
U203-F Display
Features:
8 digits volume,8 digits sales,6 digits price per unit
1.2”LCD yellow backlight
running normally on the condition of -40 C to 55 C
broad sight scope from all directions
Current:600 mA
100% Factory Tested.
Packing:
Weight:
Dimension :
300g/case of 1 120×253×26mm/case of 1
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
immigrati fuel dispenser on, but it faces a special
dilemma. In a way, it is torn between its fuel dispenser past and its future it still yearns for cultural
homogeneity, but will in fact need more immigrants, particularly highly skilled ones, to make up
for its low birth rate and to keep its economy competitive.
It is the “legacy of romanticism? in the words of Dieter Oberndörfer, a political scientist at
Freiburg University, that holds Germany back. Thinkers such as Friedrich Julius Stahl, a 19th-
century lawyer, developed the idea that Germans are a people based on descent. “The older and
purer the tribe,?he wrote, “the more it will be a nation.?This became mainstream thinking, at
least among the ruling classes, and helps to explain why, some time after Germany had become a
nation at last in the late 19th century, it decided to base citizenship on blood rather than soil.
fuel dispenser
The emphasis on ethnic origin also explains why Germany has seen a huge influx of foreigners
with German roots since the second world war, mostly from eastern Europe. Individuals who could
prove German ancestry were invariably welcomed. Immigrants without German roots were also
admitted in large numbers, but on different terms under Germany s “guest-worker model? they
were expected to go home when they were no longer needed.
Here to stay
Predictably, though, many of the 14m guest workers whom Germany allowed in between 1955
and 1973 stayed on, particularly the Turks. They also brought their families over, which resulted in
many German-born foreigners. Add other immigrants, refugees and EU citizens (who can come
and go as they please), and it is easy to see why the number of foreigners grew rapidly, from
500,000 after the second world war to 6.7m (8% of the population) today. Another 7m or so
Germans are naturalised immigrants. In record time, all this has turned Germany into nearly as
much of a nation of immigrants as America.
Yet it took German politics until the late 1990s to accept this reality. Both big partie