febra

joined 2 years ago
[–] febra 11 points 1 day ago

This isn't new at all. It's only new to those that haven't been paying attention to Israel's shenanigans for decades now. They've been doing this since I can remember.

[–] febra 35 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Amazing. Instead of just.. fighting climate change by not polluting the planet let's just fill our entire atmosphere with diamond dust, because that's the logical decision of course.

[–] febra 21 points 3 days ago (1 children)

The kurds have been one of the most betrayed people by the West. They were one of the only ones to put themselves directly in front of the ISIS hordes. Men and women fought and lost their lives to stop ISIS from spreading their reign of terror even further. The West promised in turn to help them gain their territorial autonomy. After defeating ISIS the Americans then pulled out of all of their promises to the Kurds, abandoning them, and are now actively supporting Turkey in destroying the kurdish autonomous region. What an utterly disgusting move on their part, and surely telling for all the movements looking to collaborate with them in the future.

[–] febra 23 points 1 week ago

These monsters just hate trans kids so much. TERF island strikes again.

[–] febra 3 points 1 week ago

Germany is a disgrace.

[–] febra 5 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

There's an ongoing theory that the corrupt guy might want this to happen indeed. See, the presidency in Romania isn't as important as it is in the US. We're a parliamentary republic, which means that parties need to form a coalition so that they can vote in a government. There are some hints pointing in the direction that the corrupt guy might try to hijack the elections so that the far-right guy gets the presidency. This in turn would mean that the corrupt guy's party can form a coalition government with the far-right parties and thus get elected as prime minister. It's easier for them to govern with the far-right than with the progressives or center parties.

[–] febra 30 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

And pushing the corrupt guy to the second place will give the far-right guy pretty much a free pass to the presidency.

[–] febra 3 points 3 weeks ago

In a country as racist as Germany.. good luck.

[–] febra 5 points 3 weeks ago

The police yesterday were brutal. Germany is on its downward spiral into totalitarianism

[–] febra 14 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Let's say that you hypothetically prove it. Then what? It's not like the average voter votes for this person because Putin has somehow managed to install a microchip in their brains. Moscow's money just gives these people a platform to stand on and launch their campaigns from. The rest is their own doing. And it's not only Russia that has these interests in mind. It's also the American right, hardcore evangelical groups that pour millions upon millions into these people.

What I'm trying to say is that the issue is systemic. Getting rid of Putin or hardcore American evangelicals won't solve the problem. The underlying problem is how capital has commodified and hollowed out the average person, increasing inequality, and creating multiple social crises. Until that problem is not solved, we'll keep seeing these hard-right reactionaries pop up out of nowhere.

[–] febra 11 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Just my two cents, as a Romanian (or half Romanian, half German) living abroad, with family members that voted for this far-right candidate, both in Romania and from abroad:

Romania suffers from the same problem many other European countries suffer from. The status quo parties haven't come to the realization that they need to change their course if they want to stay relevant, either willingly, because changing political course would hurt their financial interests, or unwillingly, because they're too dense to understand what the people want.

The economic situation is dire. Over 3 million Romanians (out of ~20 million) live abroad, most of them due to the dire economic situation at home (as is the case with a big chunk of my own family). These are not doctors, engineers, or other people with a ton of degrees hanging on their walls, but normal laborers that moved abroad in the pursuit of a better life. They often get exploited and discriminated, due to their lack of education, language skills, and other factors. One question I get asked very often about by my relatives in Romania is "but when are you moving back home?" and "but aren't the people there really shitty to you?". Most of these people dream about saving enough money so they can move back "home" (which in turn is also quite hard given the dire economic situation they face and the very insignificant amounts of money they can save in western Europe).

The status quo parties keep failing to deliver on their promises, with one corruption scandal after the other. The improvements are moving very, very slowly, and people are getting fed up. I'll quote Milton Friedman on this one (someone that I, as a communist, very often do not agree with):

“Only a crisis - actual or perceived - produces real change. When that crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around. That, I believe, is our basic function: to develop alternatives to existing policies, to keep them alive and available until the politically impossible becomes the politically inevitable.”

People are looking for alternatives, and the only alternatives lying around are far-right reactionaries, often because their campaigns are getting funded by Moscow, capitalist think tanks, and other actors that want to change the course of our politics.

The classical parties have failed the average person. Doing a Kamala and just campaigning on keeping the status quo won't win you an election there, because the status quo sucks.

The capital has exploited and hollowed out the individual, and now the individual is striking back by choosing the most reactionary "opposition" candidate they can put their stamp on.

The anti-EU (and anti-NATO since they're very closely associated) rhetoric is only helped by the huge wave of xenophobia these people face from foreigners either while abroad or online. We know that we don't have the best reputation abroad, and this insecurity is well drilled into our heads.

Now to get back to Georgescu, I won't deny it that it is indeed very weird how this guy appeared out of nowhere. I'm fairly sure Moscow had its money in there somewhere, but that only launched him into the public consciousness. The reason people voted for him isn't because he got big on TikTok, but because he presented himself as an outsider and he spoke directly to people's insecurities and anger.

Romania sadly has no leftist parties, nor any leftist candidates. The only "leftists" are somewhat progressive neoliberals that fight to keep the status quo alive (or sometimes make it even worse with their proposed austerity measures). That obviously doesn't speak to the average person's insecurities. That's how this guy got so big, and that's how many more after him will get big if no candidate with actual solutions shows up.

 

Die “Jüdische Stimme für gerechten Frieden in Nahost” wurde am 21. Oktober 2007 als Verein gegründet. Am 9. November 2003 wurde in Berlin unter dem Namen “Jüdische Stimme für gerechten Frieden in Nahost” die Sektion der Föderation “European Jews For A Just Peace” (“Europäische Juden für einen gerechten Frieden”) in den Räumen des Hauses der Demokratie und der Menschenrechte ins Leben gerufen.

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