The poll by the ARD public broadcaster said 21% of respondents agreed with the proposition.
“It is racist. I feel we need to wake up. Many people in Europe had to flee… searching for a safe country,” Nagelsmann said on Sunday.
The 36-year-old said he agreed with Germany midfielder Joshua Kimmich, who described the questionnaire as “racist” a day earlier.
“Josh [Kimmich] responded really well, with a very clear and thought-out statement,” Nagelsmann said at a briefing at his team’s training base.
“I see this in exactly the same way. This question is insane.”
“There are people in Europe who’ve had to flee because of war, economic factors, environmental disasters, people who simply want to be taken in," he went on.
“We have to ask what are we doing at the moment? We in Germany are doing very, very well, and when we say something like that, I think it’s crazy how we turn a blind eye and simply block out such things.”
ARD - the German public broadcaster - said it had commissioned the survey to have measurable data, after a reporter working on a documentary on football and diversity was repeatedly asked about the make-up of the national team.
The poll was conducted among 1,304 randomly selected respondents.
Karl Valks, sports director with the ARD station who commissioned the poll, said the company was “dismayed that the results are what they are, but they are also an expression of the social situation in Germany today”.
“Sport plays an important role in our society, the national team is a strong example of integration,” German media cited him as saying.
The current national squad has a number of players with mixed heritage, including captain Ilkay Gündogan and winger Leroy Sané.
Germany is hosting the Euro 2024 tournament later this month, and Nagelsmann said his team would be playing “for everyone in the country”. They will kick-off the competition with a clash against Scotland at Munich’s Allianz Arena on 14 June.
The controversy comes just weeks after the team’s kit manufacturer, Adidas, was forced to ban fans from buying German football kits customised with the number 44, after media raised their resemblance to the symbol used by World War Two-era Nazi SS units.
The SS was responsible for many of the crimes against humanity committed by the Nazis. Members of the SS ranged from Gestapo agents to concentration camp guards. SS duties included administering death camps where millions of Jews and others were put to death.
I don’t think a survey question can be racist. An answer can, and I’m not sure that not knowing the answer is better than knowing it.
Edit: No wrongthink on feddit.de, got it.
I get what you are saying but I disagree. Such a question comes with an implication that whoever posed the question thinks both answers are valid, unless the context implies otherwise.
Oh come on now, people disliking your opinion is not the same thing as you being silenced, get over yourself.
The downvote button is not the “I disagree” button. It’s a “this is irrelevant or destructive to the conversation” button. “I get what you’re saying but I disagree” to me indicates you don’t think my comment was either.
If the question was phrased as “Is the German national team diverse enough?” - which asks for the same opinion - would that be somehow better?
This type of finger-in-ear nonsense is the type of behaviour that leads to Germans supporting a genocide in 2024 and AfD’s success being a surprise.
This isn’t reddit, there’s not a rule for what the downvote means. Further, there’s no consequences for downvotes, so I don’t see how it stifles conversation.
This attitude towards the downvote button came from reddit, because Reddit started hiding responses with an arbitrary number of downvotes, which most Lemmy clients emulate. That’s how it stifles conversation.
Reddit also has karma barriers for posting in various places, which literally stifles conversation, in that you will not be able to respond if you have enough downvotes. I don’t think it’s really comparable.
I treat it as a “I do not agree with this opinion” button.
And I do not.
Outright stating that you are trying to destroy conversation- congrats, you have provided a great example of a real reason to downvote.
My pleasure. Idownvoted this one as well, because I disagree with your take.
Example:
A user posts a brain dead take on a topic = I downvote because it’s not worth the effort to correct
A user posts an incorrect statement about a topic I can meaningfully contribute = I’ll not vote. I’ll instead conribute my stance.
A user posts a neutral post and maybe I even agree with it = Upvote and maybe a comment.
This any anything inbetween. Sometimes the example user is myself ;)
Like it or not, that’s how people generally use it.
Asking people if something is “white enough” is extremely racist, reproduces stereotypes and normalizes this bullshit. Nationality isn’t a matter of skin color.
Sorry to see you downvoted, but hear me out. If I create a survey, for example, asking: “do we need to carry out a ethnic cleaning on a certain ethnicity of this country?” It implies that:
The survey creator and people who approve of it think that there is a substantial chunk of people who will say yes.
That the idea is a valid one and if you don’t agree with it, it is valid for others to think that it is reasonable.
The idea of killing/kicking-out of people based on their race, is a part of what defines racism. The survey which validates such an idea, is racist.
I don’t know how you got from point 1 (which is valid - but do you think there aren’t Germans who will say yes?) to point 2?
How does an something being an answer on a survey make it a reasonable answer? If surveys should be limited to reasonable answers, how do we ever quantify how many unreasonable people exist?
The problem here is that it’s a yes or no question. It’s not “how do we solve problem x” but “should we just deal with x by doing y?” - which is a call for action in that exact line of thinking.
This survey is not objective, it’s subjective, with racism as part of the subjectivity.
If you are posting in good faith, please look up push polling.
The right questions can be used to influence public opinion.
A question can be wrong (Have you stopped beating your wife?). Especially in a questionnaire, you need to be careful when formulating a question, so to not skew the results. A question can also be ‘wrong’ when the outcome is useless no matter what results you get (in scientific research you actually try to achieve the exact opposite, so that even if a hypothesis is invalidated, you’d gain some useful knowledge)
Is this in answer to something or just a passing thought?
I (think I) see what you’re getting at. Wrong isn’t necessarily the same as racist (although I would assume racist questions to be a subset of wrong questions). I think you’re bright enough to think of a racist question that mimics the ‘wrong question’ example I gave.
It can be. Great question from German media would have been if they asked the audience something to reflect on the treatment of Mesut Oezil in the past for example. It was a complete racist shitshow at that time and nobody was bothered.