Well, one German Youtuber wondered (from minute 6:10 onwards) if this series of car attacks over recent months is part of an agenda to create inner cities as car-free zones eventually (which would affect deliverance of goods for retail, foodmarkets and gastronomy as well) - which would tie in to Agenda 2030 and green politics (here in terms of "carbon reduction"). Garnering compliance from large groups of people by terror has been working well in the past, as we've seen with Covid in recent years.
On another note, have you noticed how the protests "against Nazis" have largely vanished by now, as the election is over? Maybe because these protests served as part of the election campaign to give the party of The Left a leg up (it was also said their rising numbers may have happened by promoting them through social media - after all, most of the young adults in Germany voted for them) while trying to push back against the conservative parties?
Or because the organizers of the protests may be finding themselves in trouble now because they have to grapple with 551 questions the CDU/CSU fraction in the Bundestag posed, regarding the financing of NGOs? There has been a considerate outcry, especially from Lars Klingbeil, who is one of the two SPD party leaders currently.
Here is a post from the alternative broadcaster AUF1 from Telegram about this situation:
edit: clarity
On another note, have you noticed how the protests "against Nazis" have largely vanished by now, as the election is over? Maybe because these protests served as part of the election campaign to give the party of The Left a leg up (it was also said their rising numbers may have happened by promoting them through social media - after all, most of the young adults in Germany voted for them) while trying to push back against the conservative parties?
Or because the organizers of the protests may be finding themselves in trouble now because they have to grapple with 551 questions the CDU/CSU fraction in the Bundestag posed, regarding the financing of NGOs? There has been a considerate outcry, especially from Lars Klingbeil, who is one of the two SPD party leaders currently.
Here is a post from the alternative broadcaster AUF1 from Telegram about this situation:
Are NGO networks preventing an upcoming coalition?
There is a lot of grumbling from the green-left camp: SPD leader Lars Klingenbeil has called on the CDU to withdraw a list of 551 questions about non-governmental organizations and their funding.
The background to this is that weeks before the Bundestag elections, “demos against the right” mobilized against the AfD, but also against Friedrich Merz and his party.
The mere submission of the list of questions caused a storm of indignation. It threatens to reveal countless links between green-left parties and NGO networks and associations disguised as non-profit organizations and financed with taxpayers' money.
The sting in the wasp's nest thoroughly scares off the associations and parties concerned.
SPD leader Klingenbeil even sounds like he will make a possible future coalition with the CDU to form a government dependent on whether Merz withdraws the list of questions.
No wonder, as he himself is a prime example of the cartel-like network that the CDU would like to uncover.
Klingebeil's wife Lena-Sophie Müller is the head of the SPD-affiliated “democracy promoter” NGO “D21”, which receives federal funding.
Whether Klingenbeil's allergic reaction to the question is solely due to this circumstance or whether he is afraid of uncovering even deeper connections could be revealed by the answers to the questionnaire.
Translated with DeepL.com (free version)
edit: clarity