German Policemen and soldiers are not far-right, but only extremely disappointed
PART 3.
Now it may be said that this is the case in a Union that is plucked by poor election results, plagued by programmatic disorientation and shaken by a meandering candidate for chancellor. There is no time spent thinking or self-doubt. One prefers to quickly reach for the saber, let him down on friend and foe and leave a deep. But the problem goes even deeper. The reaction to Mr Merz's statement is also so sharp because most of those involved at least suspect that there is something about it. Only what exactly lies wrong, many Union princes seem to have not yet been able to open up. Perhaps they should talk to federal police officers and Bundeswehr soldiers more often.
Yes, maybe they should even get over the heart of changing words with one or the other AfD MP. You don't have to coalesce with them right away. But there are not only spinners, haters and right-wing extremists in this party.
There are, for example, former police officers who think anything but are extremely disappointed: disappointed that the federal authorities have temporarily given up control of public power in the wake of the refugee crisis. Disappointed that the chancellor had not declared her migration policy at all, or only far too late. Disappointed that ministers are making fine talk about internal security, while many civil servants feel left alone when they go to train stations or in inner cities at night. If, they report, they pick up foreigners who have already been legally deported twice, but are still allowed to enter and remain temporarily for a third time. Sure, these may be isolated cases, but in some conversations you get the impression that there are quite a few individual cases in this country in which the political speeches do not fit the bleak reality. Not just now, however, but for years. And now Mr Merz comes along, notices the problem and gets a nice headline for it. And then two federal ministers come along, put him in the snare for it and also get nice headlines. I am not a psychologist, but I suspect that such a political exchange of blows is unlikely to appease the frustration of those policemen and soldiers who have turned their backs on government policy. Does the Home Secretary not see this problem โ or does he not want to see it? It is much worse, says the FDP politician Konstantin Kuhle: people like Mr. Seehofer have systematically mispronounced the policies of their own government, but also democracy. This is another reason why the confidence of many security forces in the rule of law has been shaken. Kuhle already got his thesis a year ago in a guest post for t- online. en executed. Worth reading. Maybe someone in the Home Office is printing the article for the boss."
The author has published a large number of articles on this topic, which can be accessed on the search box at www.conservo.wordpress.com (e.g. https://conservo.wordpress.com..../2018/02/19/u-v-d-le
Article-Orig.link:
https://www.journalistenwatch.....com/2019/07/01/poliz
German Policemen and soldiers are not far-right, but only extremely disappointed
PART 2.
... in the meantime, however, the frustration in the ranks of the security forces can no longer be overlooked, the rumors can no longer be ignored. Worse still, many soldiers and policemen โ they do not say it out loud (yet) โ have long since dismissed the "internal dismissal" of the state they wanted to defend. "Enough is enough" โ that expresses their mood, which can almost be grasped with your hands. Confused the messenger with the message โ Friedrich Merz, the beaten-up reminder (Note from me: Politician Merz probably belongs to the Deep State)
Obviously, one cannot do one thing under the Merkel regime: talk publicly about what is known, call for problems by name and call for improvement โ however prominent the pretentious delinquent may be, as is clear from the example of Fr. Merz: Merz has warned that Parts of the Bundeswehr and the Federal Police are increasingly committed to the AfD โ which, incidentally, shows that the AfD is clearly more concerned about the security of our country than the peace dreamers of the old parties. The opinion of t- online. en, which in the morning commentary reads among other things: "Friedrich Merz does not have the finest sense of mood. But he knows how to use the verbal floret to stab a wound as large as a saber blow. We are obviously losing parts of the Bundeswehr to the AfD," he quips in the direction of his own CDU corps, adding: "We are losing parts of the Federal Police to the AfD." One does not know what one should first wonder about as an observer: about the fact that a leading CDU politician is only now noticing this development โ or about the lapidary response of Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, who bluffs Merz, that he "should not call the Federal Police as a use the stepping stone for his political career planning". Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen also gives Merz the answer with the saber on the lid. Command: Visor to, Ears to, Attack!
German Policemen and soldiers are not far-right, but only extremely disappointed
PART 1.
The displeasure boils in the troop and the police.
The catastrophic state of the Bundeswehr reflects the miserable state of our entire republic. It is not the soldiers who are to blame and it is not the police. The clear apportionment of blame goes solely to politics and justice. If we can no longer even rely on the police, the private security forces and our soldiers, we are lost, also because any defensiveness, any resistance to the attacks is undone from within our own ranks. If, for example, the policy does not create the conditions for permanent intensive offenders to be deported and the judiciary refuses to do the same, the police will not solve this problem, but frustration is growing among these officers. As a result of a left-green zeitgeist, the established parties created the fundamental threat of one of the most important civilisational achievements of modern societies: the state monopoly on violence.
Serious prosecutions are hardly taking place in Germany any more. For example, the number of asylum seekers actually deported is less than one hundred, while the number of non-asylum seekers to be deported is around 40,000.ย The state's monopoly on violence has become an air number through such a lax policy. In the Bundeswehr, it is no longer possible to speak of militaryness for a long time. As a result of a left-green zeitgeist, the established parties created the fundamental threat of one of the most important civilisational achievements of modern societies: the state monopoly on violence.
A completely deranged defence minister can no longer defend anything โ except perhaps her feminism fantasies (e.g. pregnant tanks) โ because there is a lack of overview, insight and even foresight everywhere. Leyen's weak-mat leadership is unbearable. It is completely incomprehensible that she is still in office, but it leads to the conclusion that her boss, the German Chancellor, at best praises the Bundeswehr as a Quantitรฉ nรฉgligeable.
"Social pedagogy" instead of hardship
The evil, which both V.D.L. and Merkel seem to cultivate with devotion, lies in the disastrous image that they obviously have of our security forces. You should scream it unmistakably in their faces โ every day: the security forces of this country โ the Bundeswehr and the police โ are not a kindergarten and children's playground for left-green games and a testing field for "socially acceptable" kittens, but a Field of application, which requires special hardship in an emergency: namely, to have to kill in an emergency. But our old parties do not want to see the anti-civilizational threat to our society posed by the utopias of left-green spinners. In addition to the utopia of a limitless world, whose socially destructive danger is hardly understood in Germany as a result of the refugee crisis, the greatest threat comes from the left-green utopia of a "social pedagogy" of the fight against crime and the defensive readiness inside and out. According to this utopia, we need fewer police, fewer prisons. Soldiers and barracks, but more social educators, social workers and street workers to effectively combat crime and its causes, i.e. "the Bundeswehr as an organized cuddle and feel-good club according to service regulations". With her feel-good agenda, the minister missed the image of soft eggs and hot showers. With "cosmetic" tricks, gender-appropriate opening and adaptation of seats for pregnant women, our troupe is made more of a tired slap in the face of the maternal health work than a "powerful" Soldateska. But it doesn't help: the Bundeswehr is a force in which you have to learn to shoot and kill if you don't want to be shot yourself. To put it plainly, violence is one of them! (And then it's out with "Healing World Nostalgia".