• @[email protected]
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    1122 hours ago

    It’s not only happening on protests. People get exmatriculated or their visas revoked if they go to the wrong protest camp or post the wrong things on facebook. You can also get your citizenship denied if you have the wrong opinions on Iserael, since the IHRA is official stance of the state.

    • @[email protected]
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      19 hours ago

      I think, this is a quite biased (at least not accurate) representation of what is happening.

      You can probably find single examples of all of that above, e.g. for exmatriculation, but when you dig deeper, there are probably hurdles for that:

      Konkret soll exmatrikuliert werden können, wer Gewalt anwendet oder dazu auffordert, wer wegen einer Straftat „zulasten eines Mitglieds der Hochschule“ rechtskräftig verurteilt wurde, oder wer Einrichtungen der Hochschule zu strafbaren Handlungen „nutzt oder zu nutzen versucht“

      You can also get your citizenship denied if you have the wrong opinions on Iserael, since the IHRA is official stance of the state.

      This “stance of the state” thing is not law. There were for sure public discussions about denying citizenship for people who oppose democracy or the right of Israel to exist. But let me be honest: If someone opposes democracy or freedom or thinks that Israel or any other country should be fully destroyed, I don’t need such a person in my country. But if your opinion is that Netanyahu is an a-hole and that his far-right government buddies only want more war and death, no one will do anything with your citizenship because of that.

      • @[email protected]
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        718 hours ago

        You can probably find single examples of all of that above

        Here’s an interview of a student about how the state tries to break the protests.

        Exmatriculation might be quite rare. But the Staatsschutz telling the BAMF to revoke visas, based on Facebook posts most certainly is not. It’s just not the kind of things you’re gonna read in the SZ, or Welt.

        This “stance of the state” thing is not law.

        Yes, because the German constitutional court wouldn’t allow that kind of law. It is however a soft-power tool to shape political discourse in favour of Netanyahu.

        There were for sure public discussions about denying citizenship for people who oppose democracy or the right of Israel to exist.

        I findeyour faith in the organs of the state a bit naive.You can check out yourself how these decisions not to grant citizenship are carried out. If you ask me: most of the questions the judge uses to determine whether or not someone is “opposing democracy” wouldn’t get a correct answer from most Germans.