No as a German myself being very grateful for all the things I was provided with / got access to, in fact i dont follow blindly "Germany bad". The comment I made was based on track records of handling police brutality in general, the prevailing "corps geist" (roughly translated team-spirit) and cases like Oury Jalloh (and many other) or the statements amnesty int gives on German police from time to time.
daw
Without reading the article I'm gonna guess Germany is one of them!
Every neoliberal shitbag ever
annas-archive.org
Absolute fucking legend
I can in no way imagine that this is legal in the EU, Schengen and everything. I mean if a Dutch person would go to Germany and drink a beer a 16 the Netherlands cannot prosecute that I think, same with a person from Germany participating in weed consumption in the Netherlands (when Germany still criminalized)
If it is legal it shouldn't be.
Yoooo that would go hard
Yes, the point I was trying to make was not that being owned by the state makes it work better: in fact I think it is absurd that it is a "for profit" company which has no incentive to make profit as it's owner will never hold them accountable by letting them go bankrupt, as that is not an option. We have the worst of both worlds, almost as if public necessities ("Daseinsvorsorge") and natural monopolies do not make sense to run "privately"....
Ok, but the comment was about how it is funny that the Dutch complain as much as the Germans although their trains are better. So it was about a lack of broader perspective on that issue. So yes the whole point was about the Dutch perspective, but about the fact that their perspective seems to be warped from a european perspective.
So the conclusion i would draw from our interaction is that what a Dutch person experiences as filthy seems to me wildly more clean than what could be considered filthy in a European context. Good on you to be able to have high standards, hope the rest of European rail will strive to get to that high level.
But that's just like, my opinion bruv. Maybe I should have stated that more clearly
They cooked the books, but not for potential investors. At least not in the last two decades.
But you are willing to reap the beneficial outcomes of a crime you didn't commit. That doesn't fit together. As a German myself I have to ask you: does that mean that our state should also not give a single fuck anymore about the victims of the Nazis as "you don't want to pay for a crime you didn't commit"? We as Germans should be the first to recognize, that a society can bare responsibility the individual is not responsible for if the descendents still suffer from the consequences!
WTF is wrong with this comment section?!