That's probably one of the most positive things written about the new pope.
From what I have read so far, he's the "middle of the road" candidate, your average, run-of-the-mill, Catholic bishop:
A little anti-LGBT, just a bit of a pedophile protector and apologist, default-sexist ... but not hard-line enough to make any of it his entire personality.
As you pretty much confirmed in your own reply, it's both an inherently political and legal process. While this isn't technically a mandatory step, it's effectively a necessary one.
It's in obvious that you have never flown Ryanair. They make it very clear at every point of the journey that they have zero regard for their customers and crew. It's an antagonistic relationship from beginning to end.
This is coming from the CEO who pitched "vertical seating" after all.
Germany, like most countries, does have issues with law enforcement. But, as you noticed, so far our checks and balances hold - at least when it comes to fatal violence.
I don't think you can extrapolate any trend from the extremely low annual numbers. 2024 was indeed an unusually violent year (even though official stats haven't been finalized afaik), but looking at 2025s numbers so far, this does not appear to indicate any trend.
No, it really doesn't. German shoots and kills, on average, fewer than 10 people per year. The total amount of bullets discharged at people hovers around 50 to 60.
In a country of 83 million.
The US population is four times larger and the number of victims of police shootings is literally 100 times higher. An estimated 1173 in 2024 and the US internationally doesn't even properly track this number.
Heck, even France's police kill significantly more people than Germany's "trigger happy nazi cops".
That sounds like the right amount to me.