Onanieren für Deutschland

Onanieren für Deutschland

Februar.
Irgendwo im Dithmarschen wählt man einen neuen Landrat.
Die Christdemokraten stolpern durch ihre eigenen Hirnwindungen.
Mal Hü (rechtsradikal), mal hot (Grünen-Koalition).
Der naive Wirtschaftsminister spricht mit uns und sich wie mit Kindern.
Und der Kanzler ist Olaf Scholz.

Von Kai Blasberg
Agenda für Deutschland.
Ja.
Es ist wahr.
So nannten es die Vorsitzenden der beiden ehemaligen Volksparteien, die Rechtsausleger Merz und Söder, als sie die Grünen bekämpfen wollten.
AfD heißt (hieß?) ihr Programm.
Ganz im Ernst.
Aber das war vor Weihnachten.
Jetzt bandelt Merz mit den Grünen an.
Die können Ihr Glück kaum fassen.

Bei twitter, vormals X, oder war es andersrum, legen die linksorientierten Mittelmaßbürger ihr intellektuelles Gemächt frei, wenn bei Spiegel-TV ganz offensichtlich des Deutschen und vor allem des Denkens kaum mächtige ehemalige DDR-Bürger ihre Meinung zur NSDAP feilbieten sollen, was nur deswegen getan wird, weil Kamerateams verzweifelt auf der Suche nach sendbar Skandalösem sind.
Endlich treffen sich bekannte Nazis in einer Villa, um das zu besprechen, was Nazis in Villen besprechen.
Darob befriedigt sich der Urbane an sich selbst, da es offenbar und dankenswerterweise noch beknacktere Zeitgenossen gibt als sich selbst.
Und lobt die eigenen, längst verfallenen Positionen des Seins als nach wie vor und vollkommen gültig.
Einwanderung in die EU wird jetzt allerdings unmöglich. Heißt ja jetzt Irregulär.
Bürgergeldempfänger werden denunziert. Waren die nicht immer faul?
Und Gaskraftwerke sollen en masse die Fehlplanungen der Energiewende auffangen.
Fuck you, Klima.
Dann doch lieber artig auf die Straße, um wenigstens den Stillstand zu verteidigen.
Es gibt ja immerhin noch die normative Kraft des Faktischen.
Kannze nix machen.

Als in Sonneberg, dessen Namen selbst Thüringer kaum kennen, weniger als 20000 Wahlbürger den Kandidaten der Ekel-Partei wählten, gehen mittelmäßige Bestürzung in Berlin-Mitte und dümmliche Freude bei der AfD Hand in Hand.

Rituale wie Anne Will, die jetzt Mioska heißt, Kommentare in den ausblutenden Medien von übersaturierten Anstaltsangestellten, meist ohne jeden verwertbaren Inhalt und nur stattfindend, weil die seelenlosen Gefäße namens Sendungen mit Inhalt gefüllt werden müssen, wozu sichtbar keiner mehr rechte Lust hat.
Thanx God, es gibt den 27. Januar.

Die jungen Männer aus Deutschland spielen so schlecht Fußball wie die älteren jungen Männer aus Deutschland, und die älteren, ja alten deutschen Männer, die schon damals in den 80ern bei den damals jungen deutschen Männern als ebensolche dabei waren und alle mit i enden, ob Rudi, Hansi, Uli, Jogi, Oli, Acki, erklären uns, dass sie bald die Probleme lösen wollen, die wir ohne sie nie hätten.
Und die Ultras schmeißen Tennisbälle.
Warum bleibt ihr Geheimnis.
Die im Driver-Seat wollen die Anwesenden dabei gerne unter sich bleiben, weil man sich ja so gut kennt und man das auch hier mit dem Verändern nicht so toll findet.
Mal DFB, mal DFL, laut den sie tragenden Fans alles und immer wiederkehrend Scheiße.
Dann aber doch schnell das aktuelle Trikot gekauft.
Ist ja Heim-EM, das muss doch klappen.

Dann feiern sie im Regen ihre Rituale, weil sie nicht loslassen können vom Überkommenen, und brauchen 60000 Polizisten, weil die Bedrohungslage amorph ist. Danach sind alle besoffen und krank. Virus ist doch nun mal immer.

Die Lufthansa macht so viele Gewinne wie nie, als hätte es die Besinnung auf etwas Neues nicht gegeben.
Wenn die Richtung schon falsch ist, dann doch wenigstens Vollgas.

Dieser Text ist ubiquitär.
Im März. Im November. Jahreszahl egal.

Derweil scheint in Nordfriesland die Sonne.
Geregnet hat es auch.
Windig war es.
Der junge Pudel jagt Enten.
Der ältere schläft.

War was?

20.02.24
*Kai Blasberg war 40 Jahre in den privaten Medien in Deutschland beschäftigt
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The same faces always follow me on the streets of Berlin: Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann in the Christian Lindner memorial black and white; Sahra Wagenknecht, who has only mastered a single facial expression in photos for fifteen years and is not running at all in the European elections; or Katharina Barley, who is apparently so unknown as the top candidate for the European elections that Olaf Scholz is standing by her side on the posters, so that the passing mob at least develops a rough idea of what this mysterious Ms. Barley is all about.

However, it's also exciting who doesn't advertise with the faces of their candidates: the CDU knows full well that it can't win much ground with the likeness of Ursula von der Leyen. The Christian Democrats are focusing on their core competence: airy casings that somehow sound delicious, the potato soup among the slogans, consisting of empty carbohydrates and still warm. "For a Germany in which we live well and happily" was the motto of the 2017 federal election. Today: "For a Europe that protects and benefits." Sexy.

First and foremost, we are dealing with great theater. The Germany in which we live so well and happily believes that its population has very little influence over their own interests. We are free to change staff every four years, although the overall shifts are rather manageable in most cases due to the five percent hurdle - much more than that is up for debate. Once they have made themselves comfortable in their seats, the politicians primarily do what they want. If they do nonsense, you have to wait until the next election to be able to sanction them for it. The population is only allowed to participate in the debate on Twitter or TikTok.

There are no means of driving out a politician who throws his principles and election promises overboard in a very short space of time - otherwise the Green faction in the Bundestag would be significantly smaller today. In addition, there is the planned electoral law reform to reduce the size of the Bundestag, which, however, primarily targets direct mandates from smaller parties. Here alone one could speak of a gross break with the will of the voters, after all, the common voter is not just there to shift percentages, but to make his or her voice heard.

The structures at the European level in particular are almost absurdly opaque. At five-year intervals, citizens are counted to cast a vote primarily in favor of leaving them alone for the next five years. There is a good tradition of deporting failed or simply annoying former federal politicians to Brussels in order to keep them busy there with twice the workload of meeting weeks and thus practically silence the local discourse. Meanwhile, the future of all of us is being decided in Europe - and we know next to nothing about it! Via text message, Ursula von der Leyen is costing taxpaying EU citizens billions and billions of euros for a vaccine that over time turned out to be significantly less effective than was initially assumed. A single company benefited greatly from the biggest crisis since the Second World War.

One hears again and again that the legislative periods, especially at the federal level, are too short to actually change anything. We should only elect the German Bundestag every five or even six years to give the poor politicians the time to implement their plans in peace. The logical error here is obvious: governments are completely free at any time to make future-oriented decisions, the benefits of which will only become apparent long after the current legislative period - but they consciously decide against it in order to promote populist fast food based on surveys. to pursue politics that are intended to maintain one's own power.

It is better to push the unpleasant things into the next legislature. After all, you want to decorate yourself with immediate, small successes. However, why this should be a problem for voters is completely unclear. Shouldn't we expect more from our elected representatives to get off their high horse and commit themselves to the German people instead of just keeping their own chair warm? Is it the voter's fault if Lauterbach pulls off a patchwork bureaucratic monster of cannabis legalization in order to be celebrated as a pioneer?

In his well-read pamphlet "Screw Selflove, Give Me Class War," the author Jean-Philippe Kindler describes our democracy as "capitalism with elections." So while the personnel changes, politicians, as soon as they get into positions of power, despite all the loud promises of unshakable ideals, end up serving the corporations. This is rarely as obvious as when the FDP leads the finance ministry. The AfD, which sells itself as social, also repeatedly talks about not wanting to tax wealthy people or companies more heavily under any circumstances. Commitment to the needs of the much-discussed (and rarely actually addressed) "little man" on the ass. In view of the draft law on the Promotion of Democracy Act, which, depending on its interpretation, can also be misused to stifle criticism of the government by citing a threat to the state. Imagine if such a law were in force under an AfD-led government.

Anyone who walks through the streets in Berlin is stared at by posters with slogans such as "Give Prosperity a Voice" (CDU), "Against Hatred and Incitement" or "For Moderation, Center and Peace" (both SPD) - absolutely meaningless turnip stew formulations - or: "Education: first line of defense of democracy." Of course a poster from the FDP, whose top candidate Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann cannot deviate from the war rhetoric even when it comes to educating people to become politically informed, responsible citizens . But it is of course welcome that the FDP wants to work for better education, because things are extremely bad in Germany. There are even said to be well-known female politicians in government parties whose reading skills are apparently so limited that they consider Mother Courage to be a positive identification figure.

As I said, it is true that most governments achieve little that will change the world in the four years they are given. However, that doesn't mean you shouldn't try. Unfortunately, we are observing a completely discouraged government that is not providing any answers to pressing questions about the future. In a rule by the people, we would actually be counted on to assert our civic duty beyond the ballot box to vote on individuals. We have the instrument of the referendum for this purpose. But anyone who walks across the streets in Berlin and observes election posters cannot help but remember the last referendums here in this city:

On May 25, 2014, a referendum was held on the development of Tempelhofer Feld. The development of the popular park planned by the Senate should be prevented by the plebiscite. A majority voted for the referendum and thus for the preservation of Tempelhofer Feld as a local recreation area and historical site. There were last headlines about the planned development of Tempelhofer Feld in autumn 2023, so the referendum is up for discussion.

The referendum on the expropriation of the real estate group Deutsche Wohnen took place during the 2021 federal election. The aim was to break the dominance of corporations like Deutsche Wohnen in order to prevent rents from skyrocketing and to maintain Berlin as a reasonably affordable place to live. As a basic service, apartments should be rented out by the city at controlled prices so that there is no Darwinian struggle for the scarce living space. The referendum received widespread support from the electorate. It has not yet been implemented and is no longer even discussed.

The last Berlin plebiscite was "Berlin 2030 climate neutral". The aim was to formulate a law that would oblige Berlin to comply with certain emission saving measures. The initiators must also have been very aware that the feasibility was only moderately good; the idea was certainly not least to be able to hold the city accountable for past failures. But none of that matters, because the referendum was actively sabotaged by the city of Berlin by not holding it parallel to the repeat election in February 2023, but more than a month later, even though it would have been possible to hold it in February.

The reason that referendums are often combined with elections is that they can increase participation. The only time the German Michel tends not to go to his polling station is for a referendum. If the plebiscite is added when an election is coming up anyway, it will have a huge impact on the number of participants. Scheduling the referendum on the climate law for Berlin on a separate date inevitably meant that the necessary quota was not reached. Here the population was partially denied the opportunity to make their own voice audible in a simple and low-threshold manner.

When Hubert Aiwanger said that the people should "take back democracy," it was treated like a despicable threatening gesture given his unjustifiable missteps in his previous life. But we need to think seriously about the state of a democracy in which we give power to people who can then act with impunity against the will of the voters and even ignore it when it is officially stated. The idea of representative democracy is noble and shows a belief in the good in people, but does not take into account the corruptibility of politicians, which always has to be taken into account in capitalism. When Julia Klöckner, then Minister of Food, praises Nestlé, it should be clear to every responsible citizen that something is wrong here. Whose interests should be represented here?

It is only worth arguing about longer terms of office if at the same time it enables greater participation of the population in other democratic processes. Imagine if we were now tied to the traffic lights for a total of six years instead of four and were practically at its mercy for the entire period when it comes to potentially existential debates such as arms deliveries or military conscription. Stability in a democracy can only exist if the population actually trusts the government and can intervene when that trust wanes. When politicians no longer just use easily digestible phrases and populist theses for election campaign purposes, only to be unable to be warned to comply once they are elected. When corporations, lobby associations and shady interest groups are disempowered. If this succeeds, a government no longer has to be so afraid of the Internet that it would need a law to promote democracy.

05/06/24
*Bent-Erik Scholz works as a freelancer for RBB