• @InverseParallax
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    English
    -12 months ago

    The modern trend of people from the former East Germany supporting AfD probably has more to do with the interceding decades of liberal rule,

    Which West Germany didn’t face?

    combined with the region’s historic relative poverty (which preceded even the Nazis).

    Western Germany was more industrialized, because of 2 reasons: 1: access to coal and metal in the Ruhr, 2: Access to trade with Europe.

    The former is just natural, the latter is more of that “librul witchcraft” of globalization.

    The only difference between the two otherwise is that the Soviets brutalized the East, and that left a legacy of uneducated poverty.

    https://direct.mit.edu/jinh/article-abstract/52/2/225/107152/Occupation-Reparations-and-Rebellion-The-Soviets?redirectedFrom=fulltext

    Basically the Soviets took an impoverished land and squeezed as hard as they could.

    Oh, and you’re right there were no camps in East Germany, those camps were in the USSR: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_labor_of_Germans_in_the_Soviet_Union

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      22 months ago

      Which West Germany didn’t face?

      We already established they had a Nazi problem

      the latter is more of that “librul witchcraft” of globalization.

      Again, the poverty in the region was longstanding and persists even today.

      the Soviets brutalized the East, and that left a legacy of uneducated poverty.

      I’m not impressed with your link, remember that the West had the RAF, which enjoyed a fair deal of popular support. I’d also need a source on things like poor education since socialist states historically are the most consistently excellent at things like mass literacy (though of course modern Germany is fine in that regard).

      So it’s reduced to “They were poor” which was always the case and is still the case, though at least there was virtually no homelessness in the East, which the West and notably modern Germany cannot say.

      Oh, and you’re right there were no camps in East Germany, those camps were in the USSR

      I said death camps, which the USSR also didn’t have. Labor camps are just a form of prison labor that people use the Holocaust’s work-to-death camps to sound more brutal than they are. Prison labor was also practiced in West Germany, is practiced in modern Germany, and is practiced in whatever liberal state you like. The equivocation here is really the peak of the “Soviets were also Nazis” bullshit that is of course popular with the aggrieved German liberals and anticommunist historians the world over.

      Well no, there’s one step further, but I hope we can avoid talking about it because it doesn’t concern Germany.