      • xenonite a day ago

        Yes, we have a really well recognized Spanish team lead here, yet he’s mostly hiring Spanish people (in Switzerland), oh yes and one Italian is the exception.

        Also we had a German team lead hiring Germans, well surprise it is easier being with similar ones.

        Diversity back in the day meant Physics, Electrical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering working together…

        • meken a day ago

          I’m an American and I just had the thought - if I was working in Japan at a Japanese company and I had the opportunity to hire, would I have a bias to hire other Americans?

          Honestly probably, since I understand them the best.

          • sashank_1509 a day ago

            I’d disagree. I’m not American or British but and in my experience Americans or British are the least ethnically biased people on the planet. Any other group, I could believe that they are biased but not Americans, or British. Something in their particular culture right now.

            • dpark a day ago

              You’re responding to an American who says he’d be biased towards Americans and telling him he’s wrong.

              Maybe Americans are the least biased (though being an American I am not so sure) but that doesn’t mean we aren’t biased (even if sometimes for legitimate reasons like ease of communication).

              • ThrowawayR2 a day ago

                Or perhaps said American genuinely is unaware of how much more biased other ethnic groups are in their own homelands.

                • sashank_1509 a day ago

                  Yes exactly, the American bias level right now is probably as low as it can get humanly.

                  • dpark a day ago

                    Now this I disagree with. I expect that you are interacting with a specific subset of Americans. A lot of Americans are deeply racist and xenophobic and I believe that the average could definitely get lower.

                    • sashank_1509 a day ago

                      I guess I work in tech. Maybe it’s different elsewhere but even there I think it’s probably lower than most of the world among similar classes of society.

                      • dpark a day ago

                        So I actually agree with you here. America has a deep, ugly pit of unconstrained racism, and a less deep pit of quiet racism that permeates a lot of society. But so do many (and very possibly most) other nations, where the level of racism is often even worse, just with different targets than Americans. I think in a way America is much more aware of our tendencies than other nations.

                • dpark a day ago

                  Okay, but the conversation was:

                  Meken: “I would be biased”

                  Sashank: “I disagree”

                  Others being more biased doesn’t make Americans unbiased.

            • pyuser583 a day ago

              It isn’t just a lack of ethnic bias, it’s a belief in capitalism or professionalism or “enlightened self-interest”: hire the best person for the job, and everyone will be better off.

            • tqi a day ago

              Yes that's why country clubs and the Greek system never caught on...

          • JuniperMesos 17 hours ago

            And this is why it's in the interest of Japanese people in Japan not to make it easy for you to have an opportunity to hire people for jobs in Japan.

          • influx a day ago

            And that seems suboptimal for a Japanese company?

          • deaux 19 hours ago

            I've actually been in such a situation and I didn't. Or if I did have such a bias it must've been rather small as none of the applicants benefited from it.

        • deepsun a day ago

          Yes, and that's normal (except for maybe eastern European cultures who better hire an American/west European).

        • dlahoda a day ago

          May be each foreigner in mgmt position should pass some exam on diversification and swiss history?

          Actually each foreigner to raise or get some state benefits should pass some exam?

        • vasco a day ago

          > well surprise it is easier being with similar ones.

          It's not easier dealing with people from your own country but it is biased. From someone who has hired hundred+ remote developers in europe for 10 years to lead them and out of those hired a total of 2 people from my country. Wouldn't have been hard either.

          At the same time I see some managers doing this, currently in another fully remote company have a manager colleague that has hired 3 brazillians back to back. Go figure. Just shows you that it's a biased person in other respects (we all are) and that they make zero efforts to keep it in check (this is a decision you make).

          • rlpb 12 hours ago

            > that has hired 3 brazillians back to back

            I've seen this kind of thing happen not through bias but because good people know good people, where by "good" I mean highly competent. They knew each other through university and other regional connections, so they happened to have the same ethnicity as one might expect from such a regional commonality. One got hired, referred another, and it cascaded. They were great to work with and highly competent, so I don't think there was bias even though it might appear that they're was.

      • deaux 19 hours ago

        Because it is real, and there _is_ in fact a large difference in the propensity to do this across cultures.

        This post is about Switzerland, and as said by parent a lot of this is about Germans in Switzerland.

        Are Germans in Switzerland more prone to hiring another German rather than a French person, or Swiss person? I'm sure that such bias exists. But that bias is nothing compared to e.g. tendency for Indians to hire other Indians. Now of course some of this can be explained by economic opportunity. The extra benefit Germans can provide to other Germans by giving them Swiss job is smaller than for Indians.

        However that only explains part of it. If that was all, then Chinese people should bias much more to hiring fellow countrymen than Japanese and Korean people, while the latter two should be similar to each other. This is definitely not the case (note that we're talking about immigrants here, not 2nd+ generation).

        I'm sure there's been research on this subject, and there will be some cultural trait that proxies for how much immigrants from country X bias towards hiring others from X.

        I can even give you a proxy for funsies: embassies. Look at the employees at the embassy of country X in country Y. How many of them are from country X and how many are from Y? Now compare that across embassies. You'll see a lot of similarities with what I've sketched. Sometimes you'll see that both the embassy of country X in country Y, as well as that of country Y in country X (the other direction), are both primarily staffed by people from country X! In those cases it's common that country X has a much stronger bias than Y towards hiring people from their own nationality rather than based on aptitude.

      • yogorenapan a day ago

        I think it's pretty logical, though perhaps it is correlation rather than causation.

        Say I am hiring as a native English speaker in a Chinese company (while of course still knowing enough Mandarin to survive) and I have 3 candidates, one of whom also speaks English fluently. I would definitely be biased towards the English speaker, because I would work better with them.

        Now, it doesn't really matter what their ethnicity was, but there is a higher likelihood of them being of the same ethnicity. Especially if my first language is niche, the chances of hiring the same ethnicity would be higher.

        I've been on the receiving end of this before, being hired in part because I spoke English due to my manager while the rest of the company was primarily Mandarin

      • thisisit a day ago

        The broader concern seems to be “outsiders taking our jobs/raising house prices/voting in elections” etc etc. Anything perceived to be done by “outsiders” is an issue.

        Americans/British saying this about non-white immigrants. Switzerland about Europeans. India saying it about Bangladeshi migrants.

        It’s like people dislike others who are worse off them.

        • account42 18 hours ago

          No it's people disliking importing the cultures and problems that made those people worse off in the first place.

      • aprilthird2021 a day ago

        Because it's an unfalsifiable claim. If you need to bring in highly skilled people and most of them come from X Y or Z, it will be near impossible to distinguish in-group preference from a continuation of skilled immigration which for most countries that practice it, is beneficial for the economy.

        Also hiring is often based on trust and networks. People refer others to their company and jobs. That trust tends to work out pretty well for companies. If people get laid off they tell their friends and their friends pass on opportunities to them or try to help them find new jobs. And people tend to make friends with others they share a culture and language with.

        If you add a bunch of barriers to make companies have to hire proportional amounts of every ethnicity or culture, that slows down hiring and can be an extra regulatory burden for what reason?

        • breakyerself a day ago

          There's no such requirement to hire proportional amounts of every ethnicity. There are requirements not to discriminate. Which isn't the same thing.

          When companies do make an effort to give everyone a fair shot there's a tendency for mediocre white men to lose out to more qualified minorities. The companies get better employees and more diverse perspectives.

          Then those white men feel spurned. They imagine they weren't hired because they're white. It's an easier pill to swallow and then the next thing you know DEI is the great Satan of low IQ white men.

          • rayiner a day ago

            Can you show me where the “mediocre white men” are on this chart?: https://www.aei.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/med-1.png?x97...

            Are the “mediocre white men” the ones with a 27-29 MCAT/3.4-3.59 GPA, who have a 21% chance of admission to medical school whereas a hispanic student in that same range has a 61% chance? Are those the “mediocre white men” you’re talking about?

            > The companies get … more diverse perspectives

            That makes no sense. The premise of non-discrimination laws is that someone’s ethnic background doesn’t affect their “perspectives” in ways that are material to employment.

            • khriss 19 hours ago

              > Can you show me where the “mediocre white men” are on this chart?

              I think you will find that they tend to be at home, according to this graph https://www.ussc.gov/research/research-reports/2023-demograp....

              From the report 'Specifically, Black males received sentences 13.4 percent longer, and Hispanic males received sentences 11.2 percent longer, than White males'

              So, based on your own logic, you would argue for higher prison sentences for whites? It's all well and good to whine about 'discrimination' in one narrow area, but few have the courage to oppose discrimination when it benefits them.

              • rayiner 18 hours ago

                > So, based on your own logic, you would argue for higher prison sentences for whites?

                Yes. Your report shows that white men are more often given probation, which explains much of the difference. That should stop. Throw those fuckers in prison.

                Your report also shows that black women received 6% shorter sentences than white women. So there seems to be more at work here than black versus white. We need less discretion in sentencing across the board.

                > It's all well and good to whine about 'discrimination' in one narrow area, but few have the courage to oppose discrimination when it benefits them.

                That describes people who point to sentencing disparities to justify affirmative discrimination in school admissions and employment.

                • khriss 12 hours ago

                  > That should stop. Throw those fuckers in prison.

                  And yet, if I look at your comment history, you seem hyper focused on discrimination in admissions. I don't see a single instance where you even attempted to advocate for broader elimination of discrimination. It has always been a few narrow instances where whites were on the receiving end.

                  • rayiner 10 hours ago

                    You’ve got it backwards. There’s 19 million people in college and graduate school, compared to under 2 million people in prison. And my contention is that the discrimination in admissions carries through to the workforce, at least to white collar jobs. There’s 70 million people in white collar jobs.

                    • khriss 8 hours ago

                      Agreed, but wouldn't you also say that being in prison has an arguably greater impact in later life?

            • breakyerself a day ago

              That isn't the premise. The premise is that discriminating is morally wrong.

              Also when did we change the subject to college admissions?

              • rayiner a day ago

                > The premise is that discriminating is morally wrong

                Yes. And the clearest evidence we have of anyone doing that at scale in modern times is DEI programs in college and medical school admissions.

                So why is it unreasonable for the people you call “mediocre white men” to conclude they’re being discriminated against? If Harvard and other elite universities are willing to go to the Supreme Court to defend such discrimination, doesn’t it stand to reason—absent data to the contrary—that the myriad companies and institutions run by graduates of those universities are doing the same thing?

                [1] Those numbers are medical school admissions, but the numbers for college admissions is similar: https://nypost.com/2023/06/29/supreme-court-affirmative-acti...

                • breakyerself 17 hours ago

                  >the clearest evidence we have of anyone doing that at scale in modern times is DEI programs in college

                  Congratulations you found the one place where a black person might have an advantage. Meanwhile virtually every other aspect of American society disadvantages black people and the supreme court ruled against those colleges.

                  http://www.racialdisadvantages.com

                  College admissions and the job market are apples and oranges. It isn't actually safe to assume the same thing must be happening in both. It isn't. There's an unofficial affirmative action favoring white people across much of the job market.

          • aprilthird2021 a day ago

            > There's no such requirement to hire proportional amounts of every ethnicity. There are requirements not to discriminate. Which isn't the same thing.

            How will you prove and prosecute supposed discrimination?

            > When companies do make an effort to give everyone a fair shot there's a tendency for mediocre white men to lose out to more qualified minorities. The companies get better employees and more diverse perspectives.

            I just don't agree with this idea of "giving a more fair shot" if it's enforced because what it really is is slowing down hiring processes and second guessing people's judgments. I don't like it to bolster diversity and I don't like it to cut diversity (what many white nationalists in the US wish would happen in industries that hire from abroad like tech).

            • account42 18 hours ago

              It's also not even defined what a fair shot means - once you discard merit and start trying to counter for all kinds of past or inherent disadvantages there is really no end to it.

              • breakyerself 17 hours ago

                A fair shot would be hiring based on qualifications and not race, relion, etc. There seems to be no end to people wanting to perpetuate a status quo that advantages themselves. You might feel differently if you were part of a group that faces discrimination at every turn.

            • breakyerself 17 hours ago

              How will you prove and prosecute supposed discrimination?

              Usually someone who feels discriminated against will get legal representation, file a lawsuit, and use the discovery process to strengthen their case. They can compare their treatment to that of people who don't share their minority status. They can show internal communications. Call witnesses. compare the companies workforce to other similarly positioned companies.

              > because what it really is is slowing down hiring processes and second guessing people's judgments

              1. So what?

              2. People's judgement should be second guessed if they're racist.

              3. One of the easiest ways to reduce discrimination in hiring is to replace names on resumes with numbers before letting hiring managers access them. Which barely slows down anything and eliminates a variable that isn't relevant to the candidates qualifications.

          • znpy a day ago

            Wow that’s racist

    • CGMthrowaway a day ago

      >Middle class has decided that they don't like competition, they want them gone. Of course they themselves are never the problem

      Yeah, screw the middle class. What do they know anyway?

      • breakyerself a day ago

        I mean there is a tendency for people in the middle class to go all NIMBY and not want additional housing to be built which drives up the cost of housing. It's good that there's a middle class but there are also things that people in the middle class do that aren't good. Like drive f350s on their 40-minute commute to the office.

    • panos_news a day ago

      "So many people seem to think that this is about refugees. Wrong. It's about Europeans. Mostly Germans.".

      It can be about both though.

    • khriss 21 hours ago

      > the german with a middle management position is however, because quote "they are only hiring other Germans".

      Good to see (in a sad way) that some biases are constant across humans.

    • einpoklum a day ago

      The text of the proposal disagrees with your claim. Or - are there lots of Europeans seeking asylum in Switzerland?

      • wqaatwt a day ago

        Maybe its a bit like Brexit, i.e. not rational immigration being one of the major issues when it did nothing to reduce the immigration of (non-white) people from third countries and EU migration was rapidly decreasing anyway.

      • soco 19 hours ago

        Funny enough, the voting of this weekend mentions as argument also "the lax asylum politics in the EU" while exactly THIS weekend the EU is strengthening a lot, and I mean quite a lot, the asylum procedures and including border controls. I guess they had to push it quickly before the Swiss voter notices...

    • 0xWTF a day ago

      Swiss as racists. Amazing. People know Americans harbor racist feelings because they are surrounded by people of many races. But it's trivial to demonstrate racism among any population as soon as you introduce an "other" of virtually any type.

      • xenonite a day ago

        No it isn’t racism as Germans had the same skin color. Keep in mind that Germans aren’t stereotypical anymore.

        In Switzerland live over 41% migrants and children of migrants (just 8.4%). So the native Swiss are not just “surrounded” but greatly diminished.

        • eqvinox a day ago

          Yeah, sure, it's nationalism instead of racism.

          Born on the wrong side of the Rhine? F right off.

          No better at all. Worse, arguably.

          • account42 18 hours ago

            Yes, that's how nations work. Otherwise you end up paying for the world's social security while not collecting everyone's taxes.

            • eqvinox 17 hours ago

              Who's paying for what social services is an entirely different question, that is in fact being currently renegotiated:

              https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/swiss-politics/swiss-warn-eu-jo...

              This thread is about migration and residence, not benefits.

            • cycomanic 14 hours ago

              Yeah it's much better to make your money by enabling the worlds worst dictators to steal money from their populations. In fact it's all the other countries taxes that are paying for the swiss social security, because of all the aid money being funneled into swiss bank accounts.

        • api a day ago

          It wasn’t that long ago that American racists debated whether Italians and even Irish were truly “white.” The definition of white had expanded considerably over the years.

          Eastern Europeans, Jews (of course), and Russians were also at times not “white.”

          Maybe we should just keep expanding it. Declare everyone white. Black people are just white people with more melanin.

          Then we can be racist about aliens from outer space.

          • wqaatwt a day ago

            There is a distinction between racism and xenophobia, no need to assign the same label to everything. i.e. the thing about Italians was cultural an educated immigrant from Northern Italy would have been considered as white as a French (not that there a significant number of those in the US) at least.

            • api 18 hours ago

              Technically yes, but usually I think there’s a racist undercurrent to xenophobia.

              The US stopped accepting refugees recently… except white South Africans. I’d say these people share no more culture or values with the average American than a Central American refugee. Maybe less. I’d much rather party with a bunch of Central or South Americans than a bunch of Apartheid lost causers.

              If ethnically white people were pouring across the US border I don’t think many of our immigration hawks would care much, even if some were committing crimes.

          • Gormo 15 hours ago

            > It wasn’t that long ago that American racists debated whether Italians and even Irish were truly “white.” The definition of white had expanded considerably over the years. Eastern Europeans, Jews (of course), and Russians were also at times not “white.”

            This idea is mostly a modern fabrication. Various more granular ethnic biases were of course present throughout American history, but those were never conflated with racial categories: in times and places where the white vs. black racial division was relevant, the ethnic groups you're referencing were always considered "white".

            And the types of discrimination that people in white ethnic groups sometimes experienced was of of a type and of a degree vastly different from that experienced by black people. They're really two very distinct phenomena, and weren't evenly distributed throughout the US -- black people in the South had the legacy of slavery, Jim Crow segregation, and other horrifying things to deal with, whereas white immigrant communities in the Northeast or Midwest never experienced anything remotely similar.

      • ndhbxyd a day ago

        Racists havent heard of Ashbys Law of Requisite Variety.

        Its also why they get left behind by everyone who has.

        Its an ever growing complex and unpredictable world. Sameness is not a strength in complexity theory.

  • autoexec a day ago

    It seems like a good idea to start worrying about population long before it feels overcrowded and there's no room left on the trains. The issue isn't about how much open space there is to stuff people into, but about how many people an area can sustainably support. I'm not sure that 10 million is a good target to aim for, but you sure don't want to wait until your quality of life declines before you start making plans.

    If people are already starting to have trouble finding work and housing that seems like the conversation is long overdue.

    • TomBogus a day ago

      The economy is strong because of immigration, particularly white collar immigration from EU countries. Without them businesses cannot grow in the same rate. Immigration leads to net job creation, meaning also more jobs to fill for locals. It's not zero sum. Public finances would be in a much more dire state without immigration and the locals will have to bear the public debt burden, maybe not immediately but eventually. Granted, housing and infrastructure do have to be built to keep up with population growth indeed, but it's a better problem to have than a depressed economy with decaying infrastructure and housing stock.

    • amunozo 17 hours ago

      Or you can rather prepare housing and infrastructure for the increase of population instead of blaming foreigners and risk all bilateral agreements with EU in which Switzerland's economy depend on.

    • dpark a day ago

      This seems like xenophobia masked as sustainability. The article indicates the referendum specifically would block immigrants but not, say, require free birth control for citizens. Interesting how narrow the target is if sustainability is the real goal.

  • Schiendelman a day ago

    It's not just the state - it's your neighbors pushing the same building restrictions as the rest of the developed world, where people say "I don't want another neighbor next to me", which results in too few apartments for even the existing people's children...

    • kakacik a day ago

      You should check Geneva then - they are building apartment buildings like crazy in past 5 years. Too much if you ask me - in very center, almost every small park or green spot is now 6 story concrete building. Only the biggest protected parks are untouched. City is visibly and permanently degrading into concrete field. Weirdly schizophrenic move - they try to keep pushing bike lanes everywhere, even where not safe to share the road, yet they also remove greenery and trees. I guess the money is too juicy. But not to just bash - they build on outskirts too.

      Switzerland as a country usually strikes good balance between various extremes, much better than US or EU countries do. I have no doubt they will work it out, not ideally, but better than most. Immigration they tackled much better than rest of Europe for example.

      And for the vote - its 1:1 Brexit. Vote for capping, damage your long term prosperity, and those unpopular jobs still will need to be staffed, or country will work worse, be dirtier etc. And if one can earn cleaning streets or putting stuff in shop shelves as much as cca doctor in France (with higher costs of life, but it doesn't have to be extreme), the amount of people willing to try coming and working is basically endless.

      The idea one can freeze time and keep the country as some idealized image from their childhood (without the nasty stuff that happened ie in 70s to orphaned kids en masse, aka Verdingkinder), one would have to become second North Korea. Everything changes these days, massively and quickly. Dictators won't be sending their kids to study here under false names anymore, would they.

      • diath a day ago

        These jobs are unpopular because the pay is shit, not because people don't want to do them, the government could simply have grants/bonus program for people employed in these positions so that the taxpayer money directly funds the bettering of the society and environment around them. Besides, Japan is a good real world example that you do not need to lean on immigrant labor to stop your country from becoming "dirty"; it's one of the most ethically homogeneous countries and also one of the cleanest places you can visit.

        • throwaway2037 14 hours ago

              > Besides, Japan is a good real world example that you do not need to lean on immigrant labor to stop your country from becoming "dirty"
          
          This was true before about 10 years ago. In last 10 years, there has been a dramatic rise (I mean millions of "technical interns") in low-skill foreigners living and working in Japan. (To be clear: I harbor no resent towards these people.) They work in any industry that needs cheap low-skill workers: agriculture, hotels, restaurants, supermarkets, convenience stores, manufacturing, construction, civil/civic maintenance etc. That said, the friction has been pretty low. The difference between the original late 1990s wave of highly-skilled foreigners (mostly bankers and lawyers) and the most recent wave for low-skill foreigners: The most recent wave arrives to Japan with some Japanese language. (They study in their home country and need to pass a test to demonstrate basic Japanese language skills.) In my experience, their "median" Japanese is much better than most highly-skilled migrants, which helps to reduce the integration friction. Also, the low-skilled migrants have a maximum number of years they can work in Japan. They either need to skill-up and get a better visa (I guess about 5-10% can do it), or they need to return home after their "technical internship" is complete.
        • alephnerd a day ago

          > Japan is a good real world example that you do not need to lean on immigrant labor to stop your country from becoming "dirty"

          Japan heavily utilizes foreign workers via a Gulf style guestworker program, and even that has led to the far-right Sanseito becoming Japan's highest rated opposition party and the far-right wing of the LDP winning internal party politics.

          • deaux 19 hours ago

            > via a Gulf style guestworker program

            They get to keep their passports and can return any time, calling it Gulf-style is a bit much. There are abuses - so are there in Europe - but it's not like they sacrificed a thousand or so immigrant worker lives on the Tokyo Olympics in Qatar 2022 style.

            • mothballed 16 hours ago

              I think they mean gulf style as seen by westerners. You can get a visa but you'll never be seen as a "local" nor granted citizenship. In places like Dubai multiple generations live without ever getting citizenship or a path to it and always with the notion you can be booted at any minute if you inconvenient the wrong person or run out of money.

              Though I don't think this is fully true of Japan -- it's one of the easiest countries to naturalize in if you give up your other citizenships but does have the quality of always being seen as a foreigner. It's just that few people naturalize as Japanese because their immigration is most open to people from developed countries who aren't interested in giving up their birth passport to acquire Japanese nationality. If you just want a Japanese passport though no matter the downsides, I think it's one of the easier citizenship to get for an American to obtain.

              • throwaway2037 14 hours ago

                    > it's one of the easiest countries to naturalize
                
                This is no longer true. With recent legislation, you need to live in Japan for 10 years before applying for citizenship. In the old days, it was only 5 years, which is pretty short for a highly developed nation. UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand are now much easier to obtain.
        • actionfromafar a day ago

          Yeah... but aren't there many more poor people in Japan, too?

        • aprilthird2021 a day ago

          > Japan is a good real world example that you do not need to lean on immigrant labor to stop your country from becoming "dirty"; it's one of the most ethically homogeneous countries and also one of the cleanest places you can visit.

          It's also one of the worst developed nation economies and has a massive old, shrinking population problem and is well associated with people having no kids, having no prospects for a better life, and having huge amounts of its population live alone shuttered from the outside world.

          A good economy has many benefits and skilled immigration can significantly improve developed nation economies.

          • throwaway2037 14 hours ago

            To be clear, the economic performance of Japan is pretty similar to Italy. They have incredibly low population growth (or shrinking), but their GDP per capita continues to increase year-over-year. Surprisingly, quality of life is pretty good in Japan and Italy (the second will be a bit controversial here). As long as you have a middle class job, your life will be pretty good.

          • ab5tract a day ago

            You would think that such a terrible, untenable, broken economy as I hear the Japanese economy described (oh no, it’s not growing fast! The horrors of checks notes equilibrium) would precipitate a very dirty landscape, vast swathes of nature torn down, civility breakdowns, mass homelessness, and a high murder rate, bridges collapsing out of nowhere, etc.

            I’ve just described some famously “excellent economy” countries, but I certainly didn’t describe Japan.

      • jnwatson a day ago

        Geneva is the 2nd most expensive city to live in (behind Zurich). I commend any attempt at moderating prices by building more housing.

      • tempay a day ago

        > in very center, almost every small park or green spot is now 6 story concrete building

        I struggle to see this. Central Geneva is full of beautiful, well-maintained green spaces and children's play areas with plenty of larger parks scattered around.

      • egorfine 20 hours ago

        Geneva had an extreme shortage of housing while there were plots of land perfectly suitable for construction but older people willing to sacrifice their kids' future for the sake of today's comfort and for one more year of ignoring the world around them. This problem is no unique to Geneva though.

        • account42 17 hours ago

          Reducing parcel sizes and similar development decreases not only your own comfort but also those of people living there in the future.

          • Schiendelman 17 hours ago

            It doesn't.

            I know that sounds weird, but bear with me.

            Compare the no build scenario to the scenario where you build one more apartment, but that one new apartment is smaller than you want.

            In the no build scenario, the person who wants to move to Geneva doesn't get to, or they have to rent a room in an existing apartment.

            In the scenario where you build that one additional apartment, a person moves into it instead. So they make a choice that that was better than their existing situation.

            That choice is someone increasing their comfort level. There are lots of housing situations that are worse than a new apartment, even a very small one.

            The mistake is not realizing that everyone who moves into a new unit is increasing their comfort.

      • lejalv a day ago

        I agree about bike lanes in Geneva, they should take the space away from cars. Their success is so phenomenal, that they are carrying more passengers/h in some sections than the much wider street they flank.

      • aprilthird2021 a day ago

        > Too much if you ask me

        Good thing no one asked you. Why should you have a say in how someone else uses their land if all they are doing is building more housing units?

  • MoonWalk a day ago

    Considering the other EU ramifications, this is basically Swixit, is it not?

    • hocuspocus a day ago

      Yes. We can cap non-EU/EFTA immigration to zero but that's relatively small anyway. Getting out of Schengen-Dublin and more importantly the Freedom of Movement of workers would basically unravel all bilateral agreements.

    • throw1234567891 a day ago

      Switzerland is not a member of the EU.

      • saguntum a day ago

        Switzerland is, however, a member of the Schengen Area, which is very relevant to this discussion: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schengen_Area

        EU citizens can freely live and work in Switzerland and vice-versa. It would be difficult to reliably cap immigration from other EU countries and stay in the Schengen Area.

        • hocuspocus a day ago

          FoM doesn't require to stay in Schengen-Dublin though.

        • throw1234567891 18 hours ago

          Yeah, but Schengen Area !== EU.

        • pjmlp a day ago

          When I was at CERN, it was before Schengen became a thing, so as Portuguese I had the same VISA issues as someone else coming out of the other side of the planet.

          Worse, being at CERN wasn't a plus for the hiring process, I would need to apply to the position as if still living in Portugal, as my VISA was tied to CERN directly with a three month deadline to leave Switzerland after the contract duration.

          It also did not help, that my fellow country folks do not have a positive image across the country, for various kind of reasons, which is another issue I experienced while living there, like being refused entry in clubs when showing a Portuguese ID card.

          Eventually I moved back to another EU country, still I do visit Switzerland, from time to time.

          Pity that right wing movements are taking off all over the place.

          • hocuspocus a day ago

            Schengen is not FoM. Visa isn't an acronym. And CERN workers are on diplomatic permits anyway.

            • pjmlp a day ago

              Lost me on the reply.

              • hocuspocus a day ago

                You're throwing a lot of words that you don't understand nor have much relevance to the topic.

                Before bilateral agreements and the freedom of movement, not Schengen which was ratified much later and is completely irrelevant here, you needed a work permit, not a visa (lowercase), which anyway at CERN is the equivalent of a diplomatic permit given to all international and tax-exempt NGOs in Geneva/Switzerland. And of course you lose your CDL permit quickly after your contract expires.

                Getting a B permit before FoM would specifically not have been as hard for you as for someone from another continent.

                • pjmlp 20 hours ago

                  Getting a B permit in 2003 - 2004 was indeed hard enough experience that I ended up not staying there and refuse any job offer from Swiss companies to this day, regardless of the Swiss friendships I managed to make there.

                  My stay at CERN was temporary, and every single company where I had an interview clearly communicated to me that the paperwork to get a B permit instead of a Swiss national, or a foreigner with existing permit.

                  The need to switch permit status from the CERN diplomatic one into a B one, killed all conversations.

                  But lets be pedantic in the meaning of words instead, which I used for folks that never lived in Switzerland, that is what is relevant for the whole discussion about foreigners how experience Switzerland.

                  • hocuspocus 18 hours ago

                    Bilateral agreements were signed in 1999 and freedom of movement enacted in 2002 so you must not have looked very hard. Also claiming that immigration from a country like Portugal was hard before FoM is extremely funny given the number of Portuguese immigrants in Romandie.

                    Words have a meaning and bringing diplomatic permits to the topic when they follow their own rules and are specifically outside any immigration quota is not particularly helpful.

                    • pjmlp 14 hours ago

                      It wasn't me that wasn't looking very hard, because apparently those bilateral agreements didn't cut it.

                      Yes, there are plenty of us in Suisse Romande, yet not everyone is welcomed, and plenty don't have it easy.

                      There are plenty of ways of folks land there, and true not everyone behaves the way they should.

                      But lets leave at this, because the discussion won't lead to any constructive place.

  • inglor_cz 21 hours ago

    "We have so much space".

    No, you don't have that much space. The entire Switzerland is half the size of Czechia and half of it is taken up by high mountains.

    Your cities are already pretty dense. Maybe your threshold for "too many people" is very high, but in general Switzerland doesn't have much free real estate left in/around its urban centers and most people would probably prefer to keep the rural places rural. You could turn your cities into a highrise maze - does the majority of the population want to?

    I can fully see where this initiative is coming from. If Czechia was pushing 20 million people, I would consider it on the edge of being overcrowded.

  • kamaal a day ago

    As a Indian I envy you.

    My whole life has been a struggle for living in places where there could be fewer humans.

    • junior44660 a day ago

      In one of the religious texts, the supreme god Indra says "man acquires sin by living amongst humans, and ward it off by wandering in faraway places (void of humans)". Not far off to think that Indians have always had this trauma due to population.

    • hibberl7 a day ago

      Please raise your voice. It's heartbreaking that European naivety is slowly turning the continent into something more resembling your home. So many people have no idea how good they have it. Thousands of generations of responsible custodianship discarded in an instant for the appearance of progressivism. They won't listen to themselves, they won't admit what they are seeing. Please try to make them understand.

    • tpm a day ago

      There are plenty of such places and as the population in many countries gets older there will be more even with available housing etc; the only issue is relatively lower pay.

  • nikolay a day ago

    "Diversity," really? You still drink this Kool-Aid in Switzerland?! Your growth rate is 0.75%! This is not going to lead to diversity but to replacement!

  • nailer 16 hours ago

    Australian/Brit here. A Sudanese man tried to decapitate someone in the middle of the street in Belfast this morning. I suspect if the UK had better immigration controls this wouldn't have happened.

    • Gormo 15 hours ago

      In Belfast? Was that a Protestant Somali man or a Catholic Somali man?

  • like_any_other a day ago

    Sounds like a lovely place. Why wouldn't you want to pass a law to keep it that way?

    • flexagoon a day ago

      Why would you want less people to live in a lovely place?

      • skiing_crawling a day ago

        Maybe some (or many) people believe that more people will make it less "lovely". I think this is a popular stance and I think many people are more than satisfied with the current population density of their area.

      • austhrow743 a day ago

        To keep it lovely.

  • archerx a day ago

    Really? I live in Lausanne and it’s getting a bit crowded. The buses and trains are completely packed to the point of over flowing, the city as well. Sure there’s a lot of land but that doesn’t mean we need to maximize its use at the expense of the environment and the nature it supports.

  • izacus a day ago

    Well, first UK had to vote for their own anti immigration nonsense, then US tried out their MAGA winning and now it's time for Switzerland to follow in their footsteps and make their country great again with SVP at the helm.

    After all, this time it HAS to go better right?

    • noncoml a day ago

      It didn't work out that well for UK the first time. So now they are trying a second time. By voting for the guy that promised he would solve it the first time. This time he really means it.

      • brewtide a day ago

        Sounds familiar.

      • izacus a day ago

        Yes, my point exactly. This is a proposal of Swiss MAGA wannabes with the same disregard for consequences as Brexit and MAGA parties showed elsewhere.

  • dlahoda a day ago

    Could just stop state financing farmers and raise import taxes on non bio products which will raise food praises hence less people will be able to survive is better option?

  • rayiner a day ago

    > benefits from diverse cultures

    You mean "benefits from increased population," right? Because isn't the whole theory that people are the same? If so, you're just adding new people who are exactly the same as the existing people. So the only benefits come from having more people, or more people with certain skills (if you're filtering based on that).

    • stymaar a day ago

      Nobody in Switzerland is worried about the population growing due to birthrate. This referendum is about stopping immigration (even though in Switzerland more than anywhere else, immigration is at the foundation of the country's wealth).

      • rayiner a day ago

        > (even though in Switzerland more than anywhere else, immigration is at the foundation of the country's wealth).

        Is that true? Switzerland's foreign-born population was under 5% around WWII. Wasn't Switzerland already a rich country by then?

        • JumpCrisscross a day ago

          > Wasn't Switzerland already a rich country by then?

          In 1940, Switzerland’s GDP/capita was 2.9x [EDIT: the world average]; it peaked at 4.4x in 2000 and is now 3.8x [1]. (It increases linearly, long term, from the mid 20s until 2000.)

          Relative to Western Europe, Switzerland was 1.6x in 1950, about the same as today.

          [1] https://www.rug.nl/ggdc/historicaldevelopment/maddison/relea...

          • ashdksnndck a day ago

            I feel like I have to read this backwards to perhaps understand it. Is 2.9x the multiplier of Swiss GDP/capita vs the Western Europe average in 1940?

        • tempay a day ago

          In 1910 the foreign-born population was 14.7% and the drop around WWII was caused by other factors.

          Much of the industrialisation and banking industry was driven by immigrants. Arguably the wealth of today is the product of managing to avoid the worst of WWII and profiting from Switzerland's "neutrality" but that's an entire conversation by itself.

          • kakacik a day ago

            Well they were neutral, its just most folks, even otherwise smart ones, don't like true neutral behavior if it doesn't actually favor their side, hence such 'smart' snarky remarks I can see all the time, by people feeling they know history. Swiss accepted everybody, hundreds of thousands of refugees too, some parts even when it became obvious they will all face starvation since they were completely encircled by axis. Private banks accepted everybody's money, just like every global bank did before and after the war.

            They secretly helped allies - check Campione d'Italia story for example. Thats very far from neutral behavior. And so on. But most people don't want to know facts, they want simple black & white stories.

            It continues till today - they are officially neutral but look at their moves ie against russia during Ukraine war. Completely aligned with west (well apart from US which has top brass collaborating with their sworn mortal enemy). Look how their army looks like - 100% compatibility with NATO, 0% with russia or anybody else. They picked their side, they just don't boast around it, actions speak more than 1000 words.

        • moomin a day ago

          It saw a fair bit of immigration before the war to get there. The war itself obviously helped enrich them by not being in it and also practically zeroed immigration. Immigration continued after the war. There’s other factors, obviously, like early industrialisation.

      • bluebarbet a day ago

        >in Switzerland more than anywhere else, immigration is at the foundation of the country's wealth

        Such a claim would need terms to be defined, even before justification. Switzerland's mercenary attitude to immigration is well known, yes. I would argue that endogenous factors (history and culture) are far more important in explaining Switzerland's success. Neither natural resources nor immigration are determinative of a country's wealth. See: Japan, which historically has had neither.

        • throwaway2037 14 hours ago

              > Switzerland's mercenary attitude to immigration is well known
          
          What is meant by "mercenary attitude" here?
          • bluebarbet 11 hours ago

            Historically, Switzerland has taken the same approach to immigration as the Gulf Arab states: immigration is strictly contingent on labor needs, and citizenship is almost completely out of reach.

      • bsimpson a day ago

        If the referendum passes and the population crosses the threshold, Switzerland may need to remove itself from e.g. the Schengen area. All the remediations mentioned in the referendum are about suspending immigration.

      • aprilthird2021 a day ago

        All the butthurt people are going to come in here with screeds trying to upend a basic economic tenet that a growing population translates to economic growth if you can employ that growing population gainfully

    • bootsmann a day ago

      > more people with certain skills (if you're filtering based on that)

      This is how freedom of movement works, yes, and it's a key reason why our country is so rich.

    • TacticalCoder a day ago

      > Because isn't the whole theory that people are the same? If so, you're just adding new people who are exactly the same as the existing people.

      That's a very dumb theory. People cannot just be exchanged: you cannot take say, 60 million people out of Bangladesh, put them in Japan, and expect Japan to stay the same. Just as you cannot take 60 million Japanese, put them in Bangladesh, and expect Bangladesh to stay the name.

      That's a fact. But I could give a shitload of historical examples too... Here's one: when white and black people arrived in the americas, there was still cannibalism taking place in both northern and southern america. The americas had neither white nor black people. Today there's no cannibalism anymore and there are not many kids sacrifices happening in the US to please Inca/Maya gods anymore either.

      A slightly more reasonable theory is that if you import people through immigration at a reasonable rate, you can assimilate those people. For example for a long time in Europe female genital mutilation wasn't a thing anymore. Now sadly due to mass migration, ask any ob-gyn doctor in western Europe what he sees and what kind of act he has to do: like re-stitching hymens to pretend the women-to-be-married are virgins (because, yes, there are patriarchal cultures where men are going to inspect a woman's hymen to make sure she's a virgin).

      People just live in a fantasy land in their heads: there are 300 million women alive, today, who've been genitally mutilated (that's a very sizeable percentage of all the women out there). What's actually ongoing is weirder and shittier than most people realize.

      I say good for Switzerland to curb immigration a bit.

      People may be not dissimilar but cultures certainly are.

arjie a day ago

This is such a fascinating referendum. The population is at 9.1m, and at 9.5m it appears they'll stall asylum and family reunification, and at 10m they'll execute a Swexit - Switzerland isn't in the EU but it allows freedom of movement to EU nationals. Boy it is interesting to see what's going on in the world right now. There were so many things that I saw growing up as relatively solid but I just happened to grow up in an era of European unity and American primacy. I thought that even Brexit was a one-off event, but perhaps it is the other way around and European unity is a temporary thing that fragments easily. An interesting age, in the Austen Chamberlain sense.

  • rayiner a day ago

    Calling it a population cap for something that seems to be about stricter border controls is a wild marketing choice.

    • crazygringo a day ago

      It's actually kind of genius.

      It implicitly reframes a debate about immigration, to a debate about ecology/sustainability.

      Like I'm not defending it or saying it's honest. But as a marketing jiujitsu move, it's actually impressively creative.

      • autoexec a day ago

        I think that immigration actually is an ecology/sustainability issue. There are economic and cultural effects to immigration as well, and that's what people tend to focus on, but they aren't the only issues to consider. I think every country that has their shit together should be giving serious thought to immigration and sustainability, especially knowing that a massive number of climate refugees are coming in the near future. Preparing for that now would go a long way to keeping quality of life up while still helping out.

        This specific policy may not be well intentioned, it may even be a means to avoid taking in those refugees when the time comes, but this is the kind of thing that nations should be thinking about right now.

        • panick21_ 19 hours ago

          Im sure the ecology is much improved by letting people stay where they are and be poorer. In fact we should start to remove people from all rich places so the can live in sustainable poverty.

          • autoexec 15 hours ago

            Leaving those climate refugees where they are wouldn't mean they were poor, it would mean they were dead. There are all kinds of irrational extreme positions that would maximize environmental protection. Certainly the best thing we could do for the environment would be to kill ourselves off, but very few people would argue for that. Instead it's better to go for something more balanced and limiting the number of people coming in your country to an amount the land can sustainably support seems pretty reasonable.

            • no-name-here 14 hours ago

              > to an amount the land can sustainably support seems pretty reasonable

              Is the land in refugees home countries better able to sustainably support the populations on average, whether moving because of climate, lack of a way to support the people, etc?

    • kevin_thibedeau a day ago

      That avoids accusations of bigotry which Europe has convinced itself doesn't exist within its domains.

      • inglor_cz 21 hours ago

        Europeans, with some exceptions (the UK, Germany, maybe Sweden), generally care way, way less about accusations of bigotry than Americans do, and the Swiss are one of the most DGAF nations in this regard.

      • kgwxd a day ago

        Border control is not equivalent to racism. The people pushing for it loudly just tend to be doing it for blatantly racist reasons. Unsurprisingly, those people tend to abuse any ounce of power given to them. When they're granted extraordinary government powers, they make up official sounding reason to achieve their racist agenda. Hence the general consensus that any talk of border control is racism. The non-racist-driven border control agenda just controls the border, and shut the fuck up about it. They don't boast about arrests, they don't make up stories about crime or eating cats and dogs, they don't send in the military to schools to grab kids out of class, they don't shoot people in the face when they look at them wrong.

        • rayiner a day ago

          You think people who support border controls are simply prejudiced based on skin color? Like, their problem with Little Mogadishu or Little Bangladesh is that people in those places don't need sunscreen? Do you think that, if Ilhan Omar was Albanian, people would love her?

          • themanmaran a day ago

            That's literally not what he said. He's saying the majority of people supporting border controls are not racist, but the vocal minority are the ones who "boast about arrests" / "make up stories about crime or eating cats and dogs"

            • autoexec a day ago

              Exactly. This is one of those "not everyone who cares about border controls are racist, but most racists care a lot about border controls" situations

          • genxy a day ago

            Why do you continually put words in people's mouths? The rhetorical style you use could use some improvement.

            Why are so many of your comments about race or religion?

          • p1necone a day ago

            This seems like a sarcastic/unserious comment, but based on my interactions with people who are supposedly anti-immigration - yes, it's entirely based on skin colour.

            Someone from India, China etc whose family immigrated in the 1800s to work in gold mines/railroads etc and probably has deeper roots in the country than the person criticising them = immigrant, bad, shouldn't be here. Somehow simultaneously taking all the jobs and living off the state and not contributing.

            Someone from Europe/America/Canada with white skin who either came here as a child or was born here to immigrant parents = not a problem at all, they "don't count" for some reason.

          • selimthegrim a day ago

            >Do you think that, if Ilhan Omar was Albanian, people would love her?

            You do realize who a great deal of the "southern Italians" in certain parts of New York and New Orleans actually are, right? Or is your point solely about religion?

    • oytis a day ago

      I believe people migrating to Switzerland are largely educated Europeans, so population density must be their biggest concern about migration

    • cromka a day ago

      Need to hold them liable to one child per household policy if, for some reason, Swiss start having a little bit more sex and bit more children.

      • autoexec a day ago

        You don't have to jump right to one child per household (which is a bad idea anyway) but maintaining sustainable population levels should extend beyond just border control. It should include things like building out infrastructure in underdeveloped areas and encouraging (or perhaps even requiring) people to move in the new spaces, enabling and encouraging remote work to free up unnecessary office space and concentration of workers to city centers, and the promotion of sex ed, family planning, and birth control so that the children being born are going to parents who want and are ready for them.

    • hocuspocus a day ago

      To be fair that's not specific to SVP's populist initiatives, the parliament pushes bills with nonsensical names all the time.

    • bootsmann a day ago

      It is a population cap, you can read this proposal its like 5 lines of text.

      • usefulcat a day ago

        If Swiss population growth were entirely attributable to the children of existing Swiss residents, then this initiative would be pointless because it wouldn't change anything, and we would not be having this conversation.

        So yes, it absolutely is about immigration, regardless of the wording.

      • stymaar a day ago

        It's a migration cap. There's no provision on sterilizing Swiss women should the threshold be reached through birthrate…

        • l23k4 a day ago

          They're economically sterilizing themselves by starting a conflict with the EU at that point.

      • gmac a day ago

        No, it's an immigration restriction. There's no way it applies if the Swiss start having 5 kids each.

      • panick21_ a day ago

        Apparently you are unable to understand that if people who have been crying about immigration for 20 years that now push this things does not mean they have changed their mind. They just try to hide what's obvious to confuse uniformed voters (like old people who just see big number and remember the 1970s).

  • philipallstar a day ago

    > There were so many things that I saw growing up as relatively solid but I just happened to grow up in an era of European unity and American primacy

    European unity works well in a world of mostly-stable populations. Having mass migrations from large, relatively empty countries, to pretty full ones, is going to make the full ones increasingly expensive to make housing for, to power, and to water.

    • bojan a day ago

      [flagged]

      • throwaway85825 a day ago

        Are the people supposed to eat rocks? Agriculture takes a lot of land but people need to eat.

        If anything agriculture is going to require more land in order to be sustainable.

        • bojan a day ago

          People do need to eat, but over 80% of the Dutch agricultural produce is being exported.

          Also, good portion of it isn't even meant for human consumption. Think flowers or cattle feed.

          This is not about feeding the population or about sustainability. It's simply about profit.

          • autoexec a day ago

            If they're exporting crops that's about feeding somebody. People who would have to try to get their food elsewhere and have to worry about the standards/quality of those new sources. It's even perfectly fine for people to grow and sell flowers. There may be ways to make it more efficient, and maybe the government should be encouraging that so they can buy up some of the saved land, but I'd bet there are ecological consequences to paving over flower farms too.

            • wqaatwt a day ago

              Well Switzerland is effectively in the EU (economically if not politically) so same standard mostly apply anyway.

          • picofarad a day ago

            Are the cows pets?

        • account42 16 hours ago

          And even without agriculture, a country should be considered "full" long before each acre has been turned into a concrete hellhole.

        • wqaatwt a day ago

          Economically it would make more sense to import food from France, Spain etc. it would reduce the cost of living for the overwhelming majority of people with limited negative economic impact.

        • selfmodruntime a day ago

          well duh let's just import food from elsewhere (and completely ignore that foreign politic squabbles might crash this system)

          • throwaway85825 a day ago

            It's not like countries that import the majority of their calories have frequent food riots or anything.

          • wqaatwt a day ago

            There is hardly any need to import food from anywhere besides the EU, though. Which would be rather low risk.

      • philipallstar a day ago

        The Netherlands is completely tiny compared to many of the countries people are coming from, and the land is allocated. You can't replace the farms with suburbs throughout the country, and even if you did, then what? Is it allowed to be full then? Or should people still leave their much more land-rich origins to come anyway?

      • shimman a day ago

        Does EU have the USA problem where most farmers are basically sharecroppers where they are mandated where they can buy their seed, buy their fertilizers, where they buy their chicks/sows/calfs, what equipment they can buy, how they can repair their equipment, where they can sell their crops, and at what specific prices all from a single undemocratic corporation?

        In the USA it's basically corporations that run everything and drive the farmers into poverty where said corporations can then buy their land and rely on undocumented workers to keep the abuse going.

        From the outside EU farmers seem to have better labor relations, but don't know.

        • greggoB a day ago

          Swiss here, living in a small town quite close to farmers. I would expect if it was the case here, I would have heard about it, given my proximity. I'm aware of this "arrangement" in the US, never heard of it happening anywhere in the EU - I haven't done a comprehensive study though, maybe someone with more knowledge can say more.

        • Chu4eeno 15 hours ago

          Considering EU farmers tend to riot with their tractors in the capitals of countries which try to control them I doubt it.

          AFAIK Norwegian farmers fear of things like this was what kept Norway out of EU even with two referendums (or at least one of the distinguishing factors).

    • kaufmae a day ago

      most of the immigrants are highly educated professionals, big tech, pharma and meds. it‘s not the „empty“.

      • oytis a day ago

        I think at least in Germany it's not true - among people coming to Germany there are more refugees of various kinds than professionals

        • jubilanti a day ago

          Germany and Switzerland have taken dramatically different responses to the migrant crisis.

        • qingcharles a day ago

          These things aren't mutually-exclusive, though.

          • servo_sausage a day ago

            Every statistic regarding refugee attainment shows that it is; unless you are proposing to limit intake to only the skilled.

          • oytis a day ago

            Technically true, but I don't think anyone tracks education levels of refugees.

      • philipallstar a day ago

        They definitely aren't, but whomever they are they still requires houses, power and water.

        • panick21_ a day ago

          And literally all the limits on those things are artificial. Its the same right wing idiots that want this referendum that prevent smart transportation infrastructure in cities, that delay important transportation investments, that prevent bike infrastructure, that had the brilliant plan of buying cheap energy from France and Germany and so on.

      • stymaar a day ago

        France is mostly empty by Europe's population density standard though, so even though it was likely not the intent of GP, it kind of works in that context.

        • ahartmetz a day ago

          >France is mostly empty

          Which is so weird! France has large amounts of good farmland, some of the most modern (and unified, unlike Germany) government in Europe for a long time etc... no obvious reason to have just half the population density of Germany.

          • stymaar a day ago

            It's mostly a matter of when the demographic transition started: https://nitter.net/pic/media%2FGEDBLvOXUAANUlK.png%3Fname%3D...

            France used to be “the China of Europe” (which is why we kept being at war with the whole continent at once). Had France followed their neighbors' demographic, it would be home to more than 200 million people today.

            The demographic collapse of France in the 19th century, while Germany kept growing, alone explains the French defeat in 1870 (and then the two world wars).

            More data on that piece of history, and a hypothesis to explain it, here: https://worksinprogress.co/issue/frances-baby-bust/

          • mschuster91 a day ago

            > no obvious reason to have just half the population density of Germany.

            France was historically always focused on Paris, because that was where the Emperor was. If you were not a farmer, there was little reason to live anywhere but Paris or other large cities.

            In contrast, Germany historically consisted of thousands of small fiefdoms that each held some sort of local importance and each held authority of some sort. The Kaiser was pretty far away and only mattered in practice when the Kaiserreich was involved in some sort of conflict.

            • stymaar a day ago

              > France was historically always focused on Paris, because that was where the Emperor was.

              So much misconception in such a short sentence…

              First of all France only had an “Emperor” for a few decades (10 years for Napoléon 1er, 17 for Napoléon III).

              Then, Paris wasn't even the King's main residence for a good part of French Monarchy (the Loire valley (hence the list of famous castles here) and Versailles both aren't Paris).

              Centralization around Paris built up progressively, but it's really the French revolution (which came with the suppression of the old regional Parliaments) which made modern France the way it is. And the US is the only place where you can claim that 200 years of history counts as “always”.

              As I said in a comment sibling to yours, this has nothing to do with political organization, it's a consequence of demography: French people just stopped having babies one century before other European countries (and two centuries before the rest of the world).

              • throwaway2037 14 hours ago

                    > French people just stopped having babies one century before other European countries
                
                I'm not here to doubt this statement. Rather, I want to know: Why did this trend occur in France? I am curious to learn more.
                • stymaar 14 hours ago

                  That's a tough question, really. AFAIK the causes of the demographic transition in general are heavily debated among specialists and if we cannot exactly pinpoint what's driving the decline of birthrates happening right now, it's going to be even harder to pinpoint the causes for something that happened more than two centuries ago.

      • throw-the-towel a day ago

        Can you back up your claims? I don't have a dog in this fight, but do notice people ridiculing migrants as "doctors and engineers".

        • tempay a day ago

          As with everything it's complicated but it's more true than not:

          https://nccr-onthemove.ch/indicators/how-qualified-are-migra...

          More importantly, education isn't everything. Half the economy runs on work that doesn't need higher education and that locals largely won't do: cleaning, care, hospitality, construction. The Spanish and Portuguese speaking workers doing those jobs are propping up a standard of living for everyone.

          • throwaway85825 a day ago

            Won't do or won't do for slave wages?

            • tempay a day ago

              I can't comment outside of Geneva but it's hardly "slave wages":

              * https://www.mission-geneve.dfae.admin.ch/en/manual-labour-mi...

              * (scroll to the cost breakdown) https://batmaid.ch/en/about-us

              • throwaway85825 a day ago

                A better definition of slave wages is:

                After food, shelter and necessities is there something left over? Lately consuner spending is increasingly debt indicating that its not break even.

                • tempay a day ago

                  > consuner spending is increasingly debt

                  Geneva has the highest minimum wage in the world precisely to try and avoid the "working poor".

                  Also the "consuner spending is increasingly debt" is very US centric view. The situation in Europe is less extreme and totally absent in many countries.

                  • throwaway85825 a day ago

                    >locals largely won't do

                    This is never true and just economic denialism. There is a market price for labor. If there is no supply at a given price it is not evidence that a market does not exist, only that the demand is mispriced.

                    • jjk166 a day ago

                      > This is never true and just economic denialism. There is a market price for labor. If there is no supply at a given price it is not evidence that a market does not exist, only that the demand is mispriced.

                      There can be situations where the market for a particular type of labor does not exist. Populations aren't infinite, and if there are enough good paying, desirable jobs for full employment, then there may be no one available to do a job economically.

                      For example let's imagine a hypothetical town where only residents of the town are allowed to work in the town, though they can provide services to those outside of the town. Let's say 100 people live in this town, and they are all doctors. There is a hospital in this town that needs 100 doctors to run. There are other jobs to be done in this town - someone needs to pick up trash, someone needs to mow lawns, someone needs to sell food, etc. Now if you pay someone a doctor's salary to pick up trash, they could potentially leave the hospital to do that job instead; but then the hospital is understaffed. Something isn't going to get done; indeed in this scenario where there are a lot more jobs to be done than people to do them, a lot of stuff isn't going to get done, no matter how good the pay is, and the jobs that are done will be insanely expensive.

                      In this case you would simply allow people from outside the town to work in the town, or get more people to move into town. If you scale up this scenario to cities, provinces, and ultimately nations, it's clear that at some point you must choose between structural unemployment (ie number of workers greater than number of jobs to be done), bullshit jobs (people who would be structurally unemployed are hired to do unnecessary tasks), a managed economy (employment opportunities restricted to ensure necessary work gets done at any population level), or immigration/emigration of labor (labor supply varies to meet demand) regardless of wages. In practice you'll likely get a combination of the above.

                      • throwaway85825 a day ago

                        That's all nonsense.

                        The market for anything isn't infinite. When S/D shifts the market price changes to reflect that. The price reflects the relative supply and demand. You seem to be operating under the delusion that prices must be fixed at where you desire them and that no market existing there is a failure. In fact the availability of goods and services in a market is a function of your willingness to pay a market price for them. If you don't objectively value such goods and services they won't exist for you. It's not the responsibility of everyone else to subsidize your lifestyle because you're not willing to pay market prices.

                        • jjk166 7 hours ago

                          You very clearly did not understand what I wrote, so let's simplify this further.

                          There is one guy alone on an island. There are two lighthouses on the island. Each lighthouse needs an operator to function. The guy operates one of the lighthouses. How much do wages need to rise to get both lighthouses operating at the same time?

                  • throwaway2037 14 hours ago

                        > Geneva has the highest minimum wage in the world
                    
                    I was surprised when I read this, but I Googled, and it looks true. Minimum wage in Geneva is 24.59 CHF per hour. Wow! With 1.5 working parents, you can definitely live on 1.5 * 2000 * 24.59 CHF = 73,770 CHF (92.5K USD) per year in Geneva. (To be clear: I am not writing this sarcastically. I think 74K CHF per year will definitely not be "working poor" in Geneva.)
      • selfmodruntime a day ago

        citation needed

      • dyauspitr a day ago

        That’s to the US. I believe in Europe it’s Arab hoipolloi

    • epolanski a day ago

      Where are the full ones?

      Working age population is decreasing in Europe. It's only really major cities that suffer under development, and even among them it's just some, not the majority.

      And despite all the bitching, even extra-EU immigrants are a huge resource for most European countries. In Italy e.g. extra-EU immigrants contribute to 14% of taxes and receive less than 2% of benefits, as many of them come here as young adults and leave before qualifying for pension anyway so the bulk of social services (school and healthcare) is essentially largely subsidized by immigrants.

      In Germany extra-EU immigrants are on average net contributors to welfare state too.

      Yes, many among them stay poor, don't integrate and tend to fall for minor, petty and some for violent crime.

      What you hear little about are the insane dangers of organized crime like Italians and Albanians on the other hand, because they move hundreds of billions and are a drag to the economy in most of Europe.

      • azan_ 19 hours ago

        Extra-EU immigrants are not uniform group. E.g. in Denmark non-western migrants at some point are (weakly) positive net contributors to public finances, but MENAPT immigrants are on avg. net negative their entire life. https://www.economist.com/cdn-cgi/image/width=1424,quality=8...

      • xenonite a day ago

        > In Germany extra-EU immigrants are on average net contributors to welfare state too.

        Interesting. By what cost does this measure loss of freedom due to increased surveillance, decreased freedom of movement especially for women. Also increased cost and decreasing quality of police, law, education, or even street cleaning…

      • throwaway2037 14 hours ago

            > In Italy e.g. extra-EU immigrants contribute to 14% of taxes and receive less than 2% of benefits
        
        This is wild. Who are they and what kind of work are they doing? I would like to learn more about this phenom.
      • dmitrygr a day ago

        > In Germany extra-EU immigrants are on average net contributors to welfare state too.

        All the data I find shows them contributing less than natives, and even MORE less if corrected for age. https://www.econstor.eu/handle/10419/232517

    • marcus_holmes a day ago

      Makes me wonder about what's happening in those large, empty, countries and how cheap land would be there...

    • duped a day ago

      Global freedom of movement was an inalienable right until European colonial powers noticed some of their colonies' peoples wanted to move to Europe.

      Large scale global movement is indicative of failure to uplift the globe from violence, poverty, and climate change. It makes a lot more sense to me for the global powers who don't want mass migration to do something to fix its causes instead of retreating inward and succumbing to nativism.

      • rayiner a day ago

        > Global freedom of movement was an inalienable right until European colonial powers noticed some of their colonies' peoples wanted to move to Europe.

        What an absurd assertion. Where did you learn that? Read up about Roman border control and immigration policy, and what they required of immigrants into Roman territory.

      • selfmodruntime a day ago

        There was no global freedom of movement. Ever.

      • wizzwizz4 a day ago

        The second paragraph is a reasonable political position, but the first is blatantly ahistorical. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passport#Antecedents.

    • teiferer a day ago

      > mass migrations

      > pretty full ones

      C'mon, why parrot this nonsense? There are no "mass migrations" and neither the European countries nor the US are "full". Yes the Europeans screwed up real integration across the board, but nobody is really working on fixing that. Easier to just claim to be full and the immigrants are causing higher crime rates so no more people in but oh demographics, please everybody make more babies!

      • tpm a day ago

        Xenophobia is on the rise across the board with the rising unequality and an alliance between extreme-right elements of the society and the wealthy class that wants to use them to destroy democratic institutions and take over the power. Rationally with the ageing population we actually need managed mass migration but instead get managed mass hate and unmanaged migration.

  • foobarian a day ago

    Elderly people in our village in east Europe used to be super suspicious of the EU project and would say that European countries get along like "a sack of horns." Hopefully they were wrong :-)

    • selfmodruntime a day ago

      The EU is effectively paralysed in foreign affairs and a common fighter jet project died just today due to economic infighting. They're right.

      • l23k4 a day ago

        This is a deeply dishonest characterization of the FCAS.

        • selfmodruntime 7 hours ago

          How so? Neither Germany nor France wanted to meaningly influence Airbus nor Dassault Aviation in any way to solve internal bickering. There was a ton of political bargaining over subsystems and job guarantees.

          Of course, I can go off of what‘s publicly available.

      • laughing_man a day ago

        Seriously? This keeps happening over and over.

    • didgetmaster a day ago

      >Hopefully they were wrong.

      Over a thousand years of history has shown that they were right.

    • joe_mamba a day ago

      >would say that European countries get along like "a sack of horns."

      True words of wisdom.

      > Hopefully they were wrong :-)

      They weren't. EU membership and cooperation is built on favoritism and necessity. You get into the EU if you have something of value the other members need from you (capital, geopolitical, industrial, human or natural resources) done via treaties instead of via war and conquest.

      So it ended up as a toxic relationship where members exploit each other to get as much as they can while contributing as little as they can.

      @Ukraine, you'll experience this when you get your turn, just ask Romania.

      • boelboel a day ago

        Sometimes members are added just to prevent the EU from working better together, the reason why UK pushed hardest for expansion in 2004/2007. Funny how they'd leave the EU a few years later because of a vote that might've been decided becsuse of the 'polish plumber'.

      • throw-the-towel a day ago

        But what did Romania experience?

        • l23k4 a day ago

          Half of the Romanians moved to other EU countries and then sent significant chunk of their earnings back home :)

          • joe_mamba 13 hours ago

            Yes, by doing the poorly paid hard labor jobs the locals didn't want because they can chill on welfare, you know, the whole "muh labor shortage" bit.

            It's not like Germans, Dutch etc or the "new europeans" they imported, were rushing to wiping the asses of their elders in their own care homes or picking fruit all day in the sun on their own farms.

            What was left to send home after that wasn't "significant" by any stretch, after paying taxes, rent and CoL to further boost the local economy and the wealth of the local asset owners.

        • joe_mamba a day ago

          Banks, energy, telecom, defence, oil & gas companies had to be sold to French, German and Austrian companies for below market value, so those countries would lift their veto.

          Same with joining NATO TBF. We had to buy some overpriced shoddy used F-16 from the US with a lot of miles on the clock, for the same price of brand new Swedish Gripens just so the US would accepts us in NATO.

          So if history does indeed repeat itself, Ukraine will also have to sell off vital industry and resources to major EU corporations to get in. Like all those new shiny drone startups they have. Safe to assume Rheinmetall or Dassault will want those under German/French flag before Ukraine is allowed in the EU. Same with oil, gas and rare earths.

          Basically EU and NATO are two tier institutions. First there's the whales, the big players who are founders and make the rules, or get invited to join, and then there's the scrappy low level players, who need to beg and offer monetary dowry to be allowed to join. In theory everyone is equal, except some dogs are more equal than others.

          Because everything in the world is transactional pay-to-win. There's no charity and no handouts. If you're being invited somewhere or given something, it's because something from you is expected in exchange.

          @throwaway85825 Yes, except that was non negotiable form the US side. "You buy our overpriced junk or take a hike, I don't care if your poor country can't afford it." Leaked cables between our leaders at the time.

          Also food for thought to MAGA who keeps thinking that US acted like a charity for NATO.

          • dh2022 a day ago

            Romanian banks were looted by Romanians in the 90s: see Paunesu brothers and BRD. Also see Dacia Felix bank, Bancorex.

            Romanian telecom: post communist crash Romanian telecommunications were a disaster. For example two different phone numbers shared the same line (a.k.a. Cuplajul). In late 90s some western telecom companies started investing in Romanian cellular networks- they built all the tower and network infrastructure. I do not understand what you mean when you say the west stole telecoms from Romanian - the west actually built it.

            Energy, oil and gas- the heydays of Romanian oil producing days were during the WWII when Romania supplied a lot of the oil used by the Germans. After that Russians took whatever was left over because of war reparations. Since I can remember Romania did not produce oil - it was dependent on Russian imports during communism for example. So there was no oil and gas for the West to steal either.

            Re: NATO - in the 90s and early 2000sn Romania wanted to join NATO because that particular generation remembered the Russian all too well. The priceRomania paid was enforcing the embargo on the Serbs during the Kosovo and Bosnian wars.

            Re: F16 - romanians are flying some hand me downs from Holland which were purchased at the dizzying price of 1 euro.

            I am sorry, but you sound like a Romanian nationalist, one who unfortunately is convincing enough do that the current generation does not know how much better their lives are because of EU and NATO. But who knows, maybe they will get a chance to find out…

            [edit - some typos]

            • panick21_ 19 hours ago

              The idea that taking and helping countries like Romania was some massive commercial oppertunity is wild.

              • joe_mamba 13 hours ago

                Can you exemplify the freely given unpaid/uncompensated "help" you're referring to?

                Because with such "help", who needs enemies?

                Why doesn't US, China or Russia want that type of help?

                • panick21_ 11 hours ago

                  If you take everything, direct EU money plus other money from governments, foreign investments by companies, remittances from Romanians working in the EU, other aid money that flows in large amounts, not to mention market access and so on.

                  Anybody who rationally without nationalistic blinders evaluates that will come to the same conclusion. The idea that a Romania independent of Europe, with its shitty Post-Communist economy and the shitty companies it had could have done massively better is frankly delusional.

                  The idea that all foreign investment and foreign companies operating in other country is negative and explorative is simply wrong. That is the case both for individual works, company productivity and the countries economy. This has been shown to be true in tons of management studies. Insofar as Romania had issues, it its own internal corruption and other issues that they handled less well then Poland or the Baltic's.

                  > Why doesn't US, China or Russia want that type of help?

                  Russia did want the economic integration, foreign investments and so on, they just wanted it less then being an imperial power lead by a dictatorship.

                  If you think that is a better path for Romania then integration with the EU you are utterly braindead.

                  As for the US and China. The US already has its own set of alliances and cooperative agreements. It also is geographically very different and its so rich that if it was part of the EU it would be a net contributor.

                  China is again a dictatorship with like 1 billion people that believe they can build a system like US or the EU has themselves. And they of course did take at least large part of that package when they opened to the US and integrated the economy far more. They had foreign investment, much loser capital markets and so on.

                  To compare Romania Post-Communist situation with any of these, is laughable. And non of those paths are even remotely even an options.

                  Romania could be more like Poland, the Baltics or more like Ukraine or maybe like the Post-Soviet 'stans' just with less gas.

                  And of those options its perfectly clear what the right plan is.

                  If you have some brilliant alternative plan for Romania please share because apparently you are smarter then literally every other post Communist leader in any of those small countries. Or better yet, try to get elected on that platform. Just be aware that the massive amount of direct money and other benefits will go away, and then go watch how many people will still vote for you.

                  Realistic best case for that plan is that you become Belarus.

                  • joe_mamba 10 hours ago

                    Please don't go on lengthy off-topic rants just to put words in my mouth to disprove things I never claimed.

                    I never claimed Romania would have been better under Russian than the EU. I just asked you to show me that your claimed "help" they gave to Romania came from a selfless position without any financial strings attached in return for said help, because it wasn't.

                    Corporations in US, Germany, Austria, France, profited immensely, and still do from their operation in Romania they bought with cents on the Euro/Dollar. In fact, they often make higher profits fleecing consumers and customers in Romania than those in their home countries. EU and NATO accepted Romania because they could profit from them, that's it. I know, I worked for German and Dutch MNCs and saw the numbers coming from their offices across the world. Their offices in Asia and Eastern Europe were bringing in significantly more revenue per worker than those in NL simply because the consumers and workers in those countries get much worse deals than those in NL and Germany. It's basically neocolonialism with extra steps.

                    That was my point, that EU and NATO orgs are purely business transactional and nothing you get from them ever comes for free, and nothing in your follow-up comments disproved this, you just went on offtopic rants throwing accusations in my direction.

                    Later edit: also, on the NATO side, many Romanian troops died protecting US interest in Afghanistan, because I guess that's where America's borders are somehow, when they invoked Article 5 after Osama hit NY with two planes. Well in that case, a Russian drone hit us last week. Can US troops now please go die for us by invading Russia? Thanks. No? Well then that's the double standards I was referring to, that we only exist to serve their interests, buy their shit, die for them and that's it. Where is that mythical benevolent "help" you talked about?

            • joe_mamba 13 hours ago

              >Romanian banks were looted by Romanians in the 90s: see Paunesu brothers and BRD. Also see Dacia Felix bank, Bancorex.

              What does this unrelated thing, have to do with what I was talking about, like banks like BRD being sold to French Groupe Societe Generale and BCR by Austria's Erste Group. Bringing up random whataobutism isn't arguing in good faith.

              >Re: F16 - romanians are flying some hand me downs from Holland which were purchased at the dizzying price of 1 euro.

              Just do some googling mate before talking:

              The U.S. Response: "Not Our Problem"

                The leaked WikiLeaks cables from the U.S. Embassy in Bucharest revealed that U.S. diplomats and visiting Pentagon representatives had absolutely zero sympathy for Romania’s economic misery.
              
              The cables showed an incredibly aggressive, transactional approach by the U.S.:

                The Ultimatum: U.S. representatives told Bucharest that if Romania chose a cheaper European alternative (like the Swedish Gripen or the Eurofighter), or if they tried to delay the purchase due to their financial crisis, it would severely damage Romania's political standing in Washington.
              
              The "Don't Care" Attitude:

                American officials explicitly communicated that Romania's internal economic issues were their own problem. The U.S. objective was to secure the deal for Lockheed Martin, lock Romania into the U.S. defense supply chain, and ensure Romania paid its "dues."
              
              The "Political Insurance" Reality

                The cables exposed a deeply cynical dynamic that shocked the Romanian public when WikiLeaks published them:
              
                The U.S. viewed Romania as an easy target: American diplomats noted internally that Romanian politicians were so desperate for a security guarantee against Russia that they could be pressured into buying things they couldn't afford.
              
                The Romanian capitulation: Desperate to keep Washington happy, the Romanian Supreme Council of National Defense (CSAT) bypassed normal public tendering laws in 2010. They officially approved the acquisition of second-hand American F-16s, admitting privately that it was a political decision to appease the U.S., despite the fact that the country was in the middle of severe, painful economic austerity.
              
              
              > Since I can remember Romania did not produce oil

              HEllo?! Austria's OMV buying Romania's oil reserves for the rock bottom price of 600 million Euros in order to lift EU veta? Then pulling the same shit again for lifting the Schengen veto? It's an extortion racket.

              >you sound like a Romanian nationalist

              Pointing out the crimes of our partners and allies is now "nationalism"?

          • 202508042147 a day ago

            I'm surprised to read this on HN. Normally I stay away from this crap, but today I'll bite: the Romanian government did very well to sell Romtelecom, BCR and others. And I hope they'll sell more, like Tarom and other money sinks.

          • throwaway85825 a day ago

            Purchase price in jet deals is never straightforward because every deal is different. Variables could include: training (school + flight hours), weapons, contracted maintenance, spares, airfield infrastructure upgrades, engine overhaul etc. The only real way to compare is cost per flight hour.

  • JumpCrisscross a day ago

    > execute a Swexit

    It wouldn’t be full Chexit. Just renegotiating and then rejecting the Schengen chapter. It would then be up to the EU to execute its Guillotine clause.

    • ericmay a day ago

      > It would then be up to the EU to execute its Guillotine clause.

      These kinds of morally-superior, we'll show them, type of attitudes and suggestions are precisely why so many folks have come to be anti-EU. Nevermind the actual other real day-to-day issues with the organization.

      I'm sure you're also staunchly against Scotland and any referendum to join the EU, and against Catalonia becoming independent as well? Why should Taiwan be an exception and not part of China? Seems many of the EU are of the opinion that "We support sovereignty when it conveniently aligns with my chosen organization".

      The default and perhaps what is best for democracy is to have many smaller nation states, city states, and the other various confederations and the like. The super-organization of nations into these unwieldy states is in many respects anti-democratic and perhaps only temporary as these large nations and alliances were built precisely to fight other, large nation states.

      • JumpCrisscross a day ago

        > sure you're also staunchly against Scotland and any referendum to join the EU, and against Catalonia becoming independent as well?

        Why? I think the first is a good idea and the second fine if that’s what they want.

        • ericmay a day ago

          Because those would be breaking up the unions of those countries. It's no different morally or philosophically from Switzerland leaving the EU.

          • AnimalMuppet a day ago

            Say what? Switzerland isn't in the EU, how can it leave?

            It has treaties, but not membership. That doesn't make it "leaving" if they annul the treaties.

            • ericmay a day ago

              This was the OP:

              > It wouldn’t be full Chexit. Just renegotiating and then rejecting the Schengen chapter. It would then be up to the EU to execute its Guillotine clause.

              My terminology was matching what was used here.

              • SiempreViernes a day ago

                Sorry, nobody in the know would interpreted "Chexit" to mean "leave the EU" for the obvious reason that Switzerland is not in the EU.

                • ericmay a day ago

                  This is pointlessly argumentative, but I'm just going to continue having a conversation using the terminology brought up by the OP and what I interpreted them to mean. It seems to be working just fine for us.

      • deaux 18 hours ago

        > These kinds of morally-superior, we'll show them, type of attitudes and suggestions are precisely why so many folks have come to be anti-EU.

        This would be a hilariously dumb reason to be anti-EU when the other major Western power, the US, has had a much bigger "we'll show them", strongarm attitude for much longer.

      • Aarchive a day ago

        It's the opposite of what you think, if some countries get privileges without following the basic principles, then the EU would be unpopular.

      • jltsiren a day ago

        Those "guillotine clauses" mostly exist because member states didn't want to cede their sovereignty to the EU. If a treaty covers areas where member states have shared or full responsibility, it must be ratified unanimously by every member state. (Which in some case requires ratification by regional parliaments.) Any changes to such treaties must also be ratified, which means there will be 30+ parties negotiating and trying to win new concessions.

      • Barrin92 a day ago

        >These kinds of morally-superior, we'll show them, type of attitudes

        This is a strange framing that itself usually comes from a standpoint of moral superiority. When you sign agreements with a governing body, like the EU on freedom of movement, and you break that agreement then there's consequences. And I don't mean that in an underhanded agressive way, but just literally you've broken the terms you had negotiated.

        The superiority complex really often seems to come from countries like Switzerland or the UK in the Brexit situation. Countries that already have often privileged deals and then decide to forfeit them, which they are allowed to do, it's not an attack on their sovereignty, the EU is not mainland China and Switzerland or the UK were not Taiwan, they're free to do what they want, they just can't have their cake and eat it too.

        • ericmay a day ago

          > This is a strange framing that itself usually comes from a standpoint of moral superiority. When you sign agreements with a governing body, like the EU on freedom of movement, and you break that agreement then there's consequences. And I don't mean that in an underhanded agressive way, but just literally you've broken the terms you had negotiated.

          I don't think so. Even in the case where the Swiss or UK are breaking agreements or demanding changes to those agreements, it isn't something that's uncommon as countries and nations and companies and all sorts of entities break or renegotiate agreements or contracts all the time. In the case of Switzerland let's say they no longer feel the EU's freedom of movement policy works with the existing agreement because the EU has failed to protect its borders. You're painting a breaking of the agreement in the sense that nothing has changed in the agreement, but that may not be true and so breaking the agreement by the Swiss would have actually been because of a break in the agreement by the EU.

          These interactions taking place and then now all of a sudden the Swiss are to be the recipient of some draconian action "we'll show them" is not really that strange given it's relatively straightforward to see how these two entities can reasonable come to a disagreement which may or may not resolve itself.

          • tpm a day ago

            The EU didn't break any agreement.

            > the Swiss are to be the recipient of some draconian action "we'll show them"

            It's quite clear that the EU-Swiss agreements were negotiated as a whole and one side just can't suddenly pick parts of it that it will reject.

            • mike_hearn 20 hours ago

              Sure it did. Spain just gave 500,000 "undocumented migrants" a residence permit. They can now freely move throughout the continent. That sort of act was never envisioned when the Swiss agreed to FoM with the EU, which for most of its history was used only by a tiny minority of people all of whom had a similar culture.

              The EU/Swiss agreements don't have to be negotiated as a whole. The whole guillotine clause schtick exists only to try and transfer as much power to the EU Commission as possible. Nothing stops European countries being reasonable and looking for ways to work with each other on whatever areas they can agree; it's a deliberate ideological choice to refuse.

              • tpm 19 hours ago

                What EU-Switzerland agreement was broken by the EU by this action of Spain? And please do be exact which one and how. Otherwise stop telling lies.

                > Nothing stops European countries being reasonable and looking for ways to work with each other on whatever areas they can agree; it's a deliberate ideological choice to refuse.

                Yes, and it's the fine and reasonable ideology of protecting your own (in this case EU members') interests against the interests of other countries. Which is why neither the UK nor Switzerland nor other non-members can pick and choose. Makes them understandably unhappy of course, but so what? They are protecting their interests and we are protecting ours.

                • mike_hearn 18 hours ago

                  The treaties don't explicitly say "you may not grant residence en masse to city sized populations of illegal immigrants", because not doing that was considered so obvious it didn't need to be said at the time they were written. Such treaties don't cover a lot of possible but unlikely eventualities, which is why it's bad and wrong to make treat renegotiation artificially difficult.

                  > it's the fine and reasonable ideology of protecting your own (in this case EU members') interests

                  It doesn't protect their interests. That's the whole point. If it were about protecting the interests of European countries they could negotiate their each interest individually and independently with each other. The EU construct is deliberately designed to ignore the interests of any specific member state in favour of the interest of a new entity, the European Union, which has an entirely separate set of interests that don't correspond to the interests of the people living in it.

                  > Which is why neither the UK nor Switzerland nor other non-members can pick and choose

                  They actually can pick and choose and both have done so successfully. Hence why the EU/Swiss relations aren't governed by membership and why the EU has agreed to work with the UK on various interests without requiring membership (despite denying they'd ever do this at the time).

                  • tpm 18 hours ago

                    So no treaty was broken? Why did you write "Sure it did" when you know it wasn't?

                    > They actually can pick and choose and both have done so successfully.

                    They didn't. What happened was that some parts of some treaty were renegotiated or amended and agreed by both parties. Which is quite common in any such relationship.

                    • mike_hearn 17 hours ago

                      You can use that definition of breaking a treaty if you like. But it's not a good idea. It sends the world a message that negotiating with European countries is dangerous because to avoid getting screwed you'd have to write down all known common sense and social conventions in the text of the treaty, and probably include the contents of a specific dictionary as well, and even then they might just do something crazy you never predicted whilst claiming the agreement was being respected.

                      Note: this argument was actually used by the pro-Leave faction in the UK. They explicitly argued that any deal Cameron reached with the other EU member states would be worthless because European countries can't be trusted to honor their agreements when it becomes ideologically inconvenient. And that argument landed, which is why Cameron returned with a vaguely worded emergency break deal and then never mentioned it again - nobody took it seriously, and he was forced to campaign on the state of the union as it was, and lost. So these tactics do have a cost.

                      • tpm 14 hours ago

                        Treaty law just doesn't work with 'common sense and social conventions' any more than compilers that won't compile your 'common sense and social conventions' text. You have to say exactly what you want, nothing more, nothing less. That's the work of lawyers and negotiators. As my lawyer friends say, well-written agreements make good friends (and vice versa).

                        But also note that you are the only one against Spain creating a path for a group of people that live there to gain legal status. No one mentioned that as a specific issue worth raising at international level. It's a non-issue.

                        • ericmay 14 hours ago

                          > But also note that you are the only one against Spain creating a path for a group of people that live there to gain legal status.

                          Nah I have an issue with it too, conceptually. You're basically rewarding bad actors for breaking rules and laws which is unfair to those who were and are trying to immigrate legally. At a minimum.

                          Immigration isn't a moral good, it's just a switch we can flip on or off. Too few people? A given society can have more permissive rules. Too many people? Have more restrictive rules. Being an immigrant is just a random status one has by virtue of moving to another country - it's just paperwork.

          • Barrin92 a day ago

            >it isn't something that's uncommon as countries and nations and companies and all sorts of entities break or renegotiate agreements or contracts all the time.

            what the Swiss are trying to do here is very uncommon, in fact it's so uncommon literally nobody has ever done it before. No country in history has imposed a numerical population cap on its population, and in addition, freedom of movement isn't a detail. It's the very core of the Treaty of Rome and the Schengen agreement that Switzerland is part of. That Europeans can now move freely between countries is the bedrock achievement of virtually all its labored for.

            And the EU is not going to do braconian measures, the EU does not bully its smaller neighbors. Britain wasn't intimated, threatened and nobody tried to interfere with it when they wanted to leave. THey decided to do so and did. Swizterland can cap its population and deny freedom of movement, nobody's going to bully them, but they're obviously not going to have the relationship they had with the EU.

            To even rhetorically compare the EU to the US (which has threatened to annex an ally's territory) or China (which throws minorities into camps and threatens a democracy with force) is pretty damn absurd. Ask Taiwan if they want to trade places with Switzerland on the world map if they could.

            • ericmay a day ago

              > what the Swiss are trying to do here is very uncommon, in fact it's so uncommon literally nobody has ever done it before. No country in history has imposed a numerical population cap on its population, and in addition, freedom of movement isn't a detail. It's the very core of the Treaty of Rome and the Schengen agreement that Switzerland is part of. That Europeans can now move freely between countries is the bedrock achievement of virtually all its labored for.

              I think you are putting this referendum on a pedestal it doesn't need to go on. All countries control population to some extent, whether that's in how they support parental leave or how they support mothers, or through immigration control, quotas, points systems, &c. Switzerland is just adding in another wrinkle. Plus all legislation was at one point new.

      • phoronixrly a day ago

        You are mistaken. I am pro-Scotland independence and EU admission but anti Catalonia independence. Simply because the former will expand and strengthen the EU and the latter will divide and weaken it, especially since it's supported by Russia.

    • ceejayoz a day ago

      Sure, and I didn't shoot you, I just sent a bullet in your direction.

      • tonfa a day ago

        Especially after we saw how happy the EU was to negotiate (they didn't budge) when https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014_Swiss_immigration_initiat... passed.

        The new initiative is basically the same, but with no leeway to ignore it.

        (that said I suspect if it passes, there will be something tied to the bilateral referendum in 2027/28 to try to supersede it)

        • JumpCrisscross a day ago

          > if it passes, there will be something tied to the bilateral referendum in 2027/28 to try to supersede it

          This is my thinking, too. If it really comes down to Chexit-or-nothing, we’ll have another referendum.

          • ceejayoz a day ago

            That was the UK's thinking, too. "We won't have a hard Brexit! Of course they'll negotiate a plan!"

            • JumpCrisscross a day ago

              And then the UK delivered an Article 50 notice. That isn’t something this referendum would force.

              • ceejayoz a day ago

                The UK's referendum was also non-binding, in theory.

                • JumpCrisscross a day ago

                  > UK's referendum was also non-binding, in theory

                  If SVP gets control of government they’ll probably try to Chexit irrespective of any referendum power. That’s orthogonal to this question.

          • tonfa a day ago

            Well there's anyway going to be a referendum about the bilateral. (which is why I find the initiative somewhat stupid, you can vote on the real deal in a few years, about whether people want or do not want to have agreements with the EU, instead of hiding it behind a fake/emotional reason)

    • cromka a day ago

      It's not Schengen. It's Free Movement, the core principle of EEA. You're not in EEA, you don't get free access to EU market.

      This would be catastrophic to Swiss economy.

      • mike_hearn 21 hours ago

        It wasn't catastrophic to the British economy. Why would Switzerland be so different?

        • whazor 19 hours ago

          Most British people think Brexit is a failure.

          For Switzerland it would be significantly worse since they are surrounded by Germany, France, Italy, and Austria. So all trucks would be stopped at border. Food prices are already super expensive and this would make it worse.

          • mike_hearn 18 hours ago

            They think it's a failure because their political class refused to use the new powers to implement the will of the people on immigration, not due to economics (which, again, were not affected).

          • elch 19 hours ago

            Prices are not an issue for Switzerland, given that the tariff on pork from Germany, for example, is 347 CHF per 100 kg.

          • 0xy 18 hours ago

            Brexit was a referendum on immigration. It was the number one issue. Yet, successive governments since Brexit have turned immigration up to 11. No wonder they think it's a failure, the will of the people was ignored (and it's having real political blowback, with both major parties about to get reduced to dust according to polling).

    • mahkeiro a day ago

      Schengen is not the free movement clause… sad to see people that don’t even know the difference (free movement existed before Schengen).

      • cromka a day ago

        It's crazy how people really don't get the difference between free movement and Schengen.

    • ayylemao a day ago

      its called Switzerleave

  • bsimpson a day ago

    I was a teenager when 9/11 happened.

    Until that point, I thought wars were a stupid thing that humanity realized were stupid and stopped doing.

    • prmoustache a day ago

      There hasn't been a year, or even week without a war. How could you have thought that wars didn't exist?

  • teiferer a day ago

    > interesting

    The word I'd choose instead is "concerning" if not "scary".

  • whycome a day ago

    Just wait til Canada joins the EU and we will have a rethinking of any such unions as not necessarily being related to geographic location.

  • seydor a day ago

    damn, the word 'execute' reverberated interestingly

  • mc32 a day ago

    It veers too close to Logan’s Run when they cap things like that. I’m sure it’s just policy action at the various thresholds but it sure sounds odd.

  • l23k4 a day ago

    The EU will retaliate this time around and impose ruinous costs on Switzerland if it chooses to go through with this.

    Unlike the Brits, the Swiss have absolutely no leg to stand on here. If EU closes the borders, the Swiss will literally die of hunger.

    • marcusverus 14 hours ago

      "Don't leave us or we'll kill you" isn't the pro-EU argument you seem to think it is.

      • l23k4 12 hours ago

        That seems like an unreasonable interpretation of what I said, which was just pointing out the futility of the Swiss position. EU can impose its will at essentially zero cost no matter what the Swiss do.

  • ksd482 a day ago

    Change is the only constant.

    Nothing lasts forever. Good times will come and go and so would bad times.

    I think as humans we are used to small time frames which are proportional to our own lifetime.

    But the world: say climate, population, geology etc. moves at a much different cycle, if at all you can call it a cycle since none of the iterations are exactly the same.

    So the lesson is this: change is coming. Change will always be coming. Embrace it.

    If you like something, you have to struggle to preserve it as much as you can, for as long as you can, but you can never make it permanent.

    • throwaway85825 a day ago

      Embrace negative change?

    • account42 16 hours ago

      Change may be inevitable but not every change is and we shouldn't stop insisting that things change for the better.

      • ksd482 14 hours ago

        > we shouldn't stop insisting that things change for the better

        I never said we shouldn't.

        What I meant by "Change will always be coming. Embrace it.", is to accept it as a reality, be ready for it and prepare for it. That means, be ready to resist negative change and accept positive change.

        Even after successfully resisting negative change, the end state may still be different than before. This is what we have to accept and be ready for, mentally.

ouk a day ago

This initiative is a trap. Essentially, it would allow for the termination of bilateral agreements with Europe. This is what the SVP has been trying to do for decades, and this initiative provides them with a convenient excuse. And it’s particularly ironic because the SVP has always opposed legislation promoting sustainability.

  • JumpCrisscross a day ago

    > This initiative is a trap. Essentially, it would allow for the termination of bilateral agreements with Europe

    Or their preëmptive re-negotiation.

    I’m not sure describing it as a trap is fair. Nobody voting on is confused about what the thresholds require. I’m not thrilled at how close they both are. But the fundamental idea of a maximum sustainable population for an Alpine republic isn’t abhorrent to me.

    • idiotsecant a day ago

      is the idea of economic destruction akin to what the UK has suffered abhorrent to you? In your excitement about the one you might consider the other.

      • JumpCrisscross a day ago

        > the idea of economic destruction akin to what the UK has suffered abhorrent to you?

        Yes. But I don’t think Brexit is comparable to what is being proposed here.

        In Brexit, the UK invoked Article 50. In this case, the EU would have to execute its Guillotine clause. That dramatically changes the framework for and thus possibility of renegotiations.

        • mrtksn a day ago

          There’s not going to be negotiations to drop the core principles, I don’t know why bunch of people keep imagining this. UK was let go, Switzerland will be let go too.

          Hoping different outcome by negotiation over this is like hoping for negotiating your way out of your gym membership payment when still attending. Not going to happen unless you become a charity case or insignificant, being significant is not a strength its a weakness when you are looking for charity or special treatment. Switzerland can imagine being too important to loose just as UK thought and they will be let go as UK.

          I guess leaving EU can be useful to those who want to do things to Switzerland just like they did things to UK.

      • selfmodruntime a day ago

        How exactly are the Swiss in any position that would mean economic destruction?

        • mrtksn a day ago

          They are in a position of having no seas and only EU on every side, which means things are getting more bureaucratic the more EU-Swiss relationship sours. Think border checks on the ground and flight restrictions in the air and the less than 10M rich people in the mountains can now trade only among themselves.

          • s1artibartfast 14 hours ago

            Why would the EU be so irrationally butt hurt about it? It seems easy enough to let the Swiss have their policy and both continue to benefit

            Edit: EU can void all the other contracts, but why would it want to? Why do they care so much about how many immigrants Switzerland has?

            • mrtksn 13 hours ago

              Swiss can have their policy, who said they can't have it? It's just that they can't make EU have the Swiss policy. If Switzerland wants to be a 3rd party country, they can do that and negotiate visa regime, import/export controls etc with EU like everyone else who is not part of EU or don't have a deal. They can be like UK or Turkey for example, or be have entirely different relationship.

              • joxdosba 13 hours ago

                Swiss can never be like the UK or Turkey if it reneges on the deal it has now. The other two have leverage, Swiss do not.

                • mrtksn 13 hours ago

                  It’s up to the Swiss to decide regardless, if population limit is more important than being integrated into Europe they can do that. What they can’t do is to have equal access to the single market like the other EU countries without the obligation that other countries have.

  • greggoB a day ago

    > And it’s particularly ironic because the SVP has always opposed legislation promoting sustainability.

    I was just telling someone this today! Very business-friendly party, with the exception of immigration policy, ofc.

  • soco a day ago

    I must wonder though who could profit from Switzerland leaving Schengen. Okay pass checks are only a little hassle, but visas can become bigger, and judicial cooperation on international crime just drops. And yes, no more cross-border workers either way.

    • holowoodman a day ago

      > And yes, no more cross-border workers either way.

      Well, that will be a problem especially for Swiss industry. Tons of workers from neighboring Italy, France, Germany and Austria work in Switzerland, commuting each day. They do this because workers are paid better in Switzerland than in neighboring countries. If those workers aren't available anymore, Swiss production of all kinds of stuff will take a huge hit.

      For the same reason of wage differences, not a lot of Swiss people cross the border for work, and all neighbors are larger (except of course Liechtenstein, but that's a very special case anyways). So for those neighboring countries, it isn't that much of a problem.

    • netsharc a day ago

      Too many people confuse Schengen and EU freedom of movement. Ireland isn't in Schengen, but any EU citizen is allowed to enter the country, find work and reside...

    • joe_mamba a day ago

      >I must wonder though who could profit from Switzerland leaving Schengen.

      Same types of people who profited from Brexit.

  • namuol a day ago

    Convenient how? Even if you take the spin at face value, it’s downright dystopian.

  • chinathrow a day ago

    Meanwhile SVP head politicians employ quite a few foreign workers at all levels of employment hierarchy.

    It's pathetic.

alberto-m a day ago

The strong point of the Swiss political system is that the government is, by (EDIT) convention, made up by all significant parties. No major political force can say “if only we were in power...” because they already are. Also, no party can create disasters and then disappear and leave the consequences to the following election winners to deal with.

This referendum is an attempt by the members of SVP/UDC, the right-most party, to show that on immigration topics they have more popular support than what their relative power in the government is. Their proposed solution is very crude, on the other hand the opposition parties' position is basically “do nothing, everything is going fine”. I would have hoped the government to offer some kind of compromise proposal (which they are allowed to do and appears as third option in many referendums), but it seems the Swiss citizens will be faced with a “all or nothing” choice.

As a novel immigrant, as much as I appreciate the political system of my new host country, I was quite disappointed by the referendum campaign from both sides. Most of the propaganda concerning this vote has emotional and apocalytic tones (“the immigrants will steal our welfare and overpopulation will transform Switzerland into Kowloon” vs “we will become a pariah state, our pensioners will die unassisted due to the lack of nurses, EU will tariff us to death”).

  • tonfa a day ago

    > This referendum is an attempt by the members of SVP/UDC, the right-most party, to show that on immigration topics they have more popular support than what their relative power

    Not really about immigration but EU relationship. Almost every SVP initiative tries to create a contradiction in the constitution with foreign agreements to force an "exit".

    > The strong point of the Swiss political system is that the government is, by law, made up by all significant parties.

    It's a tradition, not a rule (the composition of the council is simply the result of an election by the parliament).

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_formula_(Swiss_politics)

  • JumpCrisscross a day ago

    Yeah, the marketing for this referendum has been awful. But as a mixed-heritage Swiss-American (continental Indian), I’m also sympathetic to the argument that some geographies and political systems have a natural maximum population they can sustain. (Unsurprisingly, the SVP’s marketing may be the thing that tips me against this.)

  • FabHK 16 hours ago

    Any parliamentary system with a proportional vote (or semi-proportional as in Germany with its 5% bar) has more parties and viewpoints represented than a first-past-the-post system such as the UK or USA. That's well understood.

kuboble a day ago

Being in Switzerland it looks to me like this is a really tough referendum.

Both sides have very good arguments and from the side it looks like either way the Switzerland has to give up some asoects of its high quality of life.

If the initiative succeeds, Switzerland will get a large hit from the cancelation of a lot of bilateral agreements with the EU.

If the population exceeds 10M then the current rail and road infrastructure will not handle it well.

I have already been on a train which refused to move due overload. And it would only depart if enough people have disembarked. The autobahn are already having hours long traffic jams at peak hours and with extra million people it will multiply.

And it's almost impossible to significantly improve the throughput of rail and autobahn without extreme projects.

It looks like a lose / lose situation is a sense and a people are going to decide which hit to take.

  • contagiousflow a day ago

    Can you explain how adding frequency to the train network will not work to compensate higher ridership?

    • tempay a day ago

      It's not simple with the "clock-face scheduling" system which is used which times the trains to all meet at the big nodes (Zürich, Bern, Basel) so connections work. To achieve this trains are supposed to fit into 30/60/120 minute beats which synchronise the entire system. See [1,2] for how this works.

      Also many of the most important parts of the system are at capacity. Bigger trains can help but a lot of these gains have already been realised in the crowded areas. The current hope is digitalising signaling to allow density to be increased but that's not simple/cheap even if it's cheaper than working on the lines themselves.

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clock-face_scheduling

      [2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMbV1rIPhCg

      • contagiousflow a day ago

        I'm not saying this is wrong, that makes a lot of sense. But on the other hand why have I never heard of other, much more dense countries facing this problem? I just never hear of Japan, China, Germany, Taiwan, etc seeing overcrowded trains and raise their hands saying "there can't possibly be a solution!"

        • throw-the-towel a day ago

          Germany's passenger rail is notoriously failing. China is big and empty compared to Switzerland so there's lots of room to build. Japan's population is stagnant, and so train use might be stagnant too. (No idea about Taiwan.)

          • mahkeiro a day ago

            What does it have to do with they way they have to manage way higher population density? Singapore is 2/3 Swiss population on 1/3 of the Canton of Vaud.. They are 18 Chinese cities with a population over 10 million.

            • Gud a day ago

              Good for them I guess?

              Not everyone wants to live in a Chinese style mega city.

              Fwiw I am a foreigner in Switzerland (I live in Zürich) and I can definitely understand why the people of Switzerland don’t want it more crowded.

          • deaux 18 hours ago

            > Japan's population is stagnant, and so train use might be stagnant too. (No idea about Taiwan.)

            Japan's number of tourists has famously exploded over the last decade, and they take trains more than the resident population.

        • tonfa a day ago

          Yeah there's tons of work ongoing. Lots of line close to the big hubs have ongoing construction to eventually switch to 15min takt.

          Improvements on various train station (new underground stations in Geneva and Luzern, extra platforms, etc.).

          https://company.sbb.ch/en/railway-development/future-rail/na...

          (for example, there's also lots of tram, etc. projects)

        • tempay a day ago

          It's not impossible, but Switzerland's geography means tunneling is involved in adding capacity which makes it very expensive. Also the beautiful synchronisation of a country-wide integrated timetable where you can reliably get between any two places in the country with connections that always make sense is a point of national pride.

          Japan, Taiwan and China all added dedicated infrastructure which took a long time and cost a fortune (vs the shared tracks currently used for intercity/regional/European freight). Tokyo accepts famously absurd levels of overcrowding during peak hours. Deutsche Bahn in Germany is widely thought of a joke due to chronic underinvestment meaning on-time trains are surprising.

          That said, these technical concerns have nothing to do with the 10 million proposal. It's worth asking why a camp that spent decades opposing sustainability legislation has suddenly discovered the word now that it can be pointed at immigration.

        • cute_boi 4 hours ago

          I have visited India, and if you ever travel on a train in Mumbai, you will understand what overpopulation really means. Your body will be pressed against other people’s bodies. To get on the train, you have to learn how to do gymnastics. They are absolutely not managing crowd better.

    • hvb2 a day ago

      You can't add more trains if the schedule is full to the brink. You would need to add train tracks, and that requires big projects

      • throw-the-towel a day ago

        And it is in fact so full that traibs crossing over from Germany sometimes get denied entry into the Swiss networks because there's no room to fit them in the schedule.

        • spockz a day ago

          AFAICT they only get denied if they are not on time.

          • throw-the-towel a day ago

            Well that was my point. They come late, and there's nowhere to stick them in the schedule because it's already full.

        • sixhobbits a day ago

          uh they get denied entry if they are late because german trains often are and it wreaks havoc on swiss timetabling where trains still generally depart to the minute and many commuters plan their day around making connections with a 2 minute change time. if the ICE from basel to zurich is late then switzerland runs their own replacement in its spot and denies entry to the german train to avoid knockon delays.

          yes the schedule is full but its not just no space for more trains, more no space for unpredictable trains

          • t0mas88 a day ago

            The Netherlands should do this as well, maybe DB will then at some point figure out how to run a train on time. The ICEs from Germany are more often late than on time, which then causes delays for other trains using the same tracks.

      • soco a day ago

        These big projects are happening as we speak, so this is not the culprit - as much as the publicity of one side would like to make it.

    • kovariantenkak 20 hours ago

      In many areas the train network is already at capacity.

    • kaufmae a day ago

      Frequency is basically 15 minutes almost all over the country already

      • Schiendelman a day ago

        That's almost laughably infrequent - you can use single level trains with more doors to triple that without even going to automation.

        • throw-the-towel a day ago

          Has any railway network managed to get less than 15 minute headways? Metros don't count, they're isolated and often enclosed.

          • t0mas88 a day ago

            Jup, quite common in the Netherlands. There are 10 minute trains from Utrecht to Amsterdam. And form Rotterdam and Den Haag to Schiphol. And from Utrecht to Den Bosch and Eindhoven.

            Most of these are double decker trains and long platforms so they move a lot of people at once.

          • trnglina a day ago

            Most of Tokyo's mass transit network is absolutely neither isolated nor enclosed, and operates with vastly higher frequencies.

            Here's is the timetable for a suburban station on a commuter lines: https://train-cloud.navitime.biz/en/odakyu/railroads/timetab...

            On a weekday at peak hours, there are up to 20+ trains an hour, with commuter trains continuing directly into Metro systems, and directly onto different commuter lines on the other end.

          • yerich a day ago

            The highest frequency city pairs I can think of, at peak periods, looking at available tickets this week:

            Shanghai Hongqiao to Hangzhou East is about 10 high speed trains per hour, all trains using the same line.

            Tokyo to Shin-Osaka is also about 10 high speed trains per hour.

            Taipei to Taichung is 8-9 trains per hour, high speed + conventional. Shanghai to Suzhou is similar.

            Rome to Florence is 6-7 trains per hour.

            Hong Kong West Kowloon to Shenzhen North is 6 high speed trains per hour.

            Beijing South to Tianjin is 5-6 high speed trains per hour.

          • spockz a day ago

            At some point we had 10m intercity intervals between Rotterdam/utrecht and Utrecht/Amsterdam in NL.

            • tonfa a day ago

              Seems like it's 4 per hour on Rotterdam/Utrecht, seems similar to Geneva/Lausanne with 6 per hour.

              In any case, I think commuters are fine with every 15 min, as long as there's enough seats. (for long distance like trains, my feeling is that frequency below 15min doesn't have a lot of impact, unlike shorter distance public transport like tram/bus/subway)

          • Schiendelman a day ago

            The Tokaido shinkansen has as low as 3 minute headways at peak times.

  • easyThrowaway a day ago

    Are they counting “frontalieri” towards that cap?

    No? Funny how that works, isn’t?

  • Stevvo a day ago

    ETCS level 2 can increase rail capacity by orders of magnitude without laying any new track. You can have multiple trains following each other separated by stopping distance instead of having to separate trains between trackside signals.

    • d3m0t3p a day ago

      I don't think so, faster trains are overtaking slower trains. There is simply not enough space between the station to overtake without having an acceleration that would damage the trains or the tracks. For example in western switzerland the maximal train speed for the fastest trains are ~130 Km/h while the same train can go up to 200 in some swiss-german part, only due to more congestion on the western part. Trains cannot be bigger, some of them are already too big for the smaller train station and in case of rerouting / unexpected stop this causes issue. You cannot make them higher too.

      You could get ride of the smaller train , only allowing big city to survive or decrease the commodity traffic or increase the rail network or increase the train station (more tracks allowing to overtake there, and have bigger trains) There is no easy solution otherwise it would have been done.

    • panick21_ a day ago

      Not really, the reality is that in some places Switzerland doesn't use ETCS 2 because it limits our system because ours is better.

      I think you mean ETCS Level 3.

      But that's just one of many investments that could be made.

  • Asmod4n a day ago

    Capping a population is a short term solution creating huge issues for the following generations. Examples: lots of places this happened.

    • missedthecue a day ago

      I agree. Enacting the deliberate policy of enforcing stasis sounds very appealing if one is incapable of conceptualizing second and third order consequences.

      • ausbah a day ago

        that seems to be exceedingly common with boomers. shotgunning lord knows how much for the sake of keeping their current net worth up

  • panick21_ a day ago

    > If the population exceeds 10M then the current rail and road infrastructure will not handle it well.

    Actually it will do just fine. Maybe if the very party who is proposing this wouldn't have spent 20 years preventing infrastructure improvements it would handle it even better. Maybe if this very same party wouldn't continue to fight sensible transportation choices at every turn. Maybe if this party wouldn't spend endless time and energy trying to put as much money as possible in unpopular and irrational highway expansion projects.

    There are lots of easy upgrades we can do to our transportation infrastructure. For example, Zimmerbergtunnel 2. This was known to be needed since the early 90s, and was planned. But was not done and is now in planning. We did it in 2 stages, making it much, much more expensive. But in the same period we spend as much as we did on Zimmerbergtunnel 2 on highway expansions that have lesser returns.

    > And it's almost impossible to significantly improve the throughput of rail and autobahn without extreme projects.

    Well we should get moving on some extreme projects then, or maybe not have the party that proposing this constantly stand in the way of sensible polices.

    Anybody who seriously thinks about this will realize having new high speed line across the country would be great. But they would never let that happen.

    NEAT was an extreme project, and it will provide benefits for centuries.

    • garte 21 hours ago

      ^-- This!

      There are so many other leavers to pull than this weird and random initiative: stop urban sprawl, extend public transport, curb automobile traffic, extend public spaces, reduce private property rights (Stichwort "Seeanschluss") to name some.

      I'm still kind of hoping we're going this way instead of something like this initiative.

jrflo a day ago

So this is essentially a way to reduce immigration to the country? And if they get close to the cap they will "need to take measures, particularly in the areas of asylum and family reunification."

Would be curious to learn more about why this is being proposed.

  • naths88 a day ago

    Here you go (if you understand French, German, Italian or Romansh, there is a video)

    https://www.admin.ch/fr/initiative-durabilite

    https://www.udc.ch/actualites/campagnes/pas-de-suisse-a-10-m...

  • soco a day ago

    The initiator party wants to get Switzerland out of Schengen and of the EU bilaterals - which will happen as a consequence if this passes. Like a Brexit, basically.

    Edit: but the CHexit will work just fine, because of the Swiss exceptionalism.

    • amunozo a day ago

      Way worse than Brexit, as Switzerland is much smaller, landlocked and had no colonies or anything like that. This would be a suicide for the country. Just populism to mobilize the electorate.

      • transcriptase a day ago

        Makes far more sense than the “population must increase forever” pyramid scheme the rest of the West is running. Check out Canada for a look at what happens when you try to juice GDP via population growth at the expense of literally everything else.

        • Stevvo a day ago

          The data/facts disagree with you. In a low birth rate society a constant influx of new tax payers is required. Without it you end up with decades of stagnation like Japan.

          • transcriptase a day ago

            Why shouldn’t the need for tax revenue go down as the population it’s intended to serve declines?

            • amunozo a day ago

              One word: ageing. Population declines but also age, so working population declines much more than total population.

            • aprilthird2021 a day ago

              2 main reasons

              1) Populations are their most expensive at their oldest age and each subsequent generation is smaller and needs to pay for an old generation larger than their own

              2) infrastructure and many of the things a government provides is not scalable down and up. A road is not (much) cheaper to maintain because less people drive on it

          • s1artibartfast 14 hours ago

            This sounds like a strong argument for having a stable cap. It's not a total immigration ban and would freeze population at a steady state. This makes all of the boom and bust problems easier, not worse

        • ryandrake a day ago

          What happens, specifically? Not that I'm a fan of "population increase forever" but what's wrong with Canada?

          • maxglute a day ago

            Pop increase faster than housing / good jobs. The usual. Tried to juice economy post covid with MASS Indian immigration, for reference peak "Chinese" immigration was post HK handover was 60k, settled at 40k per year, lots of Chinese wealth transfer to Canada. Indian immigration went from 60k per year to over 140k, outrageous amount. Bluntly, most of west including Canada gets second tier immigrants, all the good opportunities in US, Canada doesn't get to retain tier1 talent, and Indian immigrants are in aggregate less wealthy. The entire point of brain drain is to get best brains, or in lieu get wealth. Canada got neither. This not knock on Indian immigrants, who work just as hard as every other, just acknowledging value proposition is not the same.

            The broader context is Canada is on paper a small pop country with sufficiently alright governance to get per capita rich selling shit from ground. The more people you have have, the less that model works, and frankly Canada at 25m in the 00s already passed that point (vs 6m Norway). It doesn't help that... foreign influence have stagnated Canadian fossil/extractive industries development. Trudeau thought it was good idea to aim for 100m Canadians by 2100 (century initiative)... which on paper makes sense - only way for Canada to compete/influence vs US is heft, but of course that means a lot of brown and eventually black people fighting for housing and opportunities in the interregnum.

            Unsurprisingly, broken housing market = no one likes that interregnum.

            • panick21_ 19 hours ago

              Canada is really bad with housing and inftrastructure. Blame immigrants not crack head white politicans who see bike lanes as the devil take car and oil money whole worshiping Trump and far right parties all over the world.

              Yeah immigrants are really the problem.

              • maxglute 12 hours ago

                Immigrants not worth their economic value are the problem. That's not blaming "immigrants" but "immigration policy", which like housing policy - failure of politicians. But ultimately immigrants, who are not citizens are the going to be the scape goat. And reducing/denying/removing immigrants is short term more feasible than solving political sclerosis that require longer timelines, if can be fixed by system at all.

                • panick21_ 11 hours ago

                  The overwhelming majority of immigrants are worth it and long term they all are because they have more kids. Every immigrant who comes grown up with minimal education is a huge benefit.

                  Also its acceptable to have some immigrants who are not 'worth it', because it is something that is literally good to do, you are improving peoples lives.

                  > who are not citizens are the going to be the scape goat

                  Mostly because of far right misinformation.

                  > And reducing/denying/removing immigrants is short term more feasible than solving political sclerosis that require longer timelines, if can be fixed by system at all.

                  Its a falls believe that removing immigrants is somehow easy. Its not, its politically as hard as building new transit.

                  The difference is that building new transit is going to be great for everybody, specially Canadians who already own property or just live in the region, while focusing on removing immigrants will hurt everybody on net.

                  So the right solution is to focus on solving the fundamental problems you have no matter if immigrants or not.

          • alephnerd a day ago

            A lot of people on the internet blame Canada's malaise on their historically lax immigration stance.

            While to a certain extent it has caused some social issues (eg. Indian, Chinese, Viet organized crime took advantage of it to leave crackdowns during the 2010s and 2020s and degree mills abounded), it's impact on the economy is overstated.

            Canada's economy was always a resource extraction and construction driven economy, and

            1. the blocking of the Keystone Pipeline project (thus making Canadian ONG less competitive than American sourced ONG for refineries)

            2. the rise of America as a net energy producer and exporter especially in ONG (thanks Obama/Biden, Trump/Pence/Tillerson, and former Govs Burgum and Perry)

            3. the blocking of the GasLink LNG project (blocked the ability for Canada to build marketshare in Asia)

            4. the blocking of the Northern Gateway pipeline project (blocked the ability for Canada to build marketshare in Asia)

            5. the blocking of the Energie Saguenay LNG project (blocked the ability for Canada to build marketshare in Europe)

            6. Bipartisan support in America for trade barriers against Canada even before the Trump tarriffs (eg. Biden and Trump's softwood lumber tariff policy)

            7. (becuase this failure is bipartisan) Blue provinces halting renewables projects in Alberta and Saskatchewan while American governors on both sides took full advantage of CHIPS and the IRA, thus preventing Canada from building domestic dealflow in GreenTech

            all played a much larger role than immigration in causing economic malaise for Canada.

            At the end of the day, Canada's economy in the 2010s was structurally unprepared for America becoming a major energy producer and exporter by the 2020s, and was unable to successfully build infra to make Canadian ONG cost competitive against American ONG nor the ability to sell outside of North America.

            THIS is the legacy of the Trudeau administration - if your economy is based on resource extraction, fighting against it for political reasons is self-harming.

            Canada's GDP has essentially been stagnant for almost 15 years, and all kinds of infrastructure projects that would have helped the Canadian economy grow were blocked. Additionally, Canada has the same economic complexity [0] as Bulgaria [1] and Serbia [2] and is even less complex than Mexico [3], which makes Canada the least competitive choice for FDI within NAFTA.

            Australia is in the exact same boat as Canada, but unlike Canada, their political class fully backed their resource extraction industries.

            [0] - https://atlas.hks.harvard.edu/countries/124/export-complexit...

            [1] - https://atlas.hks.harvard.edu/countries/100/export-complexit...

            [2] - https://atlas.hks.harvard.edu/countries/688/export-complexit...

            [3] - https://atlas.hks.harvard.edu/countries/484/export-complexit...

            • kens a day ago

              Serious question: what is ONG? I assume it's like LNG (liquefied natural gas), but after multiple searches, all I can come up with is Oklahoma Natural Gas, NGO in French, and On God.

        • PowerElectronix a day ago

          No country is running a "population must increase forever". You only hear that when the public pensions are discussed because they are unsustainable. The argument is not " population must increase", it's more "human labor is the most critical resource and we must get as much as we can".

          You can fear the results of runaway immigration in the short term, like cultural clashes, organized crime and brown people in your neighborhood. But you can't deny the results on the long term when you allow talent to go to your country and end up with more nobel laureates of New Zealand origin than New Zealand.

        • gambiting a day ago

          Population of most European countries is actually decreasing year on year:

          https://www.worldometers.info/population/countries-in-europe...

          But either way, European nations are nearly all screwed - their expenditure on pensions and healthcare will quadruple in the coming decades as the demographics change heavily towards elderly peple.

        • metalman a day ago

          Here in Nova Scotia, Canada, mass imigration is driving the most intense building of everything boom, ever. And it just went up a notch. Plenty of Swiss imigrants as well.

      • seanmcdirmid a day ago

        This is only about the Schengen, Switzerland is not a part of the EU, and even before the Schengen, the borders between the EU and Switzerland weren't heavily controlled. I got in trouble at German airport for going by train from Lausanne to Milan, and then plane to Berlin, I had no entry step into the Schengen because they didn't bother doing that on trains (pre-Schengen).

        Everything else is negotiated under separate treaties. This would revert Switzerland to pre-Schengen, which is sad, but it wouldn't be suicidal.

        • tonfa a day ago

          > This is only about the Schengen, Switzerland is not a part of the EU

          Not really, the bilateral are a package and the EU doesn't want CH to pick and chose.

          If freedom of movement stops, a whole lot of thing also stop. It happened the last time SVP got something similar voted on (introduction of quota for foreign immigration), on a smaller scale (erasmus and horizon which are the higher ed and academic research collaboration, CH was a heavy recipient of the latter).

          • JumpCrisscross a day ago

            > the bilateral are a package and the EU doesn't want CH to pick and chose

            It really depends who is in power where when and if the 10mm limit is crossed. If there is a conservative in Paris or Berlin, chances are Switzerland can simply abrogate Schengen.

            • jltsiren a day ago

              Schengen is a minor treaty about border controls. The actual issue are the Bilateral I agreements, which link free movement with many aspects of free trade. If Switzerland drops that, it needs new free trade agreements, which take many years to negotiate and ratify.

            • tonfa a day ago

              Unlike UK, the impact to the EU is minimum and Switzerland doesn't have leverage (if the EU still stands).

              Of course if you have EU dismantlers in power anyway in FR/DE, they'll just be happy to sabotage.

              • JumpCrisscross a day ago

                > unless you're Swiss, your opinion is irrelevant

                I think we do bilaterally with our trading partners/border friends.

                Freedom of movement across the EU has created a massive backlash. Politicians can keep ignoring that. Or they can modify Schengen, perhaps by admitting that FOM makes immigration decisions a collective one. (Germany letting in a massive wave of immigration means a massive wave of immigrants for everyone.)

            • izacus a day ago

              Where do you pull this kind of nonsense from? This didn't work out for much bigger UK and UK isn't sorrounded by EU.

              • mike_hearn 20 hours ago

                How did it not work out? A lot of things the EU claimed were red lines ended up being crossed. Look at the Horizon programme. Supposedly an inviolable "privilege" tied to FoM, the UK called the EU's bluff, left, and UK is now back in Horizon anyway.

        • Yizahi a day ago

          I wish Schengen would one day apply mirror visit policies, to make countries taste their own poison. Like - "Ok UK, you want out of Schengen? Fine. You will now pay 162 EUR for a single one time entry per person. Thank you very much for your interest.". Or "Oh, you want a 5 year multi entry visa, which EU can grant for like 30-60 EUR? It will be reciprocal 1086 EUR for you. It was a pleasure of doing business with you, sir.".

          And do the same with every other renegade, including reciprocal mirror tariffs and stuff. Want to play games? Let's play them together.

        • mahkeiro a day ago

          Switzerland was part of Schengen from day one… New EU Entry exit/system will put CH in the same boat as UK with mandatory control at the border with scan of face and finger print + travel authorization. Switzerland would be completely locked. But some people are going to be happy as it would mean no more grocery shopping on the other side of the border.

          • seanmcdirmid a day ago

            Switzerland officially joined the Schengen Area on December 12, 2008

            March 26, 1995 (The Implementation): The Schengen Area officially became effective on this date. Internal border controls were finally lifted among seven member states.

          • unbeli a day ago

            > Switzerland was part of Schengen from day one

            I say! That's news to most.

      • dnautics a day ago

        how did they ever survive in the pre-EU/schengen/EEC era?

        • ceejayoz a day ago

          Divorce is harder than a wedding.

        • skywhopper a day ago

          Their neighbors were similarly restrictive back then, and the European economy was not as integrated.

          • joe_mamba a day ago

            > the European economy was not as integrated

            And somehow despite this, the European economies had the biggest share of global GDP back then.

            And now they're more integrated than ever, have more immigration than ever, have created the EU as their "big daddy" leader and enforcer, and yet they can't stop losing share of GDP to the rest of the world. Stange. Maybe they should hit the brakes for a second and reflect that their current course of action isn't the cure but the disease.

            Like ASML, Concorde and Airbus were created via European cooperation when EU was a nascent baby and present day Schengen freedom of movement did not exist. Now we EU bureaucracy, open borders unlimited freedom of movement but haven't created the next Airbus or ASML. Food for thought that the EU is tackling the wrong issues on its economic stagnation. Maybe the solution is not more EU, but less EU.

            • jltsiren a day ago

              The root issue was already visible in the 1970s. When birth rates drop below replacement, you eventually end up with a society with more old people than kids. And when you have a society like that, you naturally invest more in maintaining the society and less in building the future.

            • j_maffe a day ago

              > Maybe the solution is not more EU, but less EU.

              You haven't given a single reason why that would be beneficial.

              • joe_mamba 12 hours ago

                Because I'd rather have a change, any change, is better than the current managed decline lead by the EU overseer.

              • antonvs a day ago

                It’s a variation on the politician’s syllogism: we must do something different, this is something different, therefore we must do this.

            • panick21_ 19 hours ago

              Yeah lets compare the world now to a world pre rise of Japan, East Asia and China. Im sure less European imtegration would have resulted in Euro dominance continuing.

              I agree more bilateral agreements are good but having even more fragmented markets is not and was not a long term model of sucess.

              It was simply easier back then, less competition.

      • greenavocado a day ago

        Imagine how crazy it is to call a population cap an act of "suicide."

        • amunozo a day ago

          It's not the population cap, but that bilateral agreements with the EU depend on the free movement of people. Without it, Switzerland could lose access to the EU market, which accounts for 51% of their exports. Switzerland cannot just choose whatever they like from the agreements and cancel what they don't. They will have to accept whatever in order to keep in the EU common market, or the country will suffer massive troubles. Switzerland needs the EU much more than the other way around.

        • ceejayoz a day ago

          Imagine how crazy it is to think "Switzerland out of Schengen" isn't.

          It's a small, landlocked country, surrounded on all sides by Schengen nations, that until recently delegated air defense to the EU outside of their air force's office hours. https://www.theguardian.com/world/shortcuts/2014/feb/19/swis...

          • seanmcdirmid a day ago

            Plenty of us remember when Switzerland was not in the Schengen though. This might be good for Americans, who haven't been able to get working visas in Switzerland since EU countries now have priority. But otherwise, I don't see much changing beyond border procedures.

            • ceejayoz a day ago

              As with Brexit, leaving is likely to result in a much stricter regime than the status quo from before the establishment of the system.

              • seanmcdirmid a day ago

                True, maybe. It is really hard to say. I'm not pro leaving in any sense (beyond being an American who used to work in Switzerland and wouldn't have that chance today because of the Schengen).

            • luke5441 a day ago

              Most of the downsides would be on the goods side. Swiss companies would loose market access and the chance of "better" trade agreements is even worse then the UK, especially currently.

          • greenavocado a day ago

            When the neighboring countries become a threat again, they will place high explosives back inside the bridges and mountain passes.

            • herbst a day ago

              Not sure if they actually removed it in all the places, except that one bridge by Basel everyone know about.

            • izacus a day ago

              Well they also blow up 70% of their exports? :P

          • greenavocado a day ago

            I already pass through Swiss customs when driving in, so it makes virtually no difference to me besides slowing things down at the border potentially.

            • ceejayoz a day ago

              Schengen covers border controls (i.e. immigration/visits), not customs ones (the stuff you bring with).

              • greenavocado a day ago

                When you drive through there is someone standing looking at the line of cars and if they don't like the way you look they point to the side and you have to explain yourself and your cargo. It's like an arbitrary border control right now.

                Most of the time I'm waved through.

                • ceejayoz a day ago

                  Yes, I'm aware of the current state of things.

                  This is a proposal to change that state to something far stricter in this regard.

                • herbst a day ago

                  To be fair there is the same thing between Austria and Germany for example. Except it's more strict there even.

        • skywhopper a day ago

          At the very least it’s an infringement of human rights.

  • plqbfbv a day ago

    Moved out last year after 10y in the Zurich area.

    There's always been a pull-and-push between getting skilled workers and protecting the internal labor market. Right-wing political parties never made a secret of the fact that they hated immigrants, because they stole jobs and redirected/exported money that would have otherwise been received by Swiss. IIRC this was historically mostly felt in Ticino (the southern region), where Swiss companies sourced very cheap Italian labor by undercutting Swiss salaries by a lot, shrinking the job market for Swiss people (a Swiss can barely get by in Switzerland with an equivalent Italian salary).

    Switzerland is geographically in the middle of Europe, but it's not part of the EU. This allowed the country to thrive outside some of the more restrictive EU regulations and keep its own currency, but because it has a smaller job market that can barely replenish the high-skilled workers pool and is often in defect (not just finance bros, but also doctors, for instance), it always had to import workforce from neighboring countries to some extent. Over the last 40 years Switzerland basically opened up to more-or-less follow many EU rules and put in place agreements to have a play in the same market and be allowed to easily keep importing people it needs.

    This initiative as I understand it would be equivalent to a Brexit (because sooner or later the cap would be hit, considering more housing keeps being built), which would undo 40 years of openings and IMO greatly weaken the integration with EU, and as a result the country as a whole.

  • atemerev a day ago

    This is a way to enable deportations and curb permit prolongations, to delay reaching the 10m cap (which will create really bad consequences).

    As an immigrant in Switzerland, I am quite WORRIED.

    • unbrice a day ago

      > As an immigrant in Switzerland, I am quite WORRIED.

      If it helps : Assuming that the initiative pass and nothing is done to reduce the immigration rate, the 10M threshold would be reached by 2040 according to the Federal Statistics Office. The current regime should apply to you till 2042 which should give you 16 years to make your way to citizenship (Among many other path that would let you stay).

  • fractallyte a day ago

    It's being proposed in order to maintain quality of life. No one wants to be overcrowded. This is a sane solution: collectively agree on the maximum tolerable population. Then it's down to individual responsibility to obey the norms of one's society.

    Edit: unless you're Swiss, your opinion is irrelevant. Swiss voters have a right to decide how they want to live. They're not beholden to EU laws; they can make their own sovereign decisions, and everyone must respect that.

    • JumpCrisscross a day ago

      > unless you're Swiss, your opinion is irrelevant

      I vote in Switzerland. I’m very much interested in the thoughts and opinions of others on this vote.

    • SllX a day ago

      There’s never anything sane with population caps by fiat. If that’s a form of insanity they wish to indulge though, then democracy allows them that.

      • JumpCrisscross a day ago

        > There’s never anything sane with population caps by fiat

        Why? It’s repressive if done to cap a natively-growing population, since that means government controlling reproduction (à la one-child policy). But government has controlled immigration for generations.

        I’m asking as someone who is genuinely on the fence on this vote.

        • SllX a day ago

          Population Control ≠ Immigration Control.

          Saying that you’re going to cap your population necessarily implies you’re going to take policy measures to grow no further than the capped amount, which are by their nature, repressive.

          That said I did see in some other comments earlier after I posted this that this is a back door way to axe the Swiss-EU bilateral agreements all at once. I don’t know how true that is, but if that’s the goal, Switzerland doesn’t need to take such a back door approach. Just put it on the ballot like everything else.

          • soco a day ago

            It was put on ballot as such, and overwhelmingly (by Swiss standards) rejected. Now it's time for trying different backdoors (not the first try either). It's a constant circus, EU and the EU citizens being the demon eating at the Swiss well-being.

        • bootsmann a day ago

          Immigration is being controlled, EU immigrants require a work contract to come here (and consequentially 80% are employed with the rest split between spouses, kids and students). I strongly prefer this system over having some random bureaucrat in Berne decide who is "valuable" and who isn't.

        • Johanx64 a day ago

          > Why? It’s repressive if done to cap a natively-growing population, since that means government controlling reproduction (à la one-child policy).

          There's a point where caping even natively growing population is actually the right move.

          There's plenty of overpopulated shitholes (Mumbai, Dhaka, Cairo, Bangladesh, etc) where it would have been an absolute blessing if government was controlling reproduction or put a population cap in place.

          If you think capping population is wrong, go visit Dhaka, I highly recommend it.

          If you're still on the fence after visiting Dhaka, you're beyond saving.

    • FabCH a day ago

      Well I _am_ Swiss.

      You missed the part where we _voluntarily_ chose to enter into a contract with the EU that does in fact beholden us to EU laws.

      We can go back on that contract, but breaking your word is something that people remember for a reason.

      • criddell a day ago

        Does the contract contain a section on breaking the agreement?

        • FabCH a day ago

          Yes.

          And that clause famously includes the breaking of all other contracts.

        • brewdad a day ago

          If it doesn’t, a whole lot of European lawyers need to turn in their licenses.

      • BoingBoomTschak a day ago

        Maybe not a legally smart move, but morally... when was it signed? Perhaps way before some EU countries decided to stop enforcing their borders beyond the performative level? And since these agreements basically force countries (especially rich countries with socialist systems) to somewhat share the burden of that choice they didn't make, I don't blame them in the least.

        • FabCH a day ago

          These agreements do not force countries to share that burden.

          Freedom of movement for EU citizens. Migrants and asylum seekers don’t have the right to live and work in Switzerland because of our EU agreements.

          A migrant or asylum seeker living in Germany has 0 right to move to CH.

          We do have some asylum obligations from the Dublin accords and from global human rights laws, but those we can regulate ourselves separately anyway. EU doesn’t care. Countries within EU do it already.

    • joxdosba 16 hours ago

      [flagged]

    • dweinus a day ago

      > unless you're Swiss, your opinion is irrelevant

      Lol. Dude, sure the Swiss can vote however they want. But we all see you and can pass judgement on this thinly veiled anti-immigrant nonsense all day long. Respect it I will never.

    • soco a day ago

      I think I'm totally missing the explanation how my quality of life will increase when Swiss products cannot be sold in the EU anymore because of the price hikes and double bureaucracy - including no more cross-border work. Job loss doesn't say much "quality of life", nor does higher prices on imports.

      • Argonaut998 a day ago

        You are assuming there won’t be free trade agreements. People need to stop saying what happened with Brexit will happen with Switzerland. Two completely different countries governed in two completely different ways.

        • asyx a day ago

          The EU would be really stupid to give you a good deal. Like, for self preservation purposes alone it would be really beneficial if Switzerland would just really suffer after leaving the EEA especially because a lot of shit was going down in Europe and the world after brexit. Can’t really point at the cost of living in the uk and say that’s brexit when petrol is almost 2€ in Germany as well.

          But a Switzerland that just collapses surely but surely? That’s gonna send a message.

      • herbst a day ago

        What products are you thinking? Chocolate and cheese are actually not that relevant as some people want it to be. Gold trade, software, banking however is unlikely to decrease a lot no matter the border rules.

        • soco a day ago

          I take this question as a joke, it would be regrettable to know so little about Switzerland yet comment like this. Because more than half of the Swiss exports are chemical and pharma, then come machinery and electronics and... and yeah, food altogether is 3% as well.

    • shevy-java a day ago

      Except that it is not EU conform. And won't hold up anyway. Everyone knows this.

      Some politicians want to market themselves here.

      > Then it's down to individual responsibility to observe the norms of one's society.

      That's ok, but Switzerland decided to also partake in many EU regulations, including free movement. They can't cherry-pick individual parts. If they don't want special relations to the EU then that's also fine but the benefits will be gone as well. The UK found this out quite quickly too.

    • jrflowers a day ago

      If you increased Switzerland’s population density by 50% they’d be in a crowded hellhole like (checks notes) Belgium

    • skywhopper a day ago

      It’s ludicrous to think that 10 million is the “maximum tolerable population” for Switzerland. This is a racist, isolationist move and an attempt to stir up hatred among the population.

  • shevy-java a day ago

    The people behind this are conservative politicians. They have done so a lot in the last 20 years or so and keep on trying, but the EU regularly stops their shenanigans.

    For the most part the swiss already decided to try to cherry pick as much as possible. They know that if they want to limit movement, then the EU will also limit movement from swiss to other EU countries. And the swiss always disliked that, so they could not go through with it. You can also see that with the UK - they are out of the EU but suddenly want free movement and free trade. Some people can't decide what they want.

  • jon_adler a day ago

    With a birth rate or 1.29, they will need to accept immigrants or face the consequences of a declining population. My guess is that in the end, the next generation of old folk will want taking care of.

    • JumpCrisscross a day ago

      > With a birth rate or 1.29, they will need to accept immigrants or face the consequences of a declining population

      Doesn’t the population cap somewhat elegantly deal with this? If birth rates are insufficient, a certain amount of migration is tolerated. The lower births rates go, the more immigration is allowed.

      • harshalizee a day ago

        It doesn't work as straightforward as that. To have a healthy immigration channel, especially if you want younger/educated/skilled/etc. the pipeline needs to be active and streamlined. Jobs, housing, a well-beaten path that is predictably navigable is incredibly important for a migrant, since they're taking a lot of risks moving there.

        If this referendum blocks EU movement, it will choke the pipeline that's filling positions that takes in a high amount of immigrants like healthcare, agriculture, etc. Once it dies out, people may not be as willing to move if they're the one paving the path.

        Historically, the US has been quite successful in this area. Migrants from Philippines dominate nursing, Mexico for agriculture and Chinese/Indians for Sotware/Medical.

        The migration path has to be vastly superior to their current living for this to work, if they want the same immigration. Or else, it will be mostly people who are truly in a terrible situation who'd be willing to take a chance.

        • JumpCrisscross a day ago

          Counterpoint: Switzerland is rich, peaceful and pretty multicultural. That baseline will keep it as an attractive place to expat or migrate.

          • harshalizee a day ago

            Counter-conterpoint : For now.

            A large part of this is due to bilateral agreements and free flow migration. This referendum directly affects that.

    • vitalyan1234 a day ago

      will soemone please think of the boomers? :(

    • Der_Einzige a day ago

      Robots will take off in our life time. I will be taken care of by robots circa the 2060s and 2070s.

elektrontamer a day ago

I always dreamt of migrating to some european country but seeing their suicidal policy of importing the worst from all over the world I've completely abandoned the idea.

If this passes maybe there is some hope after all.

Note: In case anyone wants to exclaim xenophobia or some other nonsense I'm also part of the "xenos". So no it's not xenophobic to want your country to be safe and prosperous.

  • TrappedInCorner 21 hours ago

    I migrated with my parents at 3 years old to a neighboring EU country from another EU country. I agree with you strongly.

    As a migrant myself, I've become very critical about immigration in recent years. I've come to realize just how naive we europeans had become. Also just how penalized the idea of 'I want my country to maintain its culture, and I want my countrymen to look like me, smell like me and behave like me' had become, like it was some sort of a terrible sin to let anyone know you think like this. Thankfully we are waking up to our horrible reality and starting to take measures to fix the problem. Hopefully it is not too late.

    Although understandable from a single family or individual perspective, migrating from one EU country to another EU country to escape problems is futile, and you should really try to help fix the country your in, according to what the natives want.

    • garte 21 hours ago

      This does not make sense. How can you differentiate between "good" migrants (apparently you yourself) and "bad" ones? Shouldn't you remove yourself because you're a migrant to increase the quality of life for the "natives"?

      • elektrontamer 20 hours ago

        It makes perfect sense. Differentiating between a good and bad ones is the easiest thing ever.

        1. Are they a net benefit to the country's finances? Do they pay more than enough taxes to cover the public services they use and then some. Or are they just a leech on the welfare system and a burden to society in general.

        2. Do they integrate well into the society? Do they commit crimes?

        3. To whom is their allegeince? The society they live in or the one back home? Do they promote the interests of their own ethnic group at the expense of the natives?

        The first two are already available to state, tax, crime, welfare records. The third can be found out with a simple investigation.

        • garte 19 hours ago

          1. As long as these are measured they are not a problem: Switzerland - and most of the EU countries - do simply not have a problem with poor people leeching the welfare systems, but rich people not paying their share: tax evasion by the rich is a problem going into the billions while social security fraud is around millions.

          2. That's also measurable by crime stats and Switzerland is really tough in re-patriating people that broke the law.

          3. That is something you cannot measure and where you cannot guarantee freedom or fairness in a society. What if I were to deem you too stupid to vote because you're advocating for a fascist mindset that might overthrow the democratic fundamentals? You wouldn't want that, I suppose.

          So there's nothing to be done that's not already been done.

      • toasty228 8 hours ago

        Start by kicking out criminals and people who entered illegally and 90% of the "anti immigration" people will be perfectly happy. We don't even apply the laws that already exist, it really is that simple

      • TrappedInCorner 20 hours ago

        And to the fallacy of my argument you are hinting at, it truly is one of the difficulties. I think as a migrant your contribution should be to assimilate and assist with the country's interests. You must not be a freeloader. If the country wants to get rid of migrants, then thats it, they will stamp you out. Welcome to reality. In the meanwhile I will do my best, like everyone else should, to be a 'good migrant', which usually means: learn the language, treat people with respect, don't commit crimes, do not not abuse the welfare system, learn the cultural norms, take part in cultural activities and list goes on.

        • garte 20 hours ago

          From a logical standpoint there really is only one rational step you can take: you have to leave because you are a migrant.

          And that's exactly where all of this thinking falls apart: in an equal, democratic society no group should be able to decide who's a good or a bad citizen. There's only the laws of the country that should count and everyone has to obey.

          You should soften up your idea of "migration" because there is no inane biological quality in humans that make them good or bad.

          99% of "immigration problems" are because of poverty and inequality (both too little or too much money can influence behaviour) and not because of some sort of gene that makes human behave badly.

          • elektrontamer 20 hours ago

            > 99% of "immigration problems" are because of poverty and inequality

            That's just made up claim there's no evidence to support this. Even if it were true it's not the taxpayers responsibility to import all the degenerate murderers and rapists from all over the world in the hopes of civilizing them.

            Why should someone from a developed country agree to give up their safety and wealth to run this ridiculous and deadly experiment?

            • garte 19 hours ago

              > Even if it were true it's not the taxpayers responsibility to import all the degenerate murderers and rapists from all over the world in the hopes of civilizing them.

              That's just not how any of this works and I think you know it. You're just being obtuse, although I don't know why.

          • TrappedInCorner 18 hours ago

            No. I have to leave when they decide I have to leave. Generally migrants are not a problem, unless they cause a lot of problems (UK), or there are way too many of them even if they were so called good migrants (again UK). Even some of the most anti-immigration political parties in my country (ethno-fascist actually, not my opinion, it is their policy) are not saying 100% no to migrants, but they have to check a LOT of marks to be here.

            I have to say, that not every country is the same. United States from an outsider perspective seems like you could come from anywhere and look like anyone, as long as you pleadge your allegiance to the flag and become and 'American' you will be accepted. This is probably because US has a short history, and it wasnt too long ago when it was literally all migrants.

      • TrappedInCorner 21 hours ago

        What constitutes a good migrant is up to the natives and the government of a country to decide. At the end of the day it doesnt matter what how good of a migrant I think I am. Any day the native population can turn very hostile and ram any migrant out of the country for any reason, be it crime record, ethnicity or something else.

      • nailer 15 hours ago

        > This does not make sense. How can you differentiate between "good" migrants (apparently you yourself) and "bad" ones?

        Crime statistics. https://www.ft.dk/samling/20171/almdel/uui/spm/127/svar/1449...

  • nailer 15 hours ago

    David Lammy was asked about immigration in regards to the Sikh man that stabbed Henry Nowak to death, whose brother and mother then helped cover up the crime to police.

    Lammy said "he's wrong this man is British" as if there was no such thing as an ethnic Brit.

_air a day ago

Switzerland is ranked 67th in country population density. For reference, the United Kingdom is ranked 48th and the United States is ranked 183rd.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_and_dependen...

  • Octoth0rpe a day ago

    I wonder if that number can be adjusted based on the amount of arable land, or based on the ease of construction (quite the nebulous term here admittedly). The number of mountains presumably makes this hard to compare.

  • sashank_1509 a day ago

    India is 31, Netherlands is more dense than India. Would not have expected that, but then I remember that India has a massive desert, and the Himalayas. So I guess it makes more sense now.

  • MattDamonSpace a day ago

    America is soooo big and soooo sparsely populated

  • deepspace a day ago

    That is an utterly meaningless statistic. Canada, with four times the population, ranks #233, because most of the country is uninhabited / uninhabitable.

    • tomjakubowski a day ago

      Population weighted density is a better metric for this use case. It's more stable than population density when adding large areas of sparsely populated land, because the denser, more highly populated areas are more heavily weighted. It shows, roughly, the density experienced locally by the average person in some region.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Population_weighted_density

      The problem is it's difficult to compare across polities because nobody will agree on the right granularity of parcel size to use (and indeed, it is not really obvious what the right granularity is, and choice of parcel size can drastically change the number).

      It's similar to the metrics of "average class size" vs. "student-weighted class size". https://allenschwenk.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/0...

      • deaux 18 hours ago

        Whichever of the reasonable parcel sizes you choose, it's still miles better than the population density based solely on the territory of a country.

    • soco a day ago

      > That is an utterly meaningless statistic

      It's very meaningful, when the main argument is population overcrowding.

      • Argonaut998 a day ago

        The entire human population can fit within Los Angelas. It’s not a good metric in general. Pressure on public services, resources and housing is far more useful

        • jason-johnson a day ago

          The entire human population could stand there: each person would have roughly 1.5 to 5.4 square feet of space—less than the size of a single chair. If you actually did get all of humanity in LA it would instantly break out in war.

      • deaux 18 hours ago

        It's completely useless, because you're comparing country area level.

      • ceejayoz a day ago

        Read the rest of the post.

tastyeffectco 15 hours ago

As a Moroccan who recently moved to the Zurich area of Switzerland with my Swiss wife and kids, we found ourselves settling here for medical reasons and rediscovering a new way of life. When I see this debate, I mostly feel confused. I keep thinking about us as human beings and what drives us, what makes us fear others, or simply makes us uncomfortable. I think this is, and always will be, a human trait: fear of losing what we believe we deserve more than others, fear of change, and fear of competition (even when there isn't any). And I agree—Switzerland is one of the most beautiful countries in the world, with some of the kindest individuals I've ever met.

FabCH a day ago

One interesting point for me is that, IMHO, the propaganda on the „no“ side wad _abysmal_.

The counter arguments are awful and they are presented awfully and not even in such high quantity as you would expect.

I think it has a good chance of passing just because of that.

And then political shitf***y will begin with „we don’t know how to turn this into law!“, which is not good for the basis of democracy…

  • Leherenn a day ago

    I agree, but it's also a lot easier to promise a silver bullet to everything than to propose improvements to the actual, hard problems.

    Yes infrastructure are strained, but it's not like nothing is being done. It's just that it take decades, and will be too little, too late.

    Same thing with housing. Every one is saying we need to make the procedures more efficient, but when it comes time to actually makes changes, there's no consensus to drop anything.

    They could have done better, but it would have been very easy to make nothing but empty promises. I prefer they didn't.

    Although I thought weird that SVP brought the "we will need to increase retirement age" themselves. It's actually pretty likely, but sounds like a massive own goal so close to the vote given how unpopular it is.

  • mamonster 15 hours ago

    Not to be underestimated is the fact that the healthcare argument (I got like 5 flyers of a boomer in a wheelchair with a sad looking face with some nurse standing behind) is coming on the backs of boomers voting themselves the 13th AVS, which already pissed a lot of people off and is either going to lead to a pretty significant VAT rise or more direct taxes.

  • jeffrallen a day ago

    > don't know how to turn this into law

    For one time, we can be grateful that the breakdown in direct democracy is gonna save us from an own goal.

    • FabCH 21 hours ago

      I‘d rather they didn’t.

      Undermining democracy itself is far more dangerous than whatever the impact of this referendum would be.

  • izacus a day ago

    I'm sure blaming the "propaganda" will help you about as much as it helps Americans after voting for their anti immigration party nonsense.

trgn a day ago

absent productivity increases, population growth is just there to maintain the welfare state for retirees, it's a perpetuum mobile. apart from that, i dont even know what the benefits of a growing population would be. switzerland is trying a different tack through democratic means.

  • mahkeiro a day ago

    You don’t know the advantage of a growing population, but you have not far to go in Europe to see the effect of a decreasing population, and it doesn’t really look good.

    • trgn a day ago

      isnt that just a temporary bottleneck? a self-confident generation might make the sacrifice. plus, the opposite of increasing isnt necessarily decreasing, stabilizing is another one.

  • soco 21 hours ago

    I don't see anything wrong with maintaining the welfare state for the retirees. The retirees are exactly the ones who built Switzerland to be what it is now, including its welfare state. It's a great result but of you don't like it, you are free to build a better one in your own country, with retirees under the bridges if you prefer.

_trampeltier a day ago

The question is not wrong, but the answer is. Here in Switzerlands middle land, the streets and trains are very crowded, not just during peek hours. On the other hand, it's already now hard to find people for almost any kind of work.

  • jason-johnson a day ago

    When ever anyone says they can't find workers, at the end of the sentence there is always an implicit "for the compensation I'm offering".

    • _trampeltier 19 hours ago

      Yes and no. Thats also a kind of problem in Switzerland. The social system is so good, you can have a pretty good life without working. One one side, thats a good thing, on the other side, for some people, even young people, they say thats enough for me, and never start to work.

  • lifestyleguru a day ago

    I think they suffer from universal problem that the job doesn't pay for housing anywhere within reasonable commute to the job, assuming that it's even possible to rent any housing at all.

  • sltkr a day ago

    > On the other hand, it's already now hard to find people for almost any kind of work.

    Lots of people in Switzerland are struggling to find jobs, especially in the tech sector after mass layoffs and outsourcing.

    If you're looking to hire a full-stack software engineer in Switzerland, send me a message! But I bet you won't, because there isn't actually an abundance of jobs in Switzerland.

  • latency-guy2 a day ago

    > On the other hand, it's already now hard to find people for almost any kind of work.

    Why is it hard? Can't find a pick from the ~3% unemployment rate? That's approx 100-200k people, are you sure you can't find a person in that selection?

    Maybe you're asking a bit much for standards that you are weakly attempting at a defense or justification.

    This argument without any other qualifications reads to me as whinging that you're not getting everything you want. So lower your standards, offer more pay, or just move to a different country.

    • sltkr a day ago

      Interesting that you're downvoted for pointing this out. Lots of people in Switzerland are struggling to find jobs, but no, they're all unfit, and we must import more immigrants.

      Then of course those immigrants are laid off and contribute to the unemployment number, and rather than hiring them back, people will say we should import even more immigrants, and so on.

ekelsen a day ago

What would they do if the natural birthrate were to tip it over the threshold? (Perhaps unlikely at current birthrates, but given that laws last long times, perhaps worth considering?)

  • jeffrallen a day ago

    The initiative does not mention what. Because the initiative's sponsor are anti-migration.

    • ekelsen 5 hours ago

      Yeah I'm aware -- just pointing out that this threshold could be reached by other means and the options for enforcing it if it happens via birthrate are all pretty grim.

dguest a day ago

I'm probably missing something. This would seem a bit problematic for some organizations that put Switzerland on the world stage, e.g.

- The UN

- CERN

- The Red Cross

- The WHO

- The World Economic Forum

- ETH Zurich

There are probably a lot of others I'm missing.

I'd imagine international banks also benefit from recruiting foreign nationals to do business with their home countries, and not just because there's a shortage of domestic labor. The whole point of these organizations is to be the headquarters of a much larger international project.

I guess maybe there will be a lot of weird exceptions if this were to go though. Otherwise, good luck sourcing your diplomats from entirely Swiss people.

  • throw-the-towel a day ago

    The Swiss have historically been so isolationist, they refused to join the fricking UN until 2002. Some of the headquarters you're referencing have been there since the 19th century, they'll be fine.

    • dguest a day ago

      Isolationist is an interesting way to describe Switzerland: economically they're probably one of the most internationally integrated, and thus dependent, countries in the world.

      • throw-the-towel a day ago

        True, and yet at the same time they're incredibly wary of political and military alliances.

        • nairboon a day ago

          For good reason, at the Congress of Vienna 1815 the largest powers in Europe signed a treaty that guarantees Switzerland's neutrality. As a result, Switzerland got spared in world war one and two. So far not entering into any alliances has been a very good strategy for Switzerland to ensure peace.

markstos a day ago

No Population Growth in My Backyard -- NPGIMBY.

h4kunamata a day ago

Australia here, Switzerland knows something we don't, it is sad.

notimetorelax a day ago

As a voting member of the population all I can say is - good luck winning it… We have silly initiatives once in a while, that’s because you don’t need that much to start one.

  • FabCH a day ago

    Don’t be so quick.

    You know full well that the polls are 52% no. It will be a razor thin rejection and the SVP will try again until they find one that passes.

    • HerbManic a day ago

      Pretty much. Many people ignored Brexit because they basically thought it would never get through until it crawled through with a tiny margin.

      Do not get complacent, once that happens this stuff can quietly grow very fast and suddenly happen in what feels like a total blind side.

    • bootsmann a day ago

      Its honestly so annoying, every 3 years we have to vote against the same garbage proposal because the SVP is unwilling to accept the will of the electorate.

  • herbst a day ago

    Don't look at tiktok then. It seems pretty much won in there.

sakex a day ago

While I agree we need to keep our immigration under control, this is not the solution.

rdevsrex a day ago

This is a good move. I hope Switzerland doesn't become like the UK.

  • vor_ a day ago

    Population caps by fiat have always been terrible moves. Example: every country that's ever had them.

    • embedding-shape a day ago

      What counties have had population caps exactly, like the one proposed? I know China and Singapore tried to limit birth rates, otherwise some countries have various quotas/intake control for residencies, but those countries don't seem especially "failed", like Andorra or Singapore, not do they have "population caps".

  • snvzz a day ago

    The Swiss can choose what they want for their country. If they don't want immigrants, so be it.

    This is proper Democracy.

6510 18 hours ago

I read a hilarious comment from a Swish once, he was confused how we could take in so many migrants from all over the world. He was all for helping people, he could see the economic benefits, he understood that the native population was aging. What he didn't get was how we were going to preserve the familiar country we grew up in. The new people won't love your country the way you do. They will see it for what it is, a strange collection of cultural weirdness and they will struggle leaving their own cultural weirdness behind. Why would they? His final point, what if there is a war? If you were a migrant, would you die for your new country or just move on to greener pastures?

newbie4u 14 hours ago

What if these comments are massively astroturfed? As far as I can tell economic growth comes at the expense of everything. And if you can’t manage economic growth that benefits all instead of the few at the top, without endless population growth, then your political/economic system is cancerous. Tangentially, diversity is the strength of the exploitative psychopathic ruling class in the West. Why can’t a country or city or region live in balance with the rest of the planet? Most people want to have families or would clearly be happier if they had the option. Fix these problems, live in balance sustainably. This is clearly not the plan for the West. Weaponizing the higher ideals to increase economic exploitation has to be one of the most evil endeavors in the history of humanity.

amunozo 17 hours ago

People are missing the point. The problem of capping the population is that this would end all bilateral agreements with the EU, as these depend on the free movement of people, which would severely damage the economy of a country that, even rich, it's really small, landlocked, surrounded by EU countries and dependent on their economy.

up2isomorphism 11 hours ago

This is totally understandable from human’s perspective. On the other hand this is a result of global market and trade and most importantly growth based economics. So it is very hard to cure a problem by removing the symptoms.

dboreham a day ago

Logan's Run!

ChrisArchitect a day ago

Previously: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47015345

einpoklum a day ago

> ... population has grown... ... number of people immigrating depends primarily on the labour market. When the economy is strong, companies... often recruit the ... workers they need from the EU.

> ...

> The... sustainability initiative...[:] If the permanent resident population exceeds 9.5 million ... the Federal Council and Parliament will need to take measures, particularly in the areas of asylum and family reunification.

So, this measure says that if companies need more workers, Switzerland will refuse to grant asylum, and will prevent Swiss residents from having their spouse, child or parent come live with them.

Regardless of whether population capping is legitimate or not, that sounds quite nasty. If the measure had said "in case of population growing, there will be a moratorium on recruiting employees from abroad", then you would have a discussion.

derelicta a day ago

I propose we set it at 4Mio instead, deport all the German speakers and give their properties to the French-speaking ones.

cynicalsecurity a day ago

Leaving the EU or ending free movement with EU countries leads to a significant increase in immigration from the third world, as Brexit showed.

  • JumpCrisscross a day ago

    It really doesn’t have to. Britain being incompetent is sort of its own chapter in governance.

    • idiotsecant a day ago

      no true scotsman

      • JumpCrisscross a day ago

        Not what that means.

        • idiotsecant a day ago

          Thats exactly what that means. The UK did the thing you want to do and had a bad outcome because they didn't do it right. The true and best and correct way to get it done of course would have none of those bad outcomes.

          • JumpCrisscross a day ago

            > UK did the thing you want to do

            The UK invoked Article 50. It didn’t have to, but it chose to because Britain. There is no world in which Switzerland is the party that tears up all of its EU agreements.

            If someone says that’s a bad dog and I say no, that’s a cat, that’s not an example of No True Scotsman, it’s a category error.

            • karmakurtisaani a day ago

              Free movement is at the heart of the EU project. You start restricting that and the EU will tear up the agreements. We saw this already some 10 years ago when a similar vote passed, and EU stopped a lot of collaborations with the Swiss.

            • qalmakka a day ago

              It's clear to everyone involved that the EU deeply regrets how they did the Swiss agreements. Switzerland basically ended up in a parallel carbon copy of the EFTA for all intents and purposes. It was clearly stated during the Brexit charade that the bureaucratic fatigue of having so many cherry picked agreements with Switzerland made the likelihood of doing the same with the UK basically zero.

              The EU has always been clear that the single market comes alongside the four freedoms. If Switzerland approves this referendum that's a very high chance they will have to exit the single market too, which will hurt Switzerland immensely.

              This is very ironic to me, because right now we live in a world where the irrelevance of small nations is getting clearer and clearer by the day. Political norms and international law are being trampled daily by the larger powers, and Switzerland was recently at the very end of it when Trump basically bullied them by imposing on them tariffs that were vastly higher than the EU and then ghosting them because he couldn't give a shit about them

          • selfmodruntime a day ago

            You're using that fallacy wrong.

  • Argonaut998 a day ago

    The Swiss ruling class don’t have as much disdain for their populace. It will only end up that way if the Swiss people will it.

    A lot of the UK’s problems were a result of the EU being vindictive as well. The EU won’t act vindictively because they aren’t in the EU.

andrewstuart a day ago

But without population growth there will be no economic growth, the economy will stall it will be an unmitigated disaster.

Every country must grow as much as it possibly can and then keep growing much more than that.

  • JumpCrisscross a day ago

    > without population growth there will be no economic growth

    This is not true. Productivity is the mediator between a constant population and economic growth. (The world economy has grown much faster than its population over the last 100 years. And the U.S. still out produces the more-populous India.)

  • incompatible a day ago

    I assume that's meant sarcastically, but it does sum up the capitalist mindset. It's taken along with the understanding that it's fine if all the new economic output ends up in the hands of the 1%.

shevy-java a day ago

Great that they can vote, but this is also stupid. Plus, it works both ways, so if Switzerland wants to add a cap to limit movement then it won't be able to enjoy free movement in the EU either. I totally understand why Norway and Switzerland do not want to join the EU; the EU has tons of problems, but this kind of cherry-picking is simply unfair to the other EU members. (Also, the EU has to stop expanding. It constantly picks up poor countries, and demands that the richer EU countries must now pay more than before. This is also totally unfair.)

  • mrazomor a day ago

    It's not about free movement, but "free trade"/joint market.

    Having rich countries support its poor neighbors is an ingenious solution to improving your quality of life. You impose your rules, regulations and monetary policy, they get capital for internal improvements. If there's no huge waste or theft (which sadly exists), you end up with wide, strong and stable continent-level middle class. Which is great goal, as we can see when observing Switzerland -- wide, strong and stable country-level middle class.

    Last time Switzerland attempted something like this (~10y ago), it got burnt, hard (lost a lot of EU related projects and academic financing). Cutting the economical/market ties with the EU, considering its position and dependencies, is a suicide.

    • JumpCrisscross a day ago

      > It's not about free movement, but "free trade"/joint market

      This is entirely about free movement and immigration.

      • mrazomor a day ago

        I wasn't precise enough, my bad. I was referring to the comment about which says that by Switzerland restricting the moves from EU, loses the free movement to EU. My comment says that this is less of an issue -- the real issue comes from the market restrictions that EU will install against Switzerland.

  • surgical_fire a day ago

    "constantly"

    What the EU needs to get rid of is of the veto power. Otherwise I welcome our neighbors to the east as long as they are willing to play by the rules.

  • snowpid a day ago

    The EU expansion politics was a success. E.g. Poland was a great industry place for cheap labour, now it becomes a richer economy, they consume more expensive from Germany and France.

amtamt a day ago

This seems a much more rational approach than pure political agenda driven fear mongering campaigns against immigrants.

  • FabCH a day ago

    This is about Swiss - EU relations. Everyone understands that a yes vote means the Swiss equivalent of „exiting the EU“.

    All Swiss-EU contracts contain a „Guillotine clause“ where if one contract is broken, all are immediately gone. The initiative explicitly requires breaking the freedom of movement contract, which immediately severs all other links to the EU.

    This _is_ pure political agenda driven campaign using immigrants.

    • JumpCrisscross a day ago

      > All Swiss-EU contracts contain a „Guillotine clause“ where if one contract is broken, all are immediately gone. The initiative explicitly requires breaking the freedom of movement contract, which immediately severs all other links to the EU

      Why does it need to be? Would freedom of permanent movement still be something Europeans would vote for today? Will the EU really hold hard on this line with Switzerland? (And does it make political sense to?)

      • ninjagoo a day ago

        > Why does it need to be? Would freedom of permanent movement still be something Europeans would vote for today?

        Freedom of movement for labor is absolutely critical to counterbalance the freedom of movement that capital has, otherwise it leads to mass exploitation of labor and rising levels of inequality, which leads to, well, the French approach to the bourgeois problem.

      • FabCH a day ago

        Support for EU within EU is growing since the war in Ukraine and has gone to overdrive since Trump 2.0. No current political party except for fringe parties in any EU state advocates for exiting the EU or ending the four freedoms. It’s reasonable to say that yes, EU citizens do approve of freedom of movement in EU. They probably do want to limit freedom of non-EU citizens though…

        … which is exactly why the EU would terminate agreements with Switzerland if we start first. And why it would make political sense. They made that quite clear with the UK.

        • JumpCrisscross a day ago

          > Support for EU within EU is growing since the war in Ukraine

          I believe you. But hard numbers?

          > No current political party except for fringe parties in any EU state advocates for exiting the EU or ending the four freedoms

          Eh, there seems to be massive demand for modifying either freedom of movement or the context around it.

          > They made that quite clear with the UK

          The UK invoked Article 50. That wouldn’t happen here.

          • FabCH a day ago

            There is no demand for modifying freedom of movement within EU. It’s not even a topic in most EU countries.

            What IS a topic, is preventing non-EU migration, and that has broad support and slowly all parties are moving in that direction.

            And we are NOT EU. But for now, they basically go „yes yes, but we think of you as EU because we are so tightly connected“.

            So what do you expect to happen if we push the point and make them treat us as non-EU?

            • JumpCrisscross a day ago

              > There is no demand for modifying freedom of movement within EU

              Again, based on what polling?

              > what do you expect to happen if we push the point and make them treat us as non-EU?

              I frankly don't expect the EU to be unreasonably spiteful. (And for the record, I don’t think the EU was spiteful with the UK.)

              • greggoB a day ago

                > Again, based on what polling?

                Do you have evidence/polling to suggest otherwise?

      • surgical_fire a day ago

        > Would freedom of permanent movement still be something Europeans would vote for today?

        My guess is yes.

        It's one of the best things that the EU brings.

    • amtamt a day ago

      Of course it is political agenda driven, but at least from surface it does not have _fear mongering_ vibe, comparing for example with Sweden which did not conclude citizenship applications and applied back dated refusal. Also politician openly attribting all immigrants as source of increasing crime and lowering education levels.

      10m is larger than current resident counts, so people moving in can decide now if they want to move with uncertainty. It is not what everyone would like, but it is more understandable that recent Swedish changes, for example.

    • seanmcdirmid a day ago

      This is not a vote for Switzerland to exit the EU...for obvious reasons. It is a vote to exit the Schengen.

      • tonfa a day ago

        "the swiss equivalent"

        As OP explains, freedom of movement can't be stopped in isolation from the rest of the bilaterals.

        (btw funnily Schengen is just about the border control, we're talking about freedom of movement which is a different thing, e.g. UK wasn't in Schengen but the freedom of movement applied to UK as well before brexit, tho I guess people use Schengen interchangeably)

      • FabCH a day ago

        Which immediately triggers the guillotine clause in all other bilateral treaties including movement of goods and services, Horizon, energy market etc.

        „Exiting the EU“ is a perfectly adequate way to summarize it to a world audience that doesn’t care about the details.

        • seanmcdirmid a day ago

          I’m pretty sure you just pissed off a bunch of Swiss citizens claiming they are voting to exit the EU. It’s just insulting and insensitive.

          Incidentally, when brexit was being voted, the only person I knew who thought it was a good thing was Swiss. They are just fiercely independent.

      • soco a day ago

        Even worse then - no more visa free travel, and no more international collaboration on crime. I must wonder, who would profit from these?

  • lukan a day ago

    Hm. Are there any difference in the consequences for the immigrants, if they are kicked out because of arbitrary population cap, instead of anti-migration laws?

    • d1sxeyes a day ago

      As far as I understand, action begins when the population hits 9.5M, so likely no-one gets kicked out, but fewer new visas will be approved, etc.

      • lukan a day ago

        I am pretty sure there are many people living in swiss with temporary visa's and those will then be de facto kicked out, if they do not get their permissions extended.

        • d1sxeyes 6 hours ago

          Either these are already counted in the 9.5M, or they will continue not to be counted.

      • herbst a day ago

        This. As immigrant I don't feel threatened by this at all. I can't vote, and I wouldn't vote for SVP but as far as I can tell this makes kinda sense.

    • fractallyte a day ago

      Why would you assume the population cap is arbitrary? There's a calculable limit to the population an area of land can sustain. (Yes, some agricultural practices can mitigate that, but that should also be weighed against culture and history, and how much change is acceptable.)

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrying_capacity

  • acivitillo a day ago

    What is rational about this exactly? They share no borders with the countries most immigrants come from, they are moving the problem to Spain, Italy, Greece.

  • slopinthebag a day ago

    I agree. Every country has a limit, unspoken or not, let the people decide. Anything less is undemocratic.

  • amunozo a day ago

    What's rational in the arbitrary number of 10 millions for no reason at allM

    • naths88 a day ago

      It is completely irrational. But the UDC knows it, pure manipulation of the masses.

      • herbst a day ago

        It's not completely irrational. It's a fixed placative number yes.

        But reality is also we don't produce more food than we already do. More people means more import and it's actually lowering the quality of the available food, making shopping more complicated, etc. And that's just the food quality aspect, what about pensions? Health care? ...

        • amunozo a day ago

          Most of food is imported anyway, Switzerland is a very small country. This is a very silly argument, I'm sorry, it does not make any sense. "making shopping more complicated" what does that even mean.

          What about pensions? We are talking about foreigners working and paying taxes in Switzerland, a lot of them in very specialized jobs. Health care? A lot of doctors and nurses are foreigners, too. But apart from all these cliches about how good immigrants are for the economy, the main issue is that all bilateral agreements with the EU depend on the free movement of people between Switzerland and the EU. Without that, Switzerland losses access to the EU market and becomes and isolated country. It is nonsense.

          • herbst 10 hours ago

            Honestly I don't know import statistics but the majority of food I eat is from Switzerland. A lot of imported products are complicated because they often contain more weird stuff like artificial colouring, sweeteners or thickening stuff.

            Familien nachzug is a thing where people can get their elderly parents (or anyone family really) to move to Switzerland a lot more easily. This can indeed add additional costs to the pension and health care system.

            The implications with the EU surely could be problematic.

        • foldr a day ago

          >what about pensions? Health care?

          What about health care if there's no more 'room' for the immigrants who make up a substantial fraction of health workers in Switzerland?

          • logancbrown a day ago

            Swiss people are perfectly capable of becoming health workers? What kind of argument is this?

            • amunozo a day ago

              Fertility rates are low and people are ageing, like everywhere in Europe. There will be a moment that simply there won't be enough workers. The reality is that there is already a lack of healthcare professional even without a population cap that would only get worse given the case.

              • logancbrown 12 hours ago

                Sounds like modern slavery, import people from poorer countries to tend to the rich and elderly in countries that made short-term sacrifices to not build a future for themselves independently.

            • foldr a day ago

              That's an option, but it takes a long time to train and recruit locally, costs a lot of money, and you'll probably have to increase salaries to get the required numbers. If there were an easy and cheap way to recruit all the required staff locally, that would already be happening.

              • logancbrown 12 hours ago

                So the solution is to import uneducated and non-certified individuals from other countries at lower pay and hope you can pay them less and teach them? As if that is any easier? Sounds like the only reason is so health conglomerates can provide lower pay.

dbg31415 a day ago

It’s still common in Geneva to see lawn jockeys on display.

This is 100% about being racist with extra steps.

lifestyleguru a day ago

Switzerland is much less desirable and attractive than they think they are.

  • greggoB a day ago

    That's not at all reflected in the immigration numbers: ot has one of the highest proportional rates of immigration in Europe, and the brain drain of top talent from neighbouring countries has actually been a point of moral finger-wagging.

    Want to try again?

okkdev a day ago

Absolute dogshit we are voting on this week. Hopefully both gets denied. We are working ourselves into the bleakest future.

Acrobatic_Road a day ago

is this just a disguised anti-immigration policy? How is switzerland supposed to get to 10 million people with its fertility rate?

dweinus a day ago

I'm sure they are very proud of themselves for sneaking racist anti-immigrant policy in under the guise of left wing environmental rhetoric.

groan a day ago

This is amazing and I hope it passes.

wg0 a day ago

Do they know what happened to China's population control program?

jl6 a day ago

It would be saner to set a cap that is in some way tied to ecological footprint, food production, energy generation capacity, and other factors that make a country sustainable and sovereign. Trouble is, I expect that would put nearly every country way over.

  • herbst a day ago

    It is in fact based on stuff like this but hyperboled into a placative number. The "9.142 million initiative" would sell just as good.

PowerElectronix a day ago

First step towards a purge civilization. Also, rather narrowminded (to be expected, tho) to not expect your population to naturally grow beyond 10m (at 9.1 now) just based on the normal progress of healthcare and wellbeing.

tsoukase 18 hours ago

A population ceiling is not a serious decision for a modern country like Switzerland, esp given their 1.29 kids per family. They could cap by proffesion, region or even origin nation. But a hard cap reminds something between One child policy of China and Brexit, which both didn't go well. First problem will be the shortage of workers in specific fields or regions.

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