Moisés Naím schrieb in der Sonntagsausgabe der Washington Post:
Governments and citizens are used to thinking of a border as a real, physical place: a fence, a shoreline, a desert or a mountain pass. But while geography still matters, today's borders are being redefined and redrawn in unexpected ways. They are fluid, constantly remade by technology, new laws and institutions, and the realities of international commerce -- illicit as well as legitimate. They are also increasingly intangible, living in a virtual and electronic space.
Plump auf Pump
Nicht nur in Deutschland gilt für den Staat wieder das Prinzip: Kassieren ist besser als reformieren.
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