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The Gravest Generation - GÜNTER GRASS - on 60 yr. ann. German surrender

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bloom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-07-05 09:38 AM
Original message
The Gravest Generation - GÜNTER GRASS - on 60 yr. ann. German surrender
It's interesting to read his perspective. Sounds like Germany has a lot of the same problems that we are facing as a society with globalization and all.

We all are witnesses to the fact that production is being demolished worldwide, that so-called hostile and friendly takeovers are destroying thousands of jobs, that the mere announcement of measures like the dismissal of workers and employees makes share prices rise, and this is regarded unthinkingly as the price to be paid for "living in freedom." The consequences of this development disguised as globalization are clearly coming to light and can be read from the statistics. With the consistently high number of jobless, which in Germany has now reached five million, and the equally constant refusal of industry to create jobs, despite demonstrably higher earnings, especially from exports, the hope of full employment has evaporated.

<snip>

All this is now accepted as if divinely ordained, accompanied at most by the customary national grumbles. Worse, those who point to this state of affairs and to the people forced into social oblivion are at best ridiculed by slick young journalists as "social romantics," but usually vilified as "do-gooders." Questions about the reasons for the growing gap between rich and poor are dismissed as "the politics of envy." The desire for justice is ridiculed as utopian. The concept of "solidarity" is relegated to the dictionary's list of foreign words.

<snip>

When the German Reich unconditionally surrendered 60 years ago, a system of power and terror was thereby defeated. This system, which had caused fear throughout Europe for 12 years, still casts its shadow today. We Germans have repeatedly faced up to this inherited shame and have been forced to do so if we hesitated. The memory of the suffering that we caused others and ourselves has been kept alive through the generations. Compared with other nations which have to live with shame acquired elsewhere - I'm thinking of Japan, Turkey, the former European colonial powers - we have not shaken off the burden of our past. It will remain part of our history as a challenge.

We can only hope we will be able to cope with today's risk of a new totalitarianism, backed as it is by the world's last remaining ideology. As conscious democrats, we should freely resist the power of capital, which sees mankind as nothing more than something which consumes and produces. Those who treat their donated freedom as a stock market profit have failed to understand what May 8 teaches us every year.


http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/07/opinion/07grass.html?th&emc=th

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bennywhale Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-07-05 09:59 AM
Response to Original message
1. Thats exactly the joy about European ideas
of democracy, they don't equate freedom, democracy, rights with the accumulation of capital.

Business and mass global capitalism exploiting thousands worlwide are not put in the same sentence in Europe when talking about democracy and freedom like they are here
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bloom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-07-05 10:24 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. At least to hear him tell it...
From what he is saying - it doesn't like his is the majority opinion.


"Which brings us back to the question of whether parliamentary democracy is able to act.

Now, I believe that our freely elected members of Parliament are no longer free to decide. The customary party pressures are not particularly present in Germany; it is, rather, the ring of lobbyists with their multifarious interests that constricts and influences the Federal Parliament and its democratically elected members, placing them under pressure and forcing them into disharmony, even when framing and deciding the content of laws. Consequently, Parliament is no longer sovereign in its decisions. It is steered by the banks and multinational corporations - which are not subject to any democratic control.

What's needed is a democratic desire to protect Parliament against the pressures of the lobbyists by making it inviolable. But are our parliamentarians still sufficiently free to make a decision that would bring radical democratic constraint? Or is our freedom now no more than a stock market profit?"
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Karenina Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-07-05 12:14 PM
Response to Original message
3. The man is a JEWEL!!!
He has SUCH a finesse with words! Gotta go find the Deutsch version...
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rumpel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-07-05 01:12 PM
Response to Original message
4. GÜNTER GRASS: The Gravest Generation NYTimes 5/7/05
Lübeck, Germany

TOMORROW, it will be 60 years to the day since the German Reich's unconditional surrender. That is equivalent to a working life with a pension to look forward to. It goes so far back that memory, that wide-meshed sieve, is in danger of forgetting it.

snip

Since then, the expanded country has stagnated. Neither the Kohl government nor the Schröder government succeeded in correcting the initial errors. Lately, perhaps too late, we have come to recognize that the threat to the state, or what should be regarded as Public Enemy No. 1, comes not from right-wing radicalism but rather, from the impotence of politics, which leaves citizens exposed and unprotected from the dictates of the economy. What is being destroyed, then, is not the state, which survives, but democracy.

When the German Reich unconditionally surrendered 60 years ago, a system of power and terror was thereby defeated. This system, which had caused fear throughout Europe for 12 years, still casts its shadow today. We Germans have repeatedly faced up to this inherited shame and have been forced to do so if we hesitated. The memory of the suffering that we caused others and ourselves has been kept alive through the generations. Compared with other nations which have to live with shame acquired elsewhere - I'm thinking of Japan, Turkey, the former European colonial powers - we have not shaken off the burden of our past. It will remain part of our history as a challenge.

We can only hope we will be able to cope with today's risk of a new totalitarianism, backed as it is by the world's last remaining ideology. As conscious democrats, we should freely resist the power of capital, which sees mankind as nothing more than something which consumes and produces. Those who treat their donated freedom as a stock market profit have failed to understand what May 8 teaches us every year.

3 pages

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/07/opinion/07grass.html

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Karenina Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun May-08-05 12:28 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. Kick!
:kick:
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