German Federal Election 2017
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Poll
Question: How Would you vote?
#1
CDU/CSU
 
#2
SPD
 
#3
Left
 
#4
Greens
 
#5
Liberal Conservative Reformers
 
#6
FDP
 
#7
AfD
 
#8
Free Voters
 
#9
Pirates
 
#10
National Democratic Party (Nazis)
 
#11
Die PARTEI
 
#12
Other
 
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Partisan results

Total Voters: 132

Author Topic: German Federal Election 2017  (Read 5732 times)
Lexii, harbinger of chaos and sexual anarchy
Alex
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« Reply #50 on: March 09, 2017, 06:42:00 PM »
« edited: March 09, 2017, 06:44:50 PM by Alex »

This is one of the few instances where the Atlas results are much better than the expected actual results.

The far right getting 23% of the vote is SO great

Maybe the poll function should be removed from this website. Y'know, just to make sure that no unsavoury opinions see the light of day.

Great non sequitur, 8/10
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Goldwater
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« Reply #51 on: March 09, 2017, 06:55:51 PM »

This is one of the few instances where the Atlas results are much better than the expected actual results.

The far right getting 23% of the vote is SO great

Maybe the poll function should be removed from this website. Y'know, just to make sure that no unsavoury opinions see the light of day.

cool strawman bro
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SWE
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« Reply #52 on: March 09, 2017, 07:48:50 PM »
« Edited: March 09, 2017, 08:13:35 PM by SpookyWE »

This is one of the few instances where the Atlas results are much better than the expected actual results.

The far right getting 23% of the vote is SO great

Maybe the poll function should be removed from this website. Y'know, just to make sure that no unsavoury opinions see the light of day.

cool strawman bro
It's an interesting case of projection: Clash, like much of the far-right, is unable to cope with the idea that some people might not share his exact worldview, and thus can only perceive any level of criticism as being threatening censorship that must be shut down.
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« Reply #53 on: March 09, 2017, 08:03:15 PM »

This is one of the few instances where the Atlas results are much better than the expected actual results.

The far right getting 23% of the vote is SO great

Maybe the poll function should be removed from this website. Y'know, just to make sure that no unsavoury opinions see the light of day.

cool strawman bro
It's an interesting case of protection: Clash, like much of the far-right, is unable to cope with the idea that some people might not share his exact worldview, and thus can only perceive any level of criticism as being threatening censorship that must be shut down.

You're the one who called the results "worrying", as if a poll on an obscure internet maps forum means anything.
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JA
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« Reply #54 on: March 09, 2017, 08:05:06 PM »

This is one of the few instances where the Atlas results are much better than the expected actual results.

The far right getting 23% of the vote is SO great

Maybe the poll function should be removed from this website. Y'know, just to make sure that no unsavoury opinions see the light of day.

cool strawman bro
It's an interesting case of protection: Clash, like much of the far-right, is unable to cope with the idea that some people might not share his exact worldview, and thus can only perceive any level of criticism as being threatening censorship that must be shut down.

You're the one who called the results "worrying", as if a poll on an obscure internet maps forum means anything.

Perhaps they were referring instead to what this says about the political makeup of Atlas forum users.
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SWE
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« Reply #55 on: March 09, 2017, 08:13:08 PM »

This is one of the few instances where the Atlas results are much better than the expected actual results.

The far right getting 23% of the vote is SO great

Maybe the poll function should be removed from this website. Y'know, just to make sure that no unsavoury opinions see the light of day.

cool strawman bro
It's an interesting case of protection: Clash, like much of the far-right, is unable to cope with the idea that some people might not share his exact worldview, and thus can only perceive any level of criticism as being threatening censorship that must be shut down.

You're the one who called the results "worrying", as if a poll on an obscure internet maps forum means anything.
I apologize if my expressing an opinion that does not confrom perfectly to your worldview offends your delicate sensibilities, but you need to understand that the real world is not your personal safe space and that not everyone is always going to agree with you.
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« Reply #56 on: March 09, 2017, 08:20:31 PM »

This is one of the few instances where the Atlas results are much better than the expected actual results.

The far right getting 23% of the vote is SO great

Maybe the poll function should be removed from this website. Y'know, just to make sure that no unsavoury opinions see the light of day.

cool strawman bro
It's an interesting case of protection: Clash, like much of the far-right, is unable to cope with the idea that some people might not share his exact worldview, and thus can only perceive any level of criticism as being threatening censorship that must be shut down.

You're the one who called the results "worrying", as if a poll on an obscure internet maps forum means anything.

Perhaps they were referring instead to what this says about the political makeup of Atlas forum users.

What kind of person would care about such a thing?
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DC Al Fine
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« Reply #57 on: March 09, 2017, 08:25:47 PM »

Ehh, undecided. Not really keen on CDU/CSU or AfD. I'd probably vote for a fringe socon party.
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DavidB.
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« Reply #58 on: March 09, 2017, 10:46:27 PM »

This is one of the few instances where the Atlas results are much better than the expected actual results.
The far right getting 23% of the vote is SO great
Exactly!
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ApatheticAustrian
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« Reply #59 on: March 09, 2017, 10:47:45 PM »

any new-rightie culturalist supporting the AfD should be wary of the strong, austrian-like, "old-school-racist-right" elements in the east.
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« Reply #60 on: March 10, 2017, 03:25:04 AM »

any new-rightie culturalist supporting the AfD should be wary of the strong, austrian-like, "old-school-racist-right" elements in the east.

austrian-like?
You have something against austrians? Tongue
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« Reply #61 on: March 10, 2017, 03:59:27 AM »
« Edited: March 10, 2017, 04:50:38 AM by 0% Approval Rating »

any new-rightie culturalist supporting the AfD should be wary of the strong, austrian-like, "old-school-racist-right" elements in the east.

I'd say the racism in eastern Germany is more alike to Eastern European racism (Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary). Anti-pluralist and anti-globalist notions which are the result of 40 years of Communist totalitarianism.

It's ironic for a nominally "internationalist" ideology like Communism, but compared to West Germany the borders were tightly closed in East Germany and the government's rhetoric also tended to be significantly more nationalist. But I guess authoritarianism remains authoritarianism, no matter under which political "colour".
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Intell
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« Reply #62 on: March 10, 2017, 04:08:52 AM »
« Edited: March 10, 2017, 04:11:10 AM by Intell »

any new-rightie culturalist supporting the AfD should be wary of the strong, austrian-like, "old-school-racist-right" elements in the east.

I'd say the racism in eastern Germany is more alike to Eastern European racism (Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary). Anti-pluralist and anti-globalist notions which are the result of 40 years of Communist totalitarianism.

It's ironic for a nominally "internationalist" ideology like Communism, but compared to West Germany the borders were tightly closed in East Germany and the government's rethoric also tended to be significantly more nationalist. But I guess authoritarianism remains authoritarianism, no matter under which political "colour".

I mean the growth of AfD in the east is due to the failures of unification on a west-dominated capitalist establishment, which left East Germany closed. As are the reasons why far-right parties are higher in former communist countries, due to stupid decisions carried out, on the basis on american neoliberal economists (carried out by both left and right), ruining the social aspect of the country, it's concepts of solidarity, reducing money to highest common factor, and letting a signifiant proportion of the country die, leaving them poor, while reducing the standard of living for many east europeans

You're from the east germany? No? Do you agree or disagree with me?.

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« Reply #63 on: March 10, 2017, 04:18:27 AM »

any new-rightie culturalist supporting the AfD should be wary of the strong, austrian-like, "old-school-racist-right" elements in the east.

I'd say the racism in eastern Germany is more alike to Eastern European racism (Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary). Anti-pluralist and anti-globalist notions which are the result of 40 years of Communist totalitarianism.

It's ironic for a nominally "internationalist" ideology like Communism, but compared to West Germany the borders were tightly closed in East Germany and the government's rethoric also tended to be significantly more nationalist. But I guess authoritarianism remains authoritarianism, no matter under which political "colour".

I mean the growth of AfD in the east is due to the failures of unification on a west-dominated capitalist establishment, which left East Germany closed. As are the reasons why far-right parties are higher in former communist countries, due to stupid decisions carried out, on the basis on american neoliberal economists (carried out by both left and right), ruining the social aspect of the country, it's concepts of solidarity, reducing money to highest common factor, and letting a signifiant proportion of the country die, leaving them poor, while reducing the standard of living for many east europeans

You're from the east germany? No? Do you agree or disagree with me?.



It's true that the economic "losers" of the political transition process are more prone to vote for AfD (or NPD for that mattter).

However, I'd say that the underlying authoritarian and xenophobic tendencies are also present in people who have in fact profited from the political transition. And those tendencies were present in 1989/90 as much as they were in 2000 or today.

So both is true, really. The Communist regimes laid the groundwork, and it fully broke through with people who suffered the most disadvantages from the regime change.
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Intell
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« Reply #64 on: March 10, 2017, 04:23:08 AM »

any new-rightie culturalist supporting the AfD should be wary of the strong, austrian-like, "old-school-racist-right" elements in the east.

I'd say the racism in eastern Germany is more alike to Eastern European racism (Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary). Anti-pluralist and anti-globalist notions which are the result of 40 years of Communist totalitarianism.

It's ironic for a nominally "internationalist" ideology like Communism, but compared to West Germany the borders were tightly closed in East Germany and the government's rethoric also tended to be significantly more nationalist. But I guess authoritarianism remains authoritarianism, no matter under which political "colour".

I mean the growth of AfD in the east is due to the failures of unification on a west-dominated capitalist establishment, which left East Germany closed. As are the reasons why far-right parties are higher in former communist countries, due to stupid decisions carried out, on the basis on american neoliberal economists (carried out by both left and right), ruining the social aspect of the country, it's concepts of solidarity, reducing money to highest common factor, and letting a signifiant proportion of the country die, leaving them poor, while reducing the standard of living for many east europeans

You're from the east germany? No? Do you agree or disagree with me?.



It's true that the economic "losers" of the political transition process are more prone to vote for AfD (or NPD for that mattter).

However, I'd say that the underlying authoritarian and xenophobic tendencies are also present in people who have in fact profited from the political transition. And those tendencies were present in 1989/90 as much as they were in 2000 or today.

So both is true, really. The Communist regimes laid the groundwork, and it fully broke through with people who suffered the most disadvantages from the regime change.

I realise that the nazi party was stronger in East Germany, but could that not be, right-wing frustation, and with virluent anti-communism, people voting for the NPD.

Underlying authoritarian tendencies might have been there, but East German "nationalism" was more about social nationalism, and solidarity towards your brother, as well as workers around the socialist block, then xenophobia.
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« Reply #65 on: March 10, 2017, 04:41:32 AM »
« Edited: March 10, 2017, 04:54:40 AM by 0% Approval Rating »

I realise that the nazi party was stronger in East Germany, but could that not be, right-wing frustation, and with virluent anti-communism, people voting for the NPD.

I seriously doubt that many people voted NPD due to "anti-communism". Certainly not those voters who were ticket-splitting and gave their first vote to the PDS candidate and the second vote to the NPD, which is a well-documented phenomenon. If anything the NPD was successful due to anti-democratism and also anti-capitalism (given that the NPD isn't really that much of a pro-free market party). If you're anti-communist you vote FDP or CDU.



Underlying authoritarian tendencies might have been there, but East German "nationalism" was more about social nationalism, and solidarity towards your brother, as well as workers around the socialist block, then xenophobia.

It was not just "social nationalism". Granted, the East German nationalism was toned down a bit in the latter phase of the regime.

Especially in the beginning GDR government propaganda was all about: "integration of West Germany into Western alliances is solidifying the partition of the German nation and preventing the re-unfication of the German people, West Germany is merely an American puppet state, Germany must regain its national sovereignty" (yeah, pretty ironic rhetoric coming from a Soviet puppet state).

But the rampant flag-waving and the emphasis on the GDR as a decidedly German nation as opposed to the "Westernized", "Americanized", and "globalized" Federal Republic were retained until the end.

Ironically, the two political parties which are the most pro-Russian and the most anti-American nowdays are the AfD and the Left.
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TheDeadFlagBlues
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« Reply #66 on: March 10, 2017, 05:09:02 AM »

I'd strategically vote for the SPD to humiliate the CDU and to vanquish Angela Merkel, who I continue to despise, despite the many exhortations from the New Yorker or the Atlantic that tell me that I should support her because she's #WokeLiberal or whatever.

Die Linke is filled with former Stasi agents, no thanks.

Greens? Um, no thank you, I don't aspire to be a lifestyle left-liberal.
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Intell
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« Reply #67 on: March 10, 2017, 05:31:57 AM »
« Edited: March 10, 2017, 06:48:05 AM by Intell »

I realise that the nazi party was stronger in East Germany, but could that not be, right-wing frustation, and with virluent anti-communism, people voting for the NPD.

I seriously doubt that many people voted NPD due to "anti-communism". Certainly not those voters who were ticket-splitting and gave their first vote to the PDS candidate and the second vote to the NPD, which is a well-documented phenomenon. If anything the NPD was successful due to anti-democratism and also anti-capitalism (given that the NPD isn't really that much of a pro-free market party). If you're anti-communist you vote FDP or CDU.



Underlying authoritarian tendencies might have been there, but East German "nationalism" was more about social nationalism, and solidarity towards your brother, as well as workers around the socialist block, then xenophobia.

It was not just "social nationalism". Granted, the East German nationalism was toned down a bit in the latter phase of the regime.

Especially in the beginning GDR government propaganda was all about: "integration of West Germany into Western alliances is solidifying the partition of the German nation and preventing the re-unfication of the German people, West Germany is merely an American puppet state, Germany must regain its national sovereignty" (yeah, pretty ironic rhetoric coming from a Soviet puppet state).

But the rampant flag-waving and the emphasis on the GDR as a decidedly German nation as opposed to the "Westernized", "Americanized", and "globalized" Federal Republic were retained until the end.

Ironically, the two political parties which are the most pro-Russian and the most anti-American nowdays are the AfD and the Left.

I guess nationalism was widely used,, in a socialistic, anti-imperialistic sense (soviet imperalism doesn't count obviously)  but it wasn't xenophobic.

Huh ticket splitting between PDS and neo-nazis when the East German regime was based on being anti-fascist is weird, is there proof, or is it from experience, was this in 1990, or at or after 2005? Huh. In 1990 unified election, neo-nazis got only very slightly higher votes than in the election before it. The inclusion of East Germany didn't result in the rise of the vote for the neo-nazis, probably meaning that neo-nazis that they weren't strong in the east in the start of unified Germany (is this correct or not?).

They started gaining in 2005, midst the SPD's and attacks on social welfare, labour laws and attacks on the poor was this when East German economy started going down also (or was this the case always?).
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« Reply #68 on: March 10, 2017, 06:17:32 AM »
« Edited: March 10, 2017, 06:22:30 AM by 0% Approval Rating »

I guess nationalism was widely used,, in a socialistic, imperialistic sense (soviet imperalism doesn't count obviously)  but it wasn't xenophobic.

I guess you could make the case that nationalism usually leads to xenophobia too whether its intended or not.



Huh ticket splitting between PDS and neo-nazis when the East German regime was based on being anti-fascist is weird,

The official anti-fascism of the East German state was superficial at best. It was mostly directed at West Germany for propaganda purposes too, claiming that the government of West was run by former members of the Nazi regime (which was at least in part true of course). However, the question "how much responsibility did WE have for the Nazis' crimes?" was never asked in East Germany. It was the fault of the West Germans, while the East Germans were supposedly clean.

This was of course a result of the East German regime being run by older communists who were either living in exile in Moscow during World War II or had to endure the concentration camps themselves. This had a couple of side effects though:

1) The extent of guilt or responsibility of whose who did live in Germany during WWII was never really discussed in East German society, at least not to the extent it was done in West Germany.

2) The Holocaust against the Jews and other minorities was downplayed in East German historiography. Instead, the communists were often portrayed as the primary victims of the Nazi regime.

3) East Germany was primarily regarded as a country of the victims of Nazism and not as a country of perpetrators.

4) As a result of 2) and 3), East Germany refused to pay reparations to Israel after the war. This was seen as West Germany's job.

5) One of the so-called bloc parties of the "National Front" which were formed alongside the SED in East Germany in the late 40s was the National Democratic Party of Germany (NDPD) which purpose was to attract former Nazis and former Wehrmacht officers and win them over for the new regime.

6) And then of course you have phenomena like the different attitude the East German government had toward the emerging skinhead and punk scenes in the country in the mid-80s. Stasi reports from the era make note of the "positive attitude" skinheads had toward patriotism and military service, while punks were considered bums whose hear had to be cut.



...is there proof, or is it from experience, was this in 1990, or at or after 2005?

It was reported in the news here and then. The first I heard of the phenomenon was in 1998, I think (see below). It's confirmed by anecdotal evidence I heard from individual people. I think it's possible that scientific studies exist on that too.



In 1990 unified election, neo-nazis got only very slightly higher votes than in the election before it. The inclusion of East Germany didn't result in the rise of the vote for the neo-nazis, probably meaning that neo-nazis that they weren't strong in the east in the start of unified Germany (is this correct or not?).

Well, it's true that there was a lot of enthusiasm about the re-unification and hence not much political dissatisfaction in East Germany in 1990. This led to East Germans overwhelmingly casting their vote for the incumbent center-right government in 1990 (CDU and FDP). Also note that the PDS' vote share was very modest in 1990, compared to later elections.



They started gaining in 2005, midst the SPD's and attacks on social welfare, labour laws and attacks on the poor was this when East German economy started going down also (or was this the case always?).

It started around the mid-90s when unemployment rates spiked in the East. The right-wing extremist DVU won 12.9% of the vote in the 1998 Saxony-Anhalt state election, 5.3% in the 1999 Brandenburg state election, and 6.1% in the 2004 Brandenburg state election. The NPD won 9.2% in the 2004 Saxony election, and 7.3% in the 2006 Mecklenburg-Vorpommern election. The DVU eventually merged into the NPD in 2011.
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« Reply #69 on: March 10, 2017, 06:55:44 AM »

I guess nationalism was widely used,, in a socialistic, imperialistic sense (soviet imperalism doesn't count obviously)  but it wasn't xenophobic.

I guess you could make the case that nationalism usually leads to xenophobia too whether its intended or not.

I disagree quite profusely but alright.



Huh ticket splitting between PDS and neo-nazis when the East German regime was based on being anti-fascist is weird,

The official anti-fascism of the East German state was superficial at best. It was mostly directed at West Germany for propaganda purposes too, claiming that the government of West was run by former members of the Nazi regime (which was at least in part true of course). However, the question "how much responsibility did WE have for the Nazis' crimes?" was never asked in East Germany. It was the fault of the West Germans, while the East Germans were supposedly clean.

This was of course a result of the East German regime being run by older communists who were either living in exile in Moscow during World War II or had to endure the concentration camps themselves. This had a couple of side effects though:

1) The extent of guilt or responsibility of whose who did live in Germany during WWII was never really discussed in East German society, at least not to the extent it was done in West Germany.

2) The Holocaust against the Jews and other minorities was downplayed in East German historiography. Instead, the communists were often portrayed as the primary victims of the Nazi regime.

3) East Germany was primarily regarded as a country of the victims of Nazism and not as a country of perpetrators.

4) As a result of 2) and 3), East Germany refused to pay reparations to Israel after the war. This was seen as West Germany's job.

5) One of the so-called bloc parties of the "National Front" which were formed alongside the SED in East Germany in the late 40s was the National Democratic Party of Germany (NDPD) which purpose was to attract former Nazis and former Wehrmacht officers and win them over for the new regime.

6) And then of course you have phenomena like the different attitude the East German government had toward the emerging skinhead and punk scenes in the country in the mid-80s. Stasi reports from the era make note of the "positive attitude" skinheads had toward patriotism and military service, while punks were considered bums whose hear had to be cut.
[/quote]

On the issue of skinheads, is it the case the skin heads were left-wing and patriotic to socialist east germany, and therefore left-wing and not xenophobic, and for lot of them that continued, however for some, and emerging germans, the unemployment, and the loss of jobs in the East cause some to vote for far-right parties.



...is there proof, or is it from experience, was this in 1990, or at or after 2005?

It was reported in the news here and then. The first I heard of the phenomenon was in 1998, I think (see below). It's confirmed by anecdotal evidence I heard from individual people. I think it's possible that scientific studies exist on that too.[/quote]

Because of rising unemployment, that makes sense, resulting in people voting for anti-establishment parties, I think it would be also prevalent in 2005, and 2009.



In 1990 unified election, neo-nazis got only very slightly higher votes than in the election before it. The inclusion of East Germany didn't result in the rise of the vote for the neo-nazis, probably meaning that neo-nazis that they weren't strong in the east in the start of unified Germany (is this correct or not?).

Well, it's true that there was a lot of enthusiasm about the re-unification and hence not much political dissatisfaction in East Germany in 1990. This led to East Germans overwhelmingly casting their vote for the incumbent center-right government in 1990 (CDU and FDP). Also note that the PDS' vote share was very modest in 1990, compared to later elections. [/quote]

What I expected



They started gaining in 2005, midst the SPD's and attacks on social welfare, labour laws and attacks on the poor was this when East German economy started going down also (or was this the case always?).

It started around the mid-90s when unemployment rates spiked in the East. The right-wing extremist DVU won 12.9% of the vote in the 1998 Saxony-Anhalt state election, 5.3% in the 1999 Brandenburg state election, and 6.1% in the 2004 Brandenburg state election. The NPD won 9.2% in the 2004 Saxony election, and 7.3% in the 2006 Mecklenburg-Vorpommern election. The DVU eventually merged into the NPD in 2011.
[/quote]

Rising unemployment and a sense of not feeling in touch with the elite, globalistic west german establishment, makes sense.
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« Reply #70 on: March 10, 2017, 07:03:02 AM »

On the issue of skinheads, is it the case the skin heads were left-wing and patriotic to socialist east germany, and therefore left-wing and not xenophobic, and for lot of them that continued, however for some, and emerging germans, the unemployment, and the loss of jobs in the East cause some to vote for far-right parties.
 

No, those were actual, racist skinheads.
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« Reply #71 on: March 10, 2017, 07:09:41 AM »

On the issue of skinheads, is it the case the skin heads were left-wing and patriotic to socialist east germany, and therefore left-wing and not xenophobic, and for lot of them that continued, however for some, and emerging germans, the unemployment, and the loss of jobs in the East cause some to vote for far-right parties.
 

No, those were actual, racist skinheads.

Ah, that sucks then.
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« Reply #72 on: March 10, 2017, 08:40:30 AM »

any new-rightie culturalist supporting the AfD should be wary of the strong, austrian-like, "old-school-racist-right" elements in the east.

austrian-like?
You have something against austrians? Tongue

nah Tongue

but if you live here you realize, that our right-wing, which after all is directly connected to the nazi regime, isn't part of the cool, modern, pro-jewish/anti-muslim, pro-gay culturalist tribe.

we just combine our a anti-semitism and hitler-praising with muslim-bashing .....like höcke and his friends in east germany. poor, poor frauke
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E: -6.50, S: -6.67

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« Reply #73 on: March 10, 2017, 10:25:18 AM »

I'd strategically vote for the SPD to humiliate the CDU and to vanquish Angela Merkel, who I continue to despise, despite the many exhortations from the New Yorker or the Atlantic that tell me that I should support her because she's #WokeLiberal or whatever.

Die Linke is filled with former Stasi agents, no thanks.

Greens? Um, no thank you, I don't aspire to be a lifestyle left-liberal.

I don't see how that's "strategic", seeing as how SPD are obviously the best choice. And my vote too. I'll say this though, the German Greens are a great example of what Green parties SHOULD be like, unlike the kooky freak shows they often end up as.
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Antonio the Sixth
Antonio V
Atlas Institution
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Posts: 58,152
United States


Political Matrix
E: -7.87, S: -3.83

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« Reply #74 on: March 10, 2017, 01:59:23 PM »

I'd strategically vote for the SPD to humiliate the CDU and to vanquish Angela Merkel, who I continue to despise, despite the many exhortations from the New Yorker or the Atlantic that tell me that I should support her because she's #WokeLiberal or whatever.

Yeah, the glorification of Angela Merkel by American liberals is the ultimate proof of their shallowness.
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