• retrospectology@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Ah yes, Germany is in those early stages where the nazis deny being nazis. Just look to the US for a glimpse of the future. Next step will be to try to take the meaning out of the word, then they’ll slip nazi rhetoric into their propaganda in small deniable ways, and eventually they just drop the facade and start saying “What’s wrong with being a nazi?”

    • Kühe sind toll@feddit.de
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      7 months ago

      Nazi is already a term for “i dislike your opinion”. Also, the AfD is using a lot of NS rrethoric.Björn Höcke is going to court for like the fifth time because he used NS speech.

    • Ooops@kbin.social
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      7 months ago

      That already happened a long time ago.

      On one hand nazi is just a meaningless word for “I don’t agree with them” but on the other hand the actual risk are all those left-green fascist degenerates trying to destroy the country… Why would the fascists have called themselves national socialists if they weren’t left. *wink wink*

  • Tarogar@feddit.de
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    7 months ago

    If it looks like a nazi, thinks like a nazi, smells like a nazi, speaks like a nazi, supports a nazi party. It’s probably a nazi.

    No way around it. Actions speak louder than words do but in that case or rather cases both point rather clearly to them being… Nazis.

    Don’t want to be called a nazi? Fine… Don’t be a nazi and there is no reason to call you one.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    7 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Soaring church spires, the 1,000-year-old town centre unblemished by second world war bombing or graffiti, snow-capped Alps in the middle distance – Kaufbeuren, in Bavaria, can count many blessings.

    However, as voters prepare to elect a new European parliament next month, deep-seated fears have gripped a significant share of the electorate in one of the most affluent pockets of Europe’s top economy and delivered it to the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD).

    Surprisingly for many, the AfD continues to make inroads in Germany’s prosperous south and west, beyond its heartland in the poorer ex-communist east, as it embraces more extreme views on immigration, the war in Ukraine and national atonement for the Holocaust.

    A bombshell report in January revealed that senior AfD members had attended a meeting at a lakeside villa where they discussed a scheme for the mass deportation of German citizens with immigrant backgrounds.

    A father of eight, Krah spoke of his fear that his 21-year-old son could become “cannon fodder on the eastern front” if Germany brings back conscription, a proposal floated in limited form by defence minister Boris Pistorius to address looming security threats.

    Bosse, from the conservative Christian Social Union, said he is haunted by a particular chapter of the Nazi past in Kaufbeuren, which under Adolf Hitler hosted a dynamite factory employing forced labourers, satellite concentration camps belonging to Dachau and a psychiatric hospital that orchestrated the extermination of more than 1,500 men, women and children.


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