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1 yr. ago

  • Wolfenstein has been released in Germany, just without the Swastikas. Germany is not the USA where stuff is either black or white, so this being nuanced is a good thing - even if don't like it in this particular case. Which we don't even know because we can't look into the state attorney's inner proceedings

  • Yes it is, but it's also protected by the freedom of art. Which makes prosecution harder, considering that 2 very strong freedoms act in Kanyes favour here

  • Trust me that will always be part of your person in the eyes if others and has been for quite some time now.

    It took decades for Germans to not be immediately seen as Nazis in other European countries even when the Germans were obviously born after WW2. And to this day one of the first things you get to hear is something related to WW2, today mostly by non-europeans.

  • I am betting everything on them not being sharp nor particularly tall - just needs a few tries to work

  • Basically all languages east of Germany. In Russian it's niemcy or something, also meaning mute. And AFAIK it was less nit being able to learn but rather not willing. Germans formed their own communities and stuck together - or still to this day do.

  • Honestly Saxonian ist the worst. I automatically assume I am talking to a Nazi and brace myself. The fact that that I am right in about 1 of 2 cases doesn't really help either

  • 50 Pfennig? Das sind x,xxxx % der Staatsverschuldung der DDR. Mit den bisherigen Spenden hätte man die DDR um x,xxxx% entschulden können.

    Bekomme ich jetzt auch eine Schnapspraline?

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Sorry have to disagree on your last sentence there. The Wehrmacht didn't kick particularly high - unlike in Soviet tradition

  • It redirected me to support saying they could deactivate it - they can't is what support said.

    Once again fuck AI

  • Not trying to argue against that. However a certain, REASONABLE, degree of room for decisions should absolutely be out of reach of courts. Otherwise you'll stall the executive branch on doing anything, from raiding peoples homes to assigning stands on a public fair.

    Naturally the more invasive to constitutional rights the narrower that room should be and the stricter they need to be held accountable.

    That being said, the USA is so far from being tightly regulated that this is even anywhere near that situation where the executive is crippled by accountability. If anything there are too few rules and to little accountability

  • Porsche tried to take over VW in 2013 but underestimated the cost. They nearly went bankrupt trying to do that so the largest shareholder of VW, the German state of lower-saxony then asked VW to instead take over Porsche - which they did. So since then Porsche has been part of VW

  • If you have a DVD/BlueRay player that is

  • It hasn't, the German federal constitutional court (German SCOTUS) has. The German federal parliament has the power to submit the proposal to ban a party to the court.

  • Good joke, but no that is too expensive, how would companies make so much money otherwise? You have to think about them too, you know?!

  • That's not entirely true. There was dissent and opposition within the NSDAP, that was just rooted out relatively early