The National Democratic Party of Germany, the NPD, is often attacked by the mainstream media and ruling powers as something extreme and unconscionable to support. But, judging by the party's latest successes, perhaps the German people are starting to recognize that something else is much more extreme and unconscionable: a government that is supposed to stand for them, but has no interest in their wellbeing or future.
At present, the German government has opened up the country to a massive number of migrants who are prioritized over impoverished Germans and receive full accommodation from German taxpayer money. The effect would be much less noticeable if it did not coincide with the rate by which Germans, overtaxed in ways that support the migrants, are seeking better opportunities and fleeing the country. If you actually care about your country, it is never a good sign when your best and brightest are leaving for greener pastures.
At present, the German government has opened up the country to a massive number of migrants who are prioritized over impoverished Germans and receive full accommodation from German taxpayer money. The effect would be much less noticeable if it did not coincide with the rate by which Germans, overtaxed in ways that support the migrants, are seeking better opportunities and fleeing the country. If you actually care about your country, it is never a good sign when your best and brightest are leaving for greener pastures.
Even if you have faith in a world where people can arrive from anywhere, put on new clothes and "become the doctors and engineers of tomorrow" or "take jobs that other people do not want", there is more to think about. First off, in competing for jobs that are in high demand and being willing to accept less, these "doctors and engineers of tomorrow" will cause the value of labor to stagnate which will, in turn, likely drive even more Germans to leave the country.
As for the migrants who "take the jobs that other people do not want", migrants often lack the language skills to qualify for any other position, so theoretically this is a bonus they offer. But surely their children will be competing for the same more-desirable opportunities as German kids and, given the current social climate and growing power of the pro-migrant bloc, it seems likely that there will eventually be policy favoring the children of migrants over "ordinary" German children, just like with Affirmative Action in the United States. What that means is Germany will be a tough place to be an ethnic German.
But wait: these are the best-case scenarios; in a much less-desirable scenario, migrants do not end up employed at all, because - surprise - they are unskilled, which explains why they were unestablished enough to flee their countries of origin in the first place. Furthermore, when you are Germany and one of your country's strongest selling points is its social welfare system for migrants who fail to work but produce families, it is a no-brainer as to who will show up, especially when opportunities can be maximized by having as many children as possible. Unfortunately, this is putting pressure on the already overburdened social welfare state and only where the problems begin.
Cocooned in a non-working neighborhood of non-German speaking residents, very little integration and socialization is taking place. Worse, pockets of young, identity-confused migrants grow up exposed to a mainstream German culture that, for reasons unexplained, actually seeks to glamorize the criminal migrant underground and fast money that comes from it. What a surprise when we see youth acting out these fantasies, and interacting with the society they are not a part of, only to claim what these influencers tell them they should want, via theft, rape, you name it. Disaffected youth are also targets of radical Islamists, too - to build cells of influence that reject the filth but also envision Europe to be the new Caliphate. What a disaster.
So, what is the government doing amidst this growing crisis? I am glad you asked. The government wants to ban those who wish to end this model. The stated goal of the ban is to stop "agitation against the people" - i.e. Volksverhetzung. But if the accused aim to protect the German people against the ambitions of the current government and the devastation it has wrought for the German people, welches "Volk" - which people - are the so-called "Volksverhetzer" agitating against? Further, is it not that very same government that is doing the agitating if its ideas burden the German people and put them in danger? These are questions that every German must ask. Meanwhile, the following article shows how difficult it will be for the Germans who are part of the resistance to reach the people of the nation they wish to save:
from "Mother Loses Day-Care Connection," as reported by Emily Harris on National Public Radio
"The way Stella Palau sees it, she was unfairly kicked out of a parent-child co-op because of her political beliefs. Palau is a leading member of the NPD's executive committee, but for about a year, no one at the co-op knew that.
"The first thing was a phone call from one of the mothers who said they were really disappointed and didn't want to see me there anymore," Palau says. "I understood because they have a completely wrong image of us."
Palau chats with her daughter and cuddles her 18-month-old son on a park bench at a playground. She told her nearly 4-year-old girl that the children's center has closed. Palau says she didn't try to talk politics with the other moms at the co-op, but she stuck to topics like children's health and nutrition.
Susanne Mosch runs the co-op. She had never met a member of the NPD until Palau brought her daughter in. "Just like the other mothers, she sat here with us, sang songs with us," Mosch says. "We talked a lot. She was a completely normal mother."
And Mosch was shocked to learn that Palau was a proponent of what Mosch considers "dangerous, extreme views." Now Mosch feels abused. "Of course, no one is here to express their political beliefs, but she intentionally kept back a lot of things," Mosch says. Palau says she's being tarred with too wide a brush.
"My personal opinion is not being heard; it's generalized," Palau says. "In Germany, everything we call right-wing, or nationalist, is bad. And there's no gradation, no differentiation."
She will not say that she has been discriminated against. But the perception is powerful among far-right sympathizers that [they are]. Using the anonymity of online chat rooms, they say the Web is the only space where they can voice their opinions without alienating neighbors or losing customers. (more)