In this episode, we discuss the current economic situation in Germany and the impact of de-industrialization and climate change on the country's economy. We also talk about the current political situation in the country and the economic situation overall.
00:11:40.960People, you know, being murdered because they live in the wrong house next to some supposed gang member or a family member of a gang member.
00:12:20.120It's a blunt turmoil because they use this turmoil as an argument for creating more totalitarian states, more civilians, more repression, getting with the argument of safety and security, trying to get the acceptance for the Orwellian overkill.
00:12:42.600There was some interesting stats there, too.
00:12:44.080We can show that since we talk about, you know, criminality.
00:12:46.540And with some of these, yeah, some of these kids, then they're brought in second generation migrants, maybe third, maybe even fourth at this point, right?
00:12:53.880You think that that, you know, we heard at least it was like, well, integration, you know, kind of gets better and better, whatever.
00:12:58.500I think most of that, I think someone broke down that statistically and they talked about some of the major terrorist attacks in European countries.
00:13:04.660And it was usually like second or even third generation migrants.
00:13:07.560In other words, they get more, you know, like displaced, essentially, and feel probably out of place in our society as well, which is bizarre.
00:13:17.940Here's the crime rates of selected nationalities in Western Europe.
00:13:21.540And Germany, of course, is listed in the first column right there.
00:13:26.100It says in Germany, Italy and Spain, suspected rates of Algerian immigrants are 10 times to 17 times higher than the suspected rates of German, Italian, Spanish citizens.
00:13:36.000I'm surprised they got this statistics out, to be honest.
00:13:39.680I know that Switzerland's still monitoring it or something like that.
00:13:42.480But, yeah, that's what we're looking at.
00:13:44.840What are these people doing in our countries?
00:13:46.140And that figures are clearly the point why I say I'm sorry for the term, not the fuck interested in the circumstances the asylum demander will find after deportation in his country of origin because I'm more interested in the safety of my family in the homeland of our ancestors.
00:14:44.520They had, you know, much more stringent, like, you know, when you get your license, like the rigorous training that you need to go through, the amount of time you need to spend on this and stuff like that.
00:14:55.580Now, of course, it turns out that a bunch of migrants are failing this and they can't get a driver's license.
00:15:07.840They've offered it in their own language, even in some cases.
00:15:10.580And even then they fail these tests, right?
00:15:12.660So now we're at a situation, Sascha, where, like, we are expected to go out and risk our own lives and maybe the lives of our children that's with us in our cars just so that these people can be in our countries, not work, not contribute, but drive on the roads and be a potential hazard to us.
00:15:40.960It's absurd when we face fenced-in Christian markets that are not allowed to call it any longer as those, but simultaneously have open borders.
00:20:20.120And on top of it, just recently, the Supreme Court, the Constitutional Court in Germany ruled that the budgets, the national budget, have been unconstitutional,
00:20:36.640because they made some special assets that have not been budgeted within the original budget that should be transparent, a kind of shadow households.
00:20:53.800And those shadow households grew a much higher than the original national budget.
00:21:22.320But one day after the fiscal committee of the parliament met together and they and they decided on more expenditures one day after this constitution.
00:21:38.560And they said, OK, we have we have such a thing called a debt break that debt is limited in relation to the GDP in Germany.
00:21:47.680But there is an exemption if in an emergency case.
00:21:52.520And so they said, OK, then we we will call out an emergency, presumably the climate emergency.
00:22:00.820And then we don't have to abide to this to the steps, right, to this limit.
00:22:07.360Yes, of course, we have an emergency in Germany.
00:22:10.120But the only and the main emergency is sitting on the benches of the government.
00:22:28.880I'm not sure if you if you watch any of the like the day to day activities as such by some of these politicians or whatnot.
00:22:34.460But like what, maybe there's some like AFD wasn't that one of the reasons, by the way, why some of the AFD were actually doing very well.
00:22:40.860They were sensible on the energy question, I believe, which is like why some so many Germans were like, OK, well, that's at least reasonable.
00:22:47.880We have to get, you know, heat our homes somehow.
00:22:50.640And then, of course, it's the migration issue over overall that they addressed there.
00:22:53.980But is there any anyone calling this out like in the German parliament or any of these politicians?
00:22:58.300As far as you know, yeah, the problem is that the center party, the CDU, the center party tries to convince the Chancellor Scholz to to break with the Greens, to break with this coalition.
00:23:16.700And they want back in the great coalition, the center with the Social Democrats.
00:23:20.780And so the the CDU was did before the Supreme Court to put the pressure high, launched this legal infringement, this this legal proceeding in that regard.
00:23:34.040But, however, if due to the fact that they want also into the government so that they're not really won't make this paradigm shift in fiscal policy,
00:25:16.800The EU overall just gives Africa like 20 billion euros every year or something like crazy like that.
00:25:23.240I just how long can this go on, do you think, to be honest?
00:25:25.740A record number, because you mentioned development aid, a record number was in 2020 when Germany, alone Germany, not the EU, just Germany, gave more than 41 billion euros for an aid to Africa.
00:25:59.360And it would be a topic for itself to discuss with this Africa and foreign aid.
00:26:05.480And then also in regard of this migration, because it's very interesting.
00:26:10.660And I don't think that a lot of people are not aware that how the population explosion is going on on the African continent and how the relation of those figures is to the overall inhabitants in the European Union.
00:26:32.800And by 2050, it's not very long, for example, Niger alone could be home to as many people as the entire EU inhabits.
00:26:47.680But what most people don't know is because the proportions, if you're looking on the map, the proportions, if you're looking on the globe or are looking on a map, are not mirrored how they are in reality.
00:27:03.840Because Africa will, even if they have this population growth, which you never can solve with asylum politics, every lunatic thinks this should go back to the school benches for mathematics.
00:27:20.820He hasn't grasped what's an exponential function.
00:27:24.060But Africa will by no means be too cramped, as the continent is around 10 times larger than India, which is currently home to a population of roughly the same as Africa is.
00:30:22.000Like, there was a YouTuber, what's his name, MrBeast, that went down recently and like building wells, drilling for water, you know, wells and stuff like that.
00:30:30.320It's like, why does an American white kid have to show up and drill wells in Africa when like this amount of money is, it's sad, right?
00:30:39.340And here's another one, by the way, a game of give and take, a classic screenshot.
00:30:43.340They talk about the rise of the global south and all that stuff.
00:30:46.100Well, guess who's been paying for this?
00:30:50.260The northern parts of it with the addition of like New Zealand and Australia down in the south, essentially.
00:30:55.600Japan, you know, is one of the countries part of that too, I guess.
00:30:57.960And in the U.S., one of the tweets here from BattleBee said the total aid to Africa from 1960 to 2013 comes up to over $5 trillion, or the equivalent of about 50 Marshall plans.
00:31:13.780Germany was given, and I'm not debating whether it was good or not, whatever.
00:31:18.120America, you know, has occupied Germany since then.
00:31:20.980It is official on the books even, right?
00:31:22.620But they got, I believe, one Marshall plan and then the extension, the German Marshall Fund, a follow-up were called or something like that, right?
00:31:34.220And so, obviously, this amount of money is helping also to grow the populations, not fix many things maybe with the corruption.
00:31:42.980And then instead, Sasha, they're pouring into Europe and America and some of the other countries as well,
00:31:48.360while their population at home, as I said, continues to grow, and with the low density, they will be able to presumably continue to grow as well.
00:32:09.200The point is we can't carry the rest of the world on our backs, right?
00:32:12.900There are a lot of African economists who are very critical to this kind of foreign aid because they say that the result of this pouring money
00:32:30.880is that you learn the people just waiting to receiving the mail, to never become productive in their own way, in their own culture,
00:32:44.060and in their own traditional way, in their own traditions they had made with their kettles or with their agriculture or whatever.
00:32:54.440But there are a lot of economists from Africa who say it would be better for the continent and they would be more successful if we would at least not help this way as we do now.
00:33:09.600Yeah, now it's like, what is it called, the UN World Food Programme or something?
00:33:13.080They drop bags of rice and milk powders, you know what I mean?
00:33:17.420Like, you just end-to-end, stuff like that has been happening.
00:33:19.860And as you say, I mean, you've got to, what's the old saying, right?
00:33:23.160You've got to teach a man to fish, not just give him the fish, right?
00:33:26.280You've got to, and I mean, anyway, it's a huge issue just that's compounding on top of what's already happening.
00:33:34.240The question is, though, as things change, presumably, financially, I mean, unless they whip out an ace card, what do you call it?
00:33:44.120An ace through their sleeve, as the saying goes, and let's say overhaul the economic system or they make a digital, you know, euro, they go for some kind of central bank digital currency or something like this.
00:33:56.900And they kind of decide to write off the debt or like scrap the old system and then just kind of keep going.
00:34:02.060Maybe they will do something like that to keep, you know, everything going, which I guess would be, that would be very bad, actually.
00:34:10.660It's probably better to just have a heavy recession, have a crash, have a fall, have a collapse, and so, you know, build it back up again or something like that.
00:34:18.280But if the welfare stops coming, right, if we can't even take care of ourselves, obviously, we're not going to be able to take care of all these other people as well.
00:34:27.080Could that help us? A bad economic situation? Could that help us in terms of, like, restoring some of the different demographics to our countries? What do you think?
00:34:36.580I think it will help in an ethical and morally sense, because in hard times, you have to concentrate more on the really essential things.
00:34:50.120In hard times, you're not interested in entertainment or in hard times, it's the top point on the agenda will not be the transgender toilet or anything else.
00:35:08.020And if there, I think they will do this over-expansion and this digitalization and everything, but this over-expansion will be more and more harder to control.
00:35:22.100And if it will collapse, then it will be a fragmentation of systems, of institutions.
00:35:33.720But out of these fragmented institutions, maybe there will be a rise from fragmentation to regionalization.
00:35:45.500And that could be maybe a healthy development, but the problem is that I fear that mankind will learn it the hard way and not by reason.
00:36:00.300Yeah, that's true. And it's always when we get too comfortable, right?
00:36:06.560We get super complacent in that, and at some point we have to kind of be pushed back into reality a little bit, in touch with nature and how things used to be.
00:36:16.700It seems to be a natural cycle, and we're just kind of at the top of that right now.
00:36:19.800We're about to find out just how much we've been living above our means.
00:36:26.460And, you know, again, unless they wheel something out, because I am worried about that.
00:36:31.780I mean, I think one of the things, you're probably aware of that too, right?
00:36:35.020The central bank digital currency plans, they're floating this in the EU right now.
00:36:39.880Christine Lagarde recently of the European Central Bank mentioned that they're trying to take the euro digital.
00:36:44.540And then on top of that, the IMF are working on kind of like a global central bank digital currency.
00:36:49.980Individual nations are doing that as well.
00:36:52.400But this money would be what they call programmable, essentially, right?
00:36:55.820So think of dissidents or those on the outside.
00:36:59.440Just as an example, look at how the German government have treated the AFT, Alternative for Deutschland, and some of the politicians there.
00:37:07.540I think it was specifically, I forget which region, was it in Bavaria, Bayern, right?
00:37:11.680One area where they were doing very, very well, and the government is like, oh, basically, they're terrorists.
00:45:00.220And I want to ask you more about that later on.
00:45:01.920I also want to talk about kind of the media environment a little bit.
00:45:04.900Because you mentioned that, like just that continuous pressure of just like, let's just call them, you know, far right and bigots and, you know, whatever it is.
00:45:42.540I know you have two books in the works that you're – I'm not sure if you've written them now or are they just being translated now, Sascha, the two books you mentioned?
00:46:39.860One book should be a more extensive volume, not only focused on this daily politics, but more on this – on the cultural, political, philosophical, ideological roots, the book.
00:46:54.820And another one, it will be a little bit – a shorter volume that maybe I can finish within the next three months or so, I hope.
00:47:07.160And it will be a little bit also a book, a very personal book, because I will try to explain – I will introduce my favorites in culture on the different fields and why that are my favorites.
00:47:27.760And I try to do it in a kind of way that young nationalists maybe can take this as a first step to get acquainted with our occidental traditional culture, be it in literature, be it in philosophy, be it in painting, be it in music.
00:47:47.940And the reader will there become introduced, my personal favorites, with a description why they are my favorites, why I love them, and why I think they're important also for our European political work.
00:48:09.100Yeah, something we need to be reminded of all the time, to be honest.
00:48:13.980Why do we do what we do? What are we trying to preserve? All those things. We've got to remember all that.
00:48:18.020We've got to talk about our culture, our heritage, our traditions, those kinds of things. Very, very important.
00:48:24.160Now, at the moment, I actually have some issue to load some of the websites for some reason, but let's see if I can add them in post.
00:48:29.100Deutsche – in English, stimme.de. That's, of course, in German language.
00:48:35.020And then Die Heimat, as formerly the NPD. Do you want to say anything about the party that you're involved in there?
00:48:41.500Yes, Die Heimat, it made a reform process, this party.
00:48:46.420It was known in the right-wing circles as National Democratic Party of Germany, the NPD.
00:48:52.160And the leadership of NPD was working three or four years to adapt to new situations.
00:49:00.120Because of populist, new, successful formations, we have been a little bit marginalised in the parliamentarian and party political way,
00:49:09.240despite we had some on the local level, some parliamentarians, but not on the federal and the nationwide level anymore.
00:49:17.980And so we thought we have to go to adapt to a new situation, and we wanted to combine this with a new nomenklatura.
00:49:30.840And we saw that we had some resources in our party.
00:49:34.820We have been marginalised, but on the other hand, we had some houses.
00:49:39.980We have a good circle of skilled lawyers with experience on this particular field.