Germany CIA engineered shift to right wing
In preparation for a future war against a muslim country, Germany's public opinion is manipulated towards ANTI-FOREIGNER (anti-muslim) feelings.
a typical german mutti falls for mass-hysteria against turks etc
JERUSALEM POST is happy to report:
Poll says 10 percent of Germans want a new 'Führer'
By JPOST.COM STAFF oct13/2010 16:12
Germans reportedly want leader to "send foreigners home"; over 58% say "religious practice for Muslims in Germany should be seriously limited."
Ten percent of Germans want a "Führer," and one quarter are strongly xenophobic, according to a poll released on Wednesday, reported German news source The Local.
The poll, entitled "The mainstream in the crisis - Right-wing extremist attitudes in Germany," was conducted by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation for Political Education.
Those who wanted a "Führer," said that he should "govern with a strong hand for the good of Germany," and believed that dictatorship is a the preferred form of government.
More than 30% agreed with the statement "foreigners come to abuse the welfare state," and even more (31.7%) said that when unemployment is high, the government should "send foreigners back home."
Over 58% said "religious practice for Muslims in Germany should be seriously limited."
Older and less-educated Germans were more likely to be intolerant, according to the poll.
Study authors Oliver Decker and Elmar Brähler called their findings "an alarm signal for politics and society," The Local reported. Decker and Brähler also said that right-wing extremism increased during the current financial crisis.
my friend is a foreigner. Soccer stadium scene.
Anti-foreigner, Muslim sentiment rife in Germany: study
Racism is on the rise in Germany, an expert study warned Wednesday, as a fierce debate about immigration, especially of Muslims, continues to rage in the country.
The study, by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation, showed that more than one third (34.3 percent) of those surveyed believed Germany's 16 million immigrants or people with foreign origins came to the country for the social benefits.
Around the same number (35.6 percent) think Germany is being "over-run by foreigners" and more than one in 10 called for a "Fuehrer" to run the country "with a strong hand."
Thirty-two percent of people said they agreed with the statement:
"Foreigners should be sent home when jobs are scarce."
"In 2010, there has been a significant increase in anti-democratic and racist attitudes. We are experiencing a dramatic turning point," said the study's authors, Elmar Braehler and Oliver Decker.
Far-right attitudes are found not only at the extremes of German society, but "to a worrying degree at the centre of society," the report noted.
More than half (58.4 percent) of the 2,411 people polled thought the around four million Muslims in Germany should have their religious practices "significantly curbed."
The integration of Muslims has been a hot button issue since August when a member of the central bank sparked outrage by saying the country was being made "more stupid" by poorly educated and unproductive Muslim immigrants.
The banker, Thilo Sarrazin, has since resigned but his book on the subject -- "Germany Does Itself In" -- has flown off the shelves, and polls showed considerable sympathy for some of his views.
President Christian Wulff used his speech to mark the 20th anniversary of German reunification to address the issue, saying that "Islam is part of Germany" but his comments attracted widespread criticism.
The Friedrich Ebert Foundation has close links to the centre-left Social Democrats.
The acrid immigration debate sparked this summer by former Bundesbank board member Thilo Sarrazin has apparently had an effect on the German public. A poll released on Wednesday showed that one-tenth want a "Führer," while one-quarter admitted to strong xenophobic attitudes - up from one-fifth in 2008.
The poll, presented in Berlin by the Friedrich Ebert foundation for political education (FES), showed that xenophobic views are taking a greater hold among the German public than previously.
The 10 percent who wanted a "Führer" said that this person should "govern with a hard hand for the good of Germany" and believed a dictatorship to be a "better form of government."
One quarter of people questioned said they longed for a "strong party" that "embodies German society."
More than 30 percent agreed with the statement, "foreigners come to abuse the welfare state," said the FES, which is backed by the centre-left Social Democrats.
Even more people - 31.7 percent - said that in a limited job market "one should send foreigners back home," and that too many immigrants put Germany in danger of being "overrun" (35.6 percent).
Anti-Islam views were particularly strong in the FES poll, which surveyed 2,400 Germans aged between 14 and 90.
Just over 58 percent said that "religious practice for Muslims in Germany should be seriously limited," and that number rose to 75.7 percent for people from former East Germany.
Leipzig-based study authors Oliver Decker and Elmar Brähler called their findings an "alarm signal for politics and society," saying the right-wing extremist views had multiplied during the financial crisis. People who promote such views could use the situation to "gain political capital," they warned.
The study, entitled Die Mitte in der Krise - Rechtsextreme Einstellungen in Deutschland 2010, or "The mainstream in the crisis - Right-wing extremist attitudes in Germany," also showed that older and less-educated Germans were most likely to be intolerant.
Still, the phenomenon is not confined to the "fringe" of society, FES spokeswoman Nora Langenbacher said. Instead right-wing extremist views are found in "worrisome amounts within mainstream society," be it eastern or western Germany, men or women, young or old, members of democratic parties, or churchgoers.
"This development is most likely linked to the effects of the economic crisis," the study said, adding that this meant not only an ongoing increase in the acceptance of right-wing extremist views, but also a measurable change in Germans' relationship to the economy.
"Beliefs in an ethnic community with a common destiny are making themselves apparent, for example in distinguishing between 'foreigners' who bring 'us' something, and those who present a burden for the 'common good'," the study concluded.
The study results come as the debate over immigration and integration reaches a fever pitch in Germany. Since June, Thilo Sarrazin has made a number of anti-immigrant statements aimed mainly at Turks and Arabs, coinciding with the publication of his controversial book Deutschland schafft sich ab - Wie wir unser Land aufs Spiel setzen, or "Abolishing Germany - How we're putting our country at jeopardy."
This is not funny, Ahmed
While many politicians have condemned Sarrazin's position, polls have shown that public support of his views is growing. In early September a poll conducted by Emnid for daily Bild revealed that 18 percent would vote for a party headed by Sarrazin, who was forced to resign from his Bundesbank position over his hot-button views.
But since then, several conservative politicians have been emboldened to make similar remarks, the latest being Bavarian state premier Horst Seehofer, who over the weekend suggested a ban on immigration for Turks and Arabs because of their "difficulties" with integration.
2 Comments:
Interesting expository text.. Living in Germany this is nothing new,
My opinion aside: where is the CIA connection???
Best,
Are we heading back to NAZI Germany? This is how facism takes hold. Never forget, they say. Well, now I am looking at the world and seeing a rising tide of Facism across the globe. Some are fighting, still, against the Facism in our own hearts. This comes from inside humans. What is it?
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