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  • Desperate times for gdp.

    I think/hope that people are starting to wake up to the fact that the UK has found itself a lot poorer than most of Western Europe and the USA and perhaps, just perhaps, that isn't the EU's fault.

  • I have 2 sons. Should have called them villa-ru-ru and villa-ru -ru-ru

    FTFY

  • I read a great theory about US Qanon madness being a symptom of the US being so rich and so stable for so long that the middle class are so fucking bored that dentists cosplay as militia just to feel something.

  • Isn't that the entire oeuvre of J G Ballard?

  • I saw a film like that but I don’t think I’m supposed to talk about it.

  • Godwin's law in action right there.

  • That's a bit of a Reich

    FTFY.

  • They've been doing this since about 1200, it's set in something that translates to 'family law' - no idea how legally binding it is. The family has split into an elder and junior line - the elder line count up to 100 and then begin at 1 again, the junior line start with 1 at the turn of each century.

    Germany would clearly find in such people, a leader for our times...

  • It's not exactly new. Fascism in general and nazism in particular have had an association with batshit conspiracy theories since before they were fully-formed. Not only the obvious one, but all sorts of disturbing bollocks.

    https://www.brutenorse.com/blog/2022/7/5/ep-35-apeling-panspermia-or-the-vlkisch-saga-of-the-lemurian-ape-craze-

  • Wow. Every day is a school day.

  • Ta will have a listen maybe conspiracy and batshit stuff is a good barometer of gullible people willing to follow.

  • ^^ But no longer a parents' evening.

  • Ah the Reichsburger weirdos. Basically Germany's version of the sovereign citizen weirdos.

    They believe that the German Empire never ended and the Bundesregierung is illegitimate. They might be a bit wrong on that.

    The thing is that the first part, that the German Empire never ended, is actually the prevalent legal opinion, whereas the second part, that the Bundesregierung/Bundesrepublik is illegitimate, is not. The Federal Republic was/is not a successor state to the German Empire (note that a better translation for the word "Reich" is actually 'realm' (the pun with 'reach' is apposite, as the word is cognate with German "reich-"), although this one once had emperors, of course) and is 'identical' (in the sense that it is the same legal 'subject' under international law) to the German Reich except in territorial extent, in which it is partly identical. Note that the legal concepts here take a lot more explaining--IANAL, and I certainly don't understand international law well. Obviously, the state now also has a different name, different constitution, a different territorial extent, many different laws, and in general differs from its previous shape in all the ways in which it has changed, but it is not like the Ship of Theseus--there is continuity. It is inescapably the state of which German "Reichsbürger" are citizens and to whose laws they are subject, as those detained will soon find out.

    So, in a sense, the German Reich didn't end, but the Federal Republic is still legitimate because it is the German Reich--as I said, a "Reich" is really a realm and is thought to merely refer to the state of Germans, which did not cease to exist following the capitulation in 1945. You can see how this will confuse extremely literal people, and it has to be said that the whole thing is rather confusing even for others.

    Many argued after the war that the German Reich had ceased to exist, and it took some years for it to become established as the orthodox opinion that it hadn't. It seems one of the main factors that won the argument was that it had never been made explicit that the German Reich had ended by any of the parties to the war, and if so, on what grounds.

    I find part of the confusion understandable, as the destruction of Germany, especially its cities, was so immense that it was easy to think of it as a total collapse of everything. However, what had ceased to exist was effectively only the Nazi perversion of the Weimarean Republic, e.g. in 'governing' through emergency orders--the Nazis passed a lot of bad and unconstitutional 'legislation' but never explicitly abolished the Weimarean constitution. Even when the Grundgesetz was passed, it didn't explicitly abolish its predecessor constitution.

    (Both German states claimed after the war that they were the only German state and initially didn't recognise each other, and this whole history is another huge can of worms with how the reunification was eventually handled.)

    Apologies to any lawyers if some of the above is bollocks. Please do correct it if so.

    It's also important to note that "Reichsbürger" have all sorts of individual views. Some are neo-Nazis, others German nationalists and want to 'go back' to the Nazi state or the Kaiserreich, respectively, as well as lots of other strange stuff. The whole thing is rather reminiscent of the cocktail of toxic and bizarre nonsense gleaned from rubbish publications that caused Hitler to develop his hateful views.

  • How nice to "see" you again.

    PS Parklife.

  • Good to see you again Mr Schick - I'm sorry that it is not under more pleasant circumstances!

  • Yeah, I think that conspiracy theories have a twofold function in this situation. Firstly they act like an idiot filter, quickly getting rid of people too likely to ask awkward questions or decide/realise that the far right is full of shit before you've wasted tons of time and resources on converting them. Secondly, it provides a false explicatory framework that allows you to appeal to people's sense of aggrievement about real problems that they actually experience, but redirect it against false causes, to both achieve the far right's aims of creating and oppressing outgroups, and simultaneously protect the elements of the status quo that they wish to defend and retain.

  • Extreme wealth is a part of it, but extreme inequality is probably more significant.

  • The "unnamed MP accused of sexual assault and rape" who didn't have the whip suspended earlier this week...

    Could be unrelated as they're such horrible human beings but...

    Conservatives remove whip from MP Julian Knight after complaint to Met

  • Great to see you Oliver

  • never explicitly abolished the Weimarean constitution. Even when the Grundgesetz was passed, it didn't explicitly abolish its predecessor constitution.

    Wasn't it that they just changed and extended it because, lacking a statement of foundational ethical principles like the U.S. declaration of independence, the Weimar constitution was entirely changeable? So its content was progressive at the time the Nazis took over but they were able to change that without violating any constitutional principles?

  • Weimarean

    -> Dog thread

  • Must be something in the air ...


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