• @[email protected]
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          68 months ago

          Well, I used to like some of their (die Linke) contributions. But lately, I don’t consider them a viable party to vote for. I don’t have a well founded opinion on Sarah Wagenknecht. But now that like 20 people vote for the Linke, I don’t consider it an issue if someone takes away a few of their voters. They’re kind of meaningless anyways.

          Sometimes I look at the USA and wonder if that’s our destiny. A government without participation of social democrats and the parties who have that in their name being more incompetent than anything of value to the citizens…

          • @[email protected]
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            48 months ago

            I hope that’s not what’s to come. I think because our parlimentary system allows for multiple parties (i.e. > 2) we have the advantage that a true social democrat party always has the chance to rise and achieve a ruling coalition. It isn’t perfect, but I think it’s a better system.

            But regarding die Linke, I dont think they were ever a viable party to vote for. They’ve supported actual terrorists and Wagenknecht is Sarah Palin level crazy.

            • @[email protected]
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              28 months ago

              Yeah, I was more referring to them doing the opposition and occasionally speaking up for the citizen in things like child care, taxes and how to treat the people who are not well off. Sometimes surveillance and stuff. I guess I like someone doing that. But you’re right, they always had that mixed with some strange ideas.

        • @[email protected]
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          28 months ago

          Well, if Wagenknecht manages to take all the un-electable baggage with her, maybe die Linke could actually become a party one could vote for.

      • hh93
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        38 months ago

        I absolutely hate how some attention craving idiots completely destroyed the pirate party from within.

        A liberal party that’s not neoliberal centrist like the lobby party we have but instead with a left leaning social part and a very open minded and modern world view would be so perfect…

        • @[email protected]
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          48 months ago

          Guess we wish for something similar.

          Idk. The 'new’er parties like the Pirate Party or Volt didn’t really take off. Seems like only the right manages to pull it off.

          • hh93
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            28 months ago

            Because everyone on the left is too scared to vote for smaller parties and lose their vote if they don’t make it.

            More radical parties always have it easier to convince people to vote for them despite that.

            I really wish we had ranked choice voting here…

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        There is still the communist party, but it’s tiny and likely never going to get into parliament.

    • @[email protected]
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      118 months ago

      The SPD hasn’t been leftist since Schröder, anyone still voting for them over believing they are has missed way more than one train.

      • @[email protected]
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        8 months ago

        They haven’t been leftist since they helped the nazis to power almost 100 years ago by now.

        • @[email protected]
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          48 months ago

          You could argue that, too. But they have been much further left than they are now between the end of WW2 and Schröder.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        There still is a left wing in the party, I would vote for Kühnert if I could.
        But yes, mostly the party is run by conservatives.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 months ago

          That “left” wing is barely relevant and only very moderately left. What counts is who is running the party, and that have been conservatives and neoliberals since Schröder.

    • @[email protected]
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      8 months ago

      A leftist party can’t win over conservatives voters by imitating conservatives, but it sure can loose leftist voters by that.

      Yes, it can.

      I’m not sure I’d call the Social Democrats in either country country “leftist” (they’re center-left and the “center” portion is more relevant), but it’s fairly likely that the Scholz’ party copying the Danish route would work. The issue is that the SPD’s approach is that it was half-hearted. If you want to win over xenophobes you have to mean it. For now the assumption with voters is that Scholz and the other SPD people are all bark and no bite.

  • @[email protected]
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    468 months ago

    I fully support Scholz on enforcing the law. For example CumEx is a wondefull case, where all the bankers and their helpers should be locked up for defrauding German taxpayers.

    However that might be a bad move for him.

    • Pleb
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      8 months ago

      Don’t forget he instituted torture methods as minister of the interior for Hamburg. Shortly before an election, trying to win by occupoying there their points. That failed of course.
      Similarities to the current tactics by him are of course purely coincidental.

  • dumdum666
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    248 months ago

    This is just Scholz pandering to the right because he has absolutely no policies of his own and wants to get re-elected.

  • @[email protected]
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    8 months ago

    Fuck you Scholz. It sucks but is expected of SPD. What sucks even more is even the greens push this inhuman agenda here now.

    Never forget that Brechmittel Scholz had police torture people with emetics when he was a major.

    • @[email protected]
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      8 months ago

      Someone needs to create a Gustav Noske Medal for Social Democrat Realpolitik and award it to Scholz. He deserves such an award.

      Edit: Look up Gustav Noske to spot the sarcasm here

        • @[email protected]
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          38 months ago

          Careful with that quote, or the enlightened centrists will come crawling out of their holes and claim it’s far right dog whistle…

            • Pleb
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              28 months ago

              Of course, the centrist crying are still there. There were even some SPD people crying that it was a Nazi line.

  • @[email protected]
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    48 months ago

    Interesting. The balance of opinion in this thread is mostly one-sided but in the opposite direction to the R-site.

    • Dataprolet
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      98 months ago

      No.

      1. Europe is responsible for crisis in other parts of the world, which leads to migration in the first place. Germany as one of the wealthiest nations in the EU has a special responsibility for migrants and asylum seekers.
      2. Even from a plain economical standpoint Germany needs migrant workers.
      • Hyperreality
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        8 months ago

        Europe is responsible for crisis in other parts of the world, which leads to migration in the first place. Germany

        Germany was steadfastly opposed to the Iraq war. A fairer solution would be that European countries which joined that war, like Poland and the UK, take all the Syrian and Iraqi refugees. They helped cause the problem, it’s only fair that they should help solve it.

        from a plain economical standpoint Germany needs migrant workers

        Ukrainians are highly educated and motivated. Employment rates in some EU countries are as high as 40%. I’m afraid that you can’t say the same about some of the migrants Europe fails to deport.

        If there’s a choice between someone who never learnt to read, versus someone who knows advanced calculus, it makes no sense to choose the former. Especially as they’re less likely to have problematic political views.

        If there’s a choice between someone who is genuinely fleeing persecution, or someone who escaped a Tunisian jail and went on to murder people because he wasn’t deported after his request for asylum was refused, that’s also an easy choice.

        • @[email protected]
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          48 months ago

          Germany was steadfastly opposed to the Iraq war. A fairer solution would be that European countries which joined that war, like Poland and the UK, take all the Syrian and Iraqi refugees. They helped cause the problem, it’s only fair that they should help solve it.

          Cause the Iraqi war is where history starts and the only cause of migration?

          Some of the states around the world have deep problems from events that happened far in the past. Specifically colonisation has played a role here.

          Additionally, if Europe wants to reduce migration, it should invest in the areas that see high migration, instead of dropping a bag of cash at the nearest African dictator to “take care” of Europe’s problems or forcing developing countries in even greater debt and problems through conditionality via the IMF and World Bank.

          At the same time will we only see an increasing demand for labour and instead of being the populist now, we should establish proper immigration systems.

      • @[email protected]
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        -38 months ago

        Germany does not need migrant workers. The Labour shortage is a lie cooked up by corporations, the media and politicians. The real shortage is in wages and working conditions.

        • dumdum666
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          28 months ago

          You have seen the age pyramid of Germany?

          Unless some Nazi Style Lebensborn „German breeding“ is started, we of course need quite a lot of immigrants.

          • @[email protected]
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            8 months ago

            we of course need quite a lot of immigrants.

            Well, to be more precise: We need a lot of people willing and able to work in elder care and certain other professions. Unfortunately that does not appear to be the case for many people who fled countries like Syria. In 2021 65% of Syrians in Germany were still on welfare. link in German

            Economically speaking refugees from countries like Syria cost more than they bring in. Now, that’s not a good reason to end the right to asylum - old people are even more expensive, don’t work and we’re not talking about abandoning them - and of course better policies could lead to a higher share of refugees actually working, but with current policies the economy isn’t an argument in favor of accepting refugees.

            • @[email protected]
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              28 months ago

              I guess that is by design. If you make it hard for refugees to work, you can use it as a argument against asylum. The stereotype of the lazy immigrant, that only came to Europe for the welfare is quite wide-spread.

              • @[email protected]
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                18 months ago

                It’s just simple protectionism. Banning outsiders from working helps with wages and unemployment. At least in the short term. The idea was to thwart the “steal our jobs” claim.

                That said, the working bans - that get lifted when people are recognized as refugees - only explain a portion of the high unemployment and welfare rates. Besides the language issues, it should be self-evident that people who grew up in war torn countries are less likely to well educated and mentally sound than people who grew up with a reasonably effective welfare state watching over them.

      • @CookieJarObserver
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        -98 months ago

        No. Who we deemed doesn’t belong here will be shown the Door you can’t just blame other countries problems on us, and even if, running away wont fix that.

        • @[email protected]
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          138 months ago

          Rejected asylum just means that there is no humanitarian reason why they couldn’t return to their home country, not that they couldn’t fit into Europe.

          For example, I know a young man who came here from Tajikistan. His asylum request was rejected, but because that process took so long, he had already built up a whole life here. He has a lot of local friends, a girlfriend and a got full education in gastronomy, where he is working full time. He got a special permit to remain here due to support from local people.

        • @[email protected]
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          88 months ago

          you can’t just blame other countries problems on us

          You can, if they happened to be caused by us. Which they are. From propping up authoritarian leaders for cheap resources to being main contributers to the climate crisis

          Also how is Germany not deporting undesireable people already? There are processes for this in play already. What part of it exactly do you think is lacking? Most people who are for more deportations have no idea how the process works, what the criteria or problems with it are at all. All they know is that they want more. Doesn’t matter if it actually solves any problems or not.

          (Turns out you can’t really deport more people faster without undermining basic principles of the rule of law or because the states to deport to are not willing to cooperate in the first place (and why would they?))

    • @[email protected]
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      -18 months ago

      No he isn’t. German politicians have been making those kinds of bullshit promises for decades and nothing has changed. Because reality is more complex than xenophobic slogan screeching assholes will have you believe.

  • Ethalia
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    -98 months ago

    I like people who are doing counter arguments and deploying whataboutism, that or they don’t even live in Germany. You would be quick to change your mind or consider otherwise too if you would be stared down, spat on, and knifed down the street too. It is what it is, Islamic people quite often don’t integrate well into the west. I had my fair share of struggles with non European immigrants as well.

    • @[email protected]
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      78 months ago

      Ah, you poor thing, what happened to you? Seems I am unbelievably lucky living in Neukölln without having any bad experience with migrants in more than 20 years. I am 64 years old, blonde, and descendant of a German farming family, i.e. I couldn’t be whiter. Maybe your experiences relate to your racism.