Posted on Dec 28, 2018
Germany’s Far-Right Rebrands: Friendlier Face, Same Doctrine
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Posted 6 y ago
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I've been to West Germany and met a female who introduced me to her family on evening in 1983.
While chatting about German culture and how great it was to be a service member stationed there, she slowly opened a wooden cabinet door and all by itself was a flag holder, like they put on a dinner table for special occasions, but this 10 inches tall holder had a Nazi party flag dangling from it.
I didn't say anything about it and politely removed myself from the house and never returned.
I wasn't so much shocked as I was amazed that the family had a Nazi party flag in their house.
I was around 21 years old and your post reminded me of that night oh so long ago.
While chatting about German culture and how great it was to be a service member stationed there, she slowly opened a wooden cabinet door and all by itself was a flag holder, like they put on a dinner table for special occasions, but this 10 inches tall holder had a Nazi party flag dangling from it.
I didn't say anything about it and politely removed myself from the house and never returned.
I wasn't so much shocked as I was amazed that the family had a Nazi party flag in their house.
I was around 21 years old and your post reminded me of that night oh so long ago.
Hipster Nazis? What on earth... Okay, I know how to defuse this. Tell them there is this thing called classical liberalism and they haven't heard of it yet.
Also, http://hipsterhitler.com/
Also, http://hipsterhitler.com/
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When I was in Germany in the early 1990s, everyone was ridiculously polite. I mentioned this to a civilian I work with who is originally from Croatia but spent some time living in Germany more recently. He said he had a very, very different experience in Germany.
My understanding is that most of the far-right stuff comes from the region that used to be East Germany. I wonder if that relates to the very different experience of West Germany in its relations with the Western Allies as opposed to the experience of East Germany under communist domination. That is, that West Germany experienced growth and prosperity in the post-war years, while East Germany did not and so West Germans might have more readily accepted the fact that the Nazis were wrong while the East Germans might not have fully separated from that history because of the bad experience that had under communism.
My understanding is that most of the far-right stuff comes from the region that used to be East Germany. I wonder if that relates to the very different experience of West Germany in its relations with the Western Allies as opposed to the experience of East Germany under communist domination. That is, that West Germany experienced growth and prosperity in the post-war years, while East Germany did not and so West Germans might have more readily accepted the fact that the Nazis were wrong while the East Germans might not have fully separated from that history because of the bad experience that had under communism.
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