Page 3 of 3 FirstFirst 123
Results 31 to 40 of 40

Thread: Germany: Neo-Nazi acquitted after driving into leftists

  1. #31
    Member Strelok126's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    In a nuclear bunker somewhere in England
    Posts
    262

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Gently Benevolent View Post
    So true, our lot look very tame compared to the Germans and the French and the scary elements of both factions in the UK have a healthy respect for each others capabilities. Our far right are more likely to suffer harm at the hands of their own peer group in the UK.
    Just been reading up on the Left/Right situation in Germany and as you said it made our bunch look entirely tame. The most you ever get in this country is a few Leftist crazies out of University and the right wingers who seem to quote the Daily Fail and the Sun as gospel truth having a bit of a scrap before the police step in. Seemed it escalated a little when those three terrorists on the M1 were stopped on their way to attack the EDL.

    Quote Originally Posted by muck View Post
    Right-leaning politics are obviously a delicate issue in Germany.
    Moreover the political spectrum of this country fosters tensions between its respective ends, as the left branch is continuous and without interruption while on the other hand there is no party to fill the ("still democratic") gap between the center-right and the extreme right.
    The very existence of such a link between the democratic center-left and the extreme left, along with the "inherent wickedness" of everything "right-leaning", provides radical leftists with a certain moral authority they need to look less dangerous. Additionally they have a different foe image that is in a subtle way more "agreeable" for a tendentially left-leaning and pacifist society and makes their violence less visual.
    In the 1990s Neo-Nazis were a tremendous danger and got a lot of blood on their hands while the extreme left posed a grave threat in the two decades before that. Since 2007 and the riots surrounding the G8 summit in Germany, leftist violence has been on the rise again and surpassing the number of Neo-Nazi crimes as of late.
    There is only one Neo-Nazi party in Germany now ("National Democrats"), and while it has some seats in a few regional parliaments, it is rather irrelevant on national level with only about 7000 members. The violent left again is split up between the youth organisation of "The Left" (the aforementioned leftist "gap filler" party) and a larger camp that doesn't seek party participation.
    All in all, we're talking about maybe 50,000 people here (stable trend).
    Thank you for the response. So within Germany there is no central-right party? I can understand German trepidation toward anything on the right but it seems (from my uneducated, outsider point of view) there is very much a 'Left only' leaning within German politics?

  2. #32
    Loadmaster General Laworkerbee's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2004
    Location
    California Über Alles
    Age
    43
    Posts
    40,001

    Default

    Hmmmm...If a large masked group of individuals approach me in my car chances are they're going to get run over as well.

    Nothing personal.

  3. #33
    buck duck huck luck muck puck ruck suck tuck yuck fuuuuuuuu muck's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Beim Barte des Proleten!
    Posts
    13,998

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Strelok126 View Post
    Thank you for the response. So within Germany there is no central-right party? I can understand German trepidation toward anything on the right but it seems (from my uneducated, outsider point of view) there is very much a 'Left only' leaning within German politics?
    You're welcome.
    As the German party system is rather unique one cannot easily describe it without visual means. Imagine the political spectrum as a scale from +5 to -5 whereby 0 is the democratic center and each end represents the respective side's extremist form; the font size is meant to represent the membership strength of the respective party or group and/or it's significance to the political process. Everything beyond +-4 can rightfully be accused of perpetrating or at least condoning violence.



    From my point of view German politics have indeed become rather left-leaning.
    In the 1960s we used to have only the Social Democrats, Christian (Social) Democrats and the Liberal Party (which was rather leftist back in the day) and they covered everything from +2.5 to -2.5.
    The 1968 student revolts and increasing political fragmentation, however, led to the emergence of new parties and conflicts over voter potential made programmatic shifts necessary.
    In the 1970s and 1980s Germany was struck by a wave of extreme leftist violence in form of the so called Red Army Fraction ("Baader-Meinhof-Gang") and radical protests against nuclear energy or other "anti-ecological" projects.
    The green movements subsequently emerged as another political power.
    In the 1990s racist violence rose particularly in the East but while the extreme right continued to gain voter approval there, it also lost support in the rest of the country (and so did non-extreme right wing positions).
    When in 1998 Gerhard Schröder of the Social Democrats became chancellor he realigned his party and moved it to the center (much like Tony Blair did in the UK). Along with general social changes - for example the shrinking importance of religion - his "poaching" in the center forced the right-leaning parties to sweep to the center as well and face him on the same territory, leaving everything from the center-right to the democratic right's outer rim without representation.

    The chart basically shows the current stage of this development.
    Last edited by muck; 07-17-2012 at 05:28 PM.

  4. #34
    Member Papenheims's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Latvia
    Posts
    486

    Default

    What role does Christianity play in German politics? You have there some parties with "Christian" designation. A tradition from earlier times when it mattered and now just lingering along?

  5. #35
    L O L A JCR's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    disinformation central
    Age
    33
    Posts
    10,679

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Papenheims View Post
    What role does Christianity play in German politics? You have there some parties with "Christian" designation. A tradition from earlier times when it mattered and now just lingering along?
    The Catholic Church still plays a relatively influent role within the CDU/CSU. The "Christian" within them largely means catholic.
    Despite Merkel, the CDU was and in some parts still is a catholic party.
    Strangely enough the SPD/CDU divide was often a catholic/protestant divide, which you can see from the fact that nearly all state prime ministers from the CDU in protestant states are catholics from enclaves.
    Wulff, Althaus etc.
    The election map of the 2002 elections largely looked like the map of the Westphalian Peace.

    But the choir boys largely stumbled over a mixture of their own greed and incompetence and Angela Merkel .

    That said, none of the above is really religious, they pander the catholic church to gain influence and use it as a behind the scenes network.

    With the protestants it is different because the official church is so far left that many Protestants including myself are put off by their holier than thou attitude.

  6. #36
    Senior Member Silent Reader's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Germany
    Age
    31
    Posts
    5,591

    Default

    Also thats why the CDU color is black - the color of the robes of priests

    Though despite being Christian parties with a lot of Catholic figureheads - I think in the public political discourse this plays only a single role today - as a counter image to Islam (and for example immigration and integration policies etc associated with it)

  7. #37
    buck duck huck luck muck puck ruck suck tuck yuck fuuuuuuuu muck's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Beim Barte des Proleten!
    Posts
    13,998

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Papenheims View Post
    What role does Christianity play in German politics? You have there some parties with "Christian" designation. A tradition from earlier times when it mattered and now just lingering along?
    In most parts of Europe conservative parties either follow a certain political figurehead - such as France's Gaullists - or advert to Christian values.

    My personal observation is that religion hardly plays a role anymore in Germany's so called "Christian" parties; they're in favour of abortion, alternative family patterns (and so on and so forth) and are nowhere near the right wing of America's Republicans for example. Advocates of traditionalist-religious viewpoints belong to the "old iron" (60 years of age +) and are in a clear minority.

  8. #38
    Senior Member Tyon's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Westfalen
    Age
    28
    Posts
    1,630

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by muck View Post
    My personal observation is that religion hardly plays a role anymore in Germany's so called "Christian" parties; they're in favour of abortion, alternative family patterns (and so on and so forth) and are nowhere near the right wing of America's Republicans for example. Advocates of traditionalist-religious viewpoints belong to the "old iron" (60 years of age +) and are in a clear minority.
    And we all can thank our god or imaginary friend for that.

  9. #39
    buck duck huck luck muck puck ruck suck tuck yuck fuuuuuuuu muck's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Beim Barte des Proleten!
    Posts
    13,998

    Default

    I agree - and at the same time I don't. It's not necessarily a good thing if a not-so-small percentage of the population is left without any political representation.

  10. #40
    Senior Member Tyon's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Westfalen
    Age
    28
    Posts
    1,630

    Default

    I disagree. If they want their christianity stuff they have to vote for the PBC. If not enough people vote that party they obviously wont get a voice.

    But such is life.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •