matrixmann (
matrixmann) wrote2017-04-18 10:47 am
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Like after WWII
If developing the idea of mixed school year tuition in school even only on a federal level because there are not enough students to fill the year classes, does that mean you're a rich country?
Part II
If you ask me, it all looks like the prototype of what later became the famous "color revolutions". If you really take all the events of a wider circle together.
I also know, as people started hitting the streets with protests, they didn't scream "unite Germany!" at first. They were all for "Shitty government, stop doing your thing without asking us! Fuck off, you old skeletons - let some younger people enter reign who're not come from your elite circles!".
In concrete, it was just a fight between a government and its own citizens. The government was doing shitty business and the citizens demanded radical change from them. This didn't include giving up one's own state and unite with West Germany!
Other factor that may also add why that time and year: Franz Josef Strauß, prime minister of Bavaria, he actually had pretty good economical ties with the GDR - and he was pretty much a gangster as a politician. He knew how to get his will even with illegal means. Therefore he was feared in some way.
There was also a credit he gave to the GDR (today one knows: They used the credit to pay off other credits with worse conditions and even put a little reserve on an account in a Swiss bank, for the sake of that the GDR should get into financial troubles one day.)
Strauß died in 1988.
As long as he had lived, he surely wouldn't have let other people destroy his economical partners he makes a lot of profit from.
With him gone, another component gone that would strongly act against the trials to stir up a revolution.
If you put the puzzle together, things point into a planned action...
Could maybe name more, already as far as I know, but I save it for another time.
Re: Part II
Re: Part II
This attitude you can still find present in people today. So I don't guess this only has to do with "yeah, then the party rules what I have to do and how I have to do it...". This also has to do with some sort of general laziness.
Actually, how they understood the parliamentary contract at all, that's a thing I don't have any idea about.
Practically, other circumstances were reality than what should have actually been there, I can be sure about that. But how that was understood in general, how it should be in theory at least, that's a question I can't answer...