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October 29, 2010

Leadership and Leitkultur

JÜRGEN HABERMAS in The New York Times:

Germany SINCE the end of August Germany has been roiled by waves of political turmoil over integration, multiculturalism and the role of the “Leitkultur,” or guiding national culture. This discourse is in turn reinforcing trends toward increasing xenophobia among the broader population. These trends have been apparent for many years in studies and survey data that show a quiet but growing hostility to immigrants. Yet it is as though they have only now found a voice: the usual stereotypes are being flushed out of the bars and onto the talk shows, and they are echoed by mainstream politicians who want to capture potential voters who are otherwise drifting off toward the right. Two events have given rise to a mixture of emotions that are no longer easy to locate on the scale from left to right — a book by a board member of Germany’s central bank and a recent speech by the German president.

It all began with the advance release of provocative excerpts from “Germany Does Away With Itself,” a book that argues that the future of Germany is threatened by the wrong kind of immigrants, especially from Muslim countries. In the book, Thilo Sarrazin, a politician from the Social Democratic Party who sat on the Bundesbank board, develops proposals for demographic policies aimed at the Muslim population in Germany. He fuels discrimination against this minority with intelligence research from which he draws false biological conclusions that have gained unusually wide publicity. In sharp contrast to the initial spontaneous objections from major politicians, these theses have gained popular support. One poll found that more than a third of Germans agreed with Mr. Sarrazin’s prognosis that Germany was becoming “naturally more stupid on average” as a result of immigration from Muslim countries.

More here.

Posted by Azra Raza at 11:25 AM | Permalink

Comments

Gosh, that was disappointing from such a big name!
We even had "poison....taking root" - what would George Orwell have said?!

Posted by: cavall de quer | Oct 29, 2010 1:03:04 PM

When the times get tough, it is always easier to blame "the other". This is not confined merely to Germany, as the author noted. It is a human weakness in times of trouble.

In my opinion, a far more dangerous situation exists in Italy, for example. Given its history of Fascism (and the fact that there has not been the self-examination of the fascist past as in Germany) and weak institutions, it is more at risk to crises in its wobbly democratic system than Germany.

Posted by: Bill | Oct 29, 2010 1:40:28 PM

Let's not forget France which seems to get a pass on this matter because it happened to be on the "right side" of WWII.

Posted by: Ruchira | Oct 29, 2010 9:12:12 PM

An overt history of fascism doesn't seem to be a necessary or a sufficient condition for the emergence of the phenomenon Habermas is describing. "The fear of immigrants, attraction to charismatic nonpoliticians and ... grass-roots rebellion" - are these not in full flower, much more so than in France & Italy, in the U.S. today? See Jan Brewer et al., today's Rally to Restore Sanity/Fear, Terry Jones, the Tea Party, etc.

What I find odd is that Habermas invokes Obama as a symbol of a revitalized political class.

Posted by: Cameron Brown | Oct 30, 2010 2:22:42 PM

Cameron:
The hatred, suspicion and baseless xenophobia displayed by the likes of Jan Brewer and the Tea Party are loud and demonstrative. The difference between the American fascists and European ones is mainly that theirs tend to be more educated than ours. And I don't know that these qualities are in fuller flower in the US than they are in Europe. (France just deported the Roma who are citizens of EU nations) Habermas points out that even the so called liberals in Europe are not averse to nodding in agreement when they listen to the likes of Sarrazin. In the US, we are more likely to hear that kind of rhetoric from David Duke and that sherrif in Arizona.

And German politicians embracing their "Judeo-Christian" values to deride Muslims is to put it mildly, priceless!

Posted by: Ruchira | Oct 30, 2010 4:54:21 PM

Ruchira, Indeed France has done precious little examination of its own dalliance with Fascism...the collaborationist Vichy regime that existed between 1940-44. One hears lots of talk of the "Maquis" but little of those who actually ran the French state under Nazi control. (Marshal Pétain was condemned to death, but had his sentence commuted..) France, like Italy has strong reactionary tendencies (under the guise of protecting precious national traditions, etc..)

Posted by: Bill | Oct 31, 2010 1:56:20 PM

Bill, I completely agree. Germany was humiliated into examining its actions. Italy did not have to because the Italian public had not fallen behind their fascist leaders as eagerly as Germany's (or Austria's) did. France escapes scrutiny for the reasons you state - glory for eventually joining the Allies and sympathy for getting its a-- kicked on the battlefield. It is all opportunistic revisionism now. Let's also not forget France's atrociously brutal colonial history in Africa and the Caribbeans. That was not so long ago.

Yes, both Italy and France use "national traditions" as an excuse to scorn and marginalize the "foreigners" among them. That is what a treasure of classical art and haute cuisine will do for your ego :-)

Posted by: Ruchira | Oct 31, 2010 5:01:08 PM

Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel sprach Sarrazin das Sachinteresse für die Integrations-Debatte ab: "Angela Merkel hat nicht nur mein Buch kritisiert, sie hat auch die Bundesbank indirekt aufgefordert, mich aus dem Vorstand zu entfernen. Außerdem hat sie öffentlich erklärt, dass sie mein Buch nicht gelesen hat und auch nicht lesen wird. Daran mögen Sie das Interesse der Kanzlerin an der Sache, um die es hier geht, ablesen." Zitat Sarrazin. Wie auch immer, man kann dazu stehen wie mal will, Tatsache ist, dass das Thema wieder von der Tagesordnung verschwunden ist. So ist die Politik und dann wundern sich die Politiker, wenn immer weniger Menschen zur Wahl gehen, bzw. extreme Parteien gewählt werden.

Posted by: buch leser | Nov 1, 2010 1:33:14 PM

For those who may not be up to speed in German, from google translator. (Ok, so it need work):

Chancellor Angela Merkel said Sarrazin from property, interest in the integration debate. "Angela Merkel has criticized not only my book, she has also asked the Bundesbank indirectly to remove me from the board also has declared publicly that they my book is not has read and is not read. this, you may see the interest of the Chancellor of the matter is at issue here. " Quote Sarrazin. wants Anyway, you may want to like me, the fact is that the issue has disappeared from the agenda. Thus the policy and then be surprised that politicians, when fewer and fewer people go to vote, or extreme parties are elected.

Posted by: J.Hawkins | Nov 1, 2010 2:29:37 PM

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