Hundreds of thousands of people took the streets across Germany this weekend as the nation enters a second week of protests against the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.
Around 100,000 gathered outside the Bundestag in Berlin alone, said the police, with up to 200,000 counted by the organizers in Bavaria’s Munich. Significant turnout was also reported in the cities that represent traditional the AfD voting strongholds in eastern Germany, like Leipzig and Dresden.
Wish we could have something like this in the US, but apparently we’re just going to let the Nazis take over instead.
There have been great lengths taken over the course of decades to make protestation on this scale prohibitively difficult for Americans. The exact numbers are apparently up for debate but between 40 and 80% of Americans can’t afford to miss a single paycheck. Splinter protests across the country do fuck all for federal issues and since most people can’t afford to make the trip to DC we’re stuck with a non-starter until things get so bad that it doesn’t matter if people are getting paid or not.
Protests aren’t going to stop the Nazis in Germany, either.
Support of AfD rightwing extremist party is down 2% which is maybe not enough, but it’s something.
Not true. In Germany, extremist parties can actually be banned.
Are they banned by demonstration? Or is there a process that is under way? One that’d actually keep the individuals from simply moving parties.
Raising awareness of a problem is the first step towards solving it. The AfD and its followers are nothing but alt-right fools.
Are protests the only way people communicate? That has some serious, “don’t take my statue, how would I know history!?” false logic energy there.
Protests are an expression just like a riot. Riots are outright damaging while protests make people feel better. What they specifically do not do is solve any problem that cannot be solved in much better ways.
Making people feel better without actually doing anything to slow down bad people… is not a positive gain from a situation. If anything, people who feel better about a situation are less inclined to DO something about it.