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Thinking... helps.

Since 2020 gifted us with the curious thing that is the pandemic, I've been following the news. With mixed results - on the one hand, I am happy that I have more of a clue now of what's going on in the world; on the other hand, I sometimes get really depressed about all the bad news that are coming in from everywhere, from all areas of life.

A side effect of this is realising how little from the things happening in other countries actually arrive in the newsfeed of one's own one. Mostly because of international conferences - especially NESAT and the European Textile Forum - I have contacts in a handful of  other countries, and occasionally I get a snippet of news from there which is interesting, but not "important" enough to make it to German news.

So here's a current German thing that might make it to your newsfeed if you're outside the country, or it might not: the Sophie Scholl incident.

We're having troublesome protests against the anti-Corona measurements that the government is taking. These have been going on for months, and it's not troublesome per se that some people think all this pandemic is a scam (that is their right, as of German law) and say it out loud (also their right) and go stand and scream about it on the street in groups (also their right). The troublesome thing is that some fractions from the extreme Right have more or less appropriated these protests and are trying to undermine our democracy - the same one that protects, to great costs, their right to freely state their opinion. We're talking Nazis here. Fascists. And you find them right at the tip of the organisation that calls itself "Querdenker" (lateral thinkers).

Recent protests organised by these "Querdenker" have blatantly ignored the requirements for protests in the current situation (wearing masks and keeping distances, and a maximum of participants in a given area, and so on). These requirements are stated when you register for a protest - which you have to, in Germany, if you're planning a mass event. That is not new, by the way. People in these protests have also acted aggressively against the police, with several policepeople hurt in different protests. They are getting more and more violent, and those actually thinking (not laterally) are getting more and more concerned, and also a good bit scared. One of the big questions is also: Why do the people who are not right-wing fascist Nazi arseholes protest together with said arseholes, if they are trying to protest for peace and freedom? It's not like it would have been really hard to tell that there were lots of them present.

The latest thing, though, seems to have brought some people to actually re-think what is happening here. A 22-year-old woman from Kassel held a little speech that was caught on video, and has gone viral since. Young Jana told the people present who she is, what her age is, and that she feels like Sophie Scholl because she's been active protesting for months now, handing out flyers and is now even registering protests such as this one! Following that, one of the "Ordner" (a steward, usually someone from within or close to the organisation that runs the protest) came up to her, said "I'm not going to be steward for this bullshit any longer" and handed her his steward's vest. "This is belittling the Holocaust. It's bullshit." After that, Jana from Kassel rage-quit the stage.

This incident has inspired lots and lots of memes by now, and rightly so. Many people are making it clear that this is complete bullshit, indeed - Jana has been handing out some flyers and is protesting the necessity to wear a piece of cloth over her mouth and nose when she goes into a shop. Sophie Scholl tried to stop the Nazi dictator regime and lost her life for it. That she actually compared herself to Sophie shows that Jana has absolutely, absolutely nothing in common with Sophie Scholl, but that she is a petulant self-entitled stupid youngster.

It has, hopefully, at least shown a few more people that what is happening on those protests is not a good thing, and that there's too many too right-wing people in there, trying to use all the others for their own purposes. After some of the protests were rather violent, at least one that was planned (in Munich) has been forbidden, too.

So we'll see what will happen now, and how things will develop. Not least thanks to people disregarding the anti-Corona measurements and meeting up in huge groups, incidence numbers here in Germany are still way, way too high, and we're looking at increased restrictions through to the mid of January right now - probably with some special rules for Christmas, but nothing is settled yet.

Well. We do indeed live in interesting times...
0
Happening here.
TGIF!
 

Comments 6

Harma on Montag, 23. November 2020 17:32

It did reach two Dutch websites.

It did reach two Dutch websites.
Katrin on Dienstag, 24. November 2020 09:53

Jana's fame is spreading!

Jana's fame is spreading!
Heather on Montag, 23. November 2020 17:47

That incident hasn't hit the news here in the UK (or I've not seen it, which isn't the same thing).

Sadly, one reason any hate group gains ground is targeting - aiming at or joining people who genuinely can't believe anyone would be that hateful really or presenting themselves as friendly and inclusive to people who feel rejected.

It is wonderful that there really are people with such an optimistic view of human nature, up until it causes a denial of past or present atrocities.

An irony that is often present but conveniently overlooked is how few of any group of supremacists (of any ideology) actually match the ideal that they're campaigning for - either they haven't understood it or think that somehow it doesn't apply to them (or perhaps they're now trapped?)

That incident hasn't hit the news here in the UK (or I've not seen it, which isn't the same thing). Sadly, one reason any hate group gains ground is targeting - aiming at or joining people who genuinely can't believe anyone would be that hateful really or presenting themselves as friendly and inclusive to people who feel rejected. It is wonderful that there really are people with such an optimistic view of human nature, up until it causes a denial of past or present atrocities. An irony that is often present but conveniently overlooked is how few of any group of supremacists (of any ideology) actually match the ideal that they're campaigning for - either they haven't understood it or think that somehow it doesn't apply to them (or perhaps they're now trapped?)
Katrin on Dienstag, 24. November 2020 09:55

Apparently the Guardian did at least a tweet about it. I suspect the whole Querdenker shit has not reached news in other countries, though. Not riot-y enough (thank goodness!) to really warrant coverage, and probably each country has their own covidiots of some kind, to make the news for enough on that topic.

Apparently the Guardian did at least a tweet about it. I suspect the whole Querdenker shit has not reached news in other countries, though. Not riot-y enough (thank goodness!) to really warrant coverage, and probably each country has their own covidiots of some kind, to make the news for enough on that topic.
inge on Dienstag, 24. November 2020 09:19

The part that makes by brain bluescreen is how the protesters manage to trigger Godwin's law while fanboying the Nazis.

The part that makes by brain bluescreen is how the protesters manage to trigger Godwin's law while fanboying the Nazis.
Katrin on Dienstag, 24. November 2020 09:53

Yes, it's amazing. You'd think that people who say about themselves that they want to fight for freedom and peace and justice would realise that Nazis are not on their side...

Yes, it's amazing. You'd think that people who say about themselves that they want to fight for freedom and peace and justice would realise that Nazis are not on their side...
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