Like the people before me have posted there are legal definitions of who is a refugee and who is an asylum seeker.
You don't get to redefine what the word means.
I love the fact your implying I'm not an adult while you ignore legal facts and make up your own definition of words.
You don't seem to understand how language works. Lawyers don't make up language, legal facts don't determine how we speak and understand things, native speakers do.
And this is a prime example why this is,... the 'legal definition' is too limited, and doesn't fit real live properly. Legal definitions are black and white, where reality is nuanced and grey.
The people here don't do something either for safety or for a better future, but a bit of both and for each individual how the two aspects compare will differ.
Yeah, no. You are wrong again.
First you said that they should stay in the refugee camps in the neighboring countries.
Now people give you facts to why they can't in said countries.
Now you are moving the goalpost to Germany claiming they should stay there, while ignoring the facts that,
A: The EUs policies are responsible for people walking across the EU.
B: The notion that people shouldn't be allowed to choose what country they seeks asylum.
I'm not ignoring that the EU is responsible for people walking across the EU, that is my whole point. IS is causing people to walk out of Syria, the EU is causing the massive migration streams across Europe. And I don't know what they want to accomplish, but their policies are completely shortsighted. EU countries seem to want to help as many refugees as possible and at the same time prevent too many refugees from coming to their country. But they do so with policies that cause people to drown in the Mediterranean, certain countries to get flooded while others hardly take any people, and motivate people from completely safe countries like the Balkans to join the massive migrations. Now let's pretend giving Turkey a few billion Euro's and a renewed outlook at EU membership and new border controls between EU countries will help with the problems we're having.
To solve a problem you need to understand a problem, and classic refugees aren't the problem for the EU. They mostly just flee to the first save country they can find, and return in a few months/years. Then there's also a group of more costly refugees from long term problem areas that officially register as refugees who on average can only return home after 15-20 years.
Now the problem is - which also explains why some countries are overrun and others left alone - is that the people seeking asylum now do so strongly considering the quality of life they expect to have in their new country, so for economic reasons. The minority leaving from Syria(most of them are from other countries) might have left their because of IS, but none of the people arrive in an EU country of choice because of IS, that is a choice motivated by other reasons.
So if you want to reduce the number of migrants to specific countries, it is not higher border walls you need, or other countries 'willing to accept' more people, but to change what the outlook is for people coming to that country.
But to say it's only economic reasons to get the best benefits or whatever is in my opinion a bit too simplistic.
I agree, it is a multitude of reasons. Naturally people chose their destination based on many factors, but beyond the neighboring countries, never ONLY for safety reasons. The chances of being allowed to stay is one of the most important ones I think.