The Situation In Germany

I think one can see how much the twisting of the official narrative towards Germany being the main (or only) culprit (similar to the "lone wolf" narrative in certain assassinations / terror acts) in both world wars was influenced by larger elites when looking at the situation in Germany today:

Generations of guilt-induced people had come to abhor anything that is considered patriotic or German culture "proper", and thus they surrendered to so-called globalist "values" in order to be used by those same larger elites that have been playing the strings of that narrative. And if one speaks out against it, they're branded as "nazi" nowadays, get (publicly) defamed and even persecuted in some cases. The possibility of being branded as "nazi" is something that induces a lot of fear in most people so they don't stand up.

Most have been programmed with fear, not just in relation to the "nazi" brandishment. There's also an English term for this condition, the so-called German angst (one may have to go back much farther in history to discern its root). And with that fear, elite forces have most of the population by their "cojones", so to speak. If one would express it in the language of the nervous system, they seem to be in a kind of freeze or fawn mode (due to that anxiety). Maybe that's where their appearance of coldness as it seems to people from other countries may stem from.

When it comes to the world wars, larger elites have been pulling the strings of all war parties, more or less. Historians also went into material of how Hitler actually was made big by tycoons from industry and finance, here in Europe and overseas. (As for other countries, like Russia, there's material discussing that Lenin and the Bolsheviks were financed by the British Empire and Wallstreet and the German Reich where the dynasty was related by blood to the British one.)
 
Nord Stream sabotager Arrested - may escape prosecution as part of Russia - Ukraine Peace Deal.

Not certain if its the same person that RAFL mentions here. But a Ukrainian man thought to have been involved in coordinating the sabotage of Nord Stream pipelines has been arrested in Italy and faces extradition to Germany. Although Germany will look to prosecute the individual; its suspected those responsible for the pipeline sabotage will look to include their pardoning as part of the Ukrainian - Russian Peace DealTalks.

At the same time, the mystery of who blew up the Nord Stream pipeline continues:
Nord Stream attacks: Arrest warrant for Ukrainian Wolodymyr Z.
(Nord-Stream-Anschläge: Haftbefehl gegen Ukrainer Wolodymyr Z.)

[Satire on] Somehow the name sounds familiar, I just can't remember who it reminds me of... hmmm [Satire off]

 
Not certain if its the same person that RAFL mentions here. But a Ukrainian man thought to have been involved in coordinating the sabotage of Nord Stream pipelines has been arrested in Italy and faces extradition to Germany. Although Germany will look to prosecute the individual; its suspected those responsible for the pipeline sabotage will look to include their pardoning as part of the Ukrainian - Russian Peace DealTalks.

So Germany pretends that it doesn't know that the US knows that it wasn't that guy, while the US pretends that it doesn't know that Germany and Russia know it wasn't that guy, and Russia pretends it doesn't know that the US knows it wasn't that guy, and they all pretend to pardon him as a sort of peace gesture so that the US and Germany can pretend that they got something out of the peace deal (namely the pardon of the guy) while Russia can pretend it gave something up to make the peace deal happen. That it?
 
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is looking to nominate "Pfizer's whore" Ursula for German president in 2027.

Will Merz last long enough in office to officially propose anybody for the president's office? (No)

Will Ursula, while she's doing time in prison in 2027 be eligible for becoming president? (No)

Will there still be a Germany as we know it in 2027? (Probably not)

Will the Federal Assembly needed to elect a German president find a quiet place in the country to convene?
(Hint - it will not be Berlin)
 
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is looking to nominate "Pfizer's whore" Ursula for German president in 2027.
If she has to get an unelected position somewhere in the EU as a 'reward for her service', it sounds better for the people's sake to dump her something without any real power and influence like the President of Germany than what she has now, IMO.

But, as Ursus Minor said, maybe we won't need to 'worry' about that at all when the time comes.
 
What a story...

from: Six candidates from Germany’s rightwing AfD party die 13 days apart in lead up to local elections: reports

Six candidates from Germany's rightwing AfD party die 13 days apart in lead up to local elections: reports​


Shane Galvin

Four candidates and two reserves from the right-wing AfD political party in Germany have dropped dead within 13 days of each other — just before elections, according to reports.

The Alternative for Deutschland candidates were set to appear on ballots in North Rhine-Westphalia on September 14.

Officials said no foul play is currently suspected in any of their deaths, the BBC reported.

Ralph Lange, 66; Wolfgang Klinger, 71; Stefan Berendes, 59; and Wolfgang Seitz, 59, all kicked the bucket within two weeks of each other, the European Conservative reported. Two reserve candidates also died over the same period.

German officials stated that two of the deaths were a result of natural causes, but have not commented on the cause of the others.
The AfD was not expected to be competitive in the regional September elections, The European Conservative reported.

However, the party made significant progress since the last state elections in 2022 — climbing from 5.4% in the polls to 16.8% within North Rhine-Westphalia, the BBC reported.

North Rhine-Westphalia has a population of 18 million and a reported 20,000 candidates will run for office this cycle.

The mass of untimely deaths amongst AfD candidates has forced officials to reprint ballots several times and invalidate some mail-in ballots, according to the BBC.

Alternative for Deutschland co-leader Alice Weidel amplified speculation when she reposted economist Stefan Homburg’s comment that the number of candidate deaths was “statistically impossible,” the BBC reported.

German police stated they were investigating the deaths and details have been withheld for reasons of family privacy, according to reports.

The mentioned BBC report:

As many as six candidates for Germany's far-right AfD have died in recent weeks ahead of local elections in the big western state of North Rhine-Westphalia.

Police have made clear there is no evidence of foul play in the deaths, but it means that new ballots will have to be printed and some postal voters will have to recast their ballots.

North Rhine-Westphalia has a population of 18 million and a reported 20,000 candidates will run for office in its 14 September local elections.

The number of deaths has nevertheless raised questions on social media. The state's interior ministry has pointed out that candidates from other parties, including the Greens and Social Democrats, have also died.
The AfD became Germany's second biggest party in February's federal elections, spreading from its eastern heartland to areas of the west too.

The domestic spy agency classified it as a right-wing extremist organisation in May, before placing a pause on that description due to an appeal pending in court. In three eastern states, its AfD associations are still listed as extremist.

Initial reports centred on news that four of its candidates had died, and then the deaths of two reserve candidates also emerged, prompting a flurry of conspiracy theories on social media.

AfD co-leader Alice Weidel made no effort to quash the speculation, reposting a claim by retired economist Stefan Homburg that the number of candidates' deaths was "statistically almost impossible".

However, asked about the rumours in his party, the AfD's number two figure in North Rhine-Westphalia, Kay Gottschalk, acknowledged on Tuesday that "what I have in front of me - but that's just partial information - that doesn't back up these suspicions at the moment".

He told Politico's Berlin Playbook Podcast that his party wanted the cases to be investigated "without immediately getting into conspiracy-theory territory". He said they had to tread carefully with the families concerned as they had lost a family member.


Police told Germany's DPA news agency that the four initial deaths were either from natural causes or the cause was not being divulged for reasons of family privacy. The two further deaths have been similarly described.

AfD strategists are hoping for gains in North Rhine-Westphalia's local elections, which are seen as the first test of voters since the new federal government came to power.

In the last state elections in May 2022, the AfD polled just 5.4% in a region that is home to Germany's industrial heartland in the Ruhr valley and has suffered from steep job losses.

The AfD polled 16.8% in the state in federal elections last February and polls suggest the party could almost match those numbers.

The party has found support among several leading US figures on the right who have accused the German government of trying to suppress the AfD through bureaucracy.

Tech billionaire Elon Musk, who endorsed the far-right party's migration policies earlier this year, has repeated his support for the AfD in recent days.

"Either Germany votes AfD, or it is the end of Germany," he claimed.
 

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