Heee Matze,

As far as I know, i expressed myself in very general, neutral terms, ie 
"change in state-system". I did not intend to imply any equation. I 
_might_  have an opinion about that, I but did not voice it. Your guess is 
your guess. 

Your analysis furthermore appears to me to be a bit sweeping. What about 
a simpler one: the permanent default mode of repressive institutions 
(state prosecution, security services, etc.) that are basically out of 
control?  I found the disproportionate violence of the arrests quite 
telling in this respect.

Cheers, p+2D!

On Tue, Dec 25, 2007 at 02:08:17PM +0100, Matze Schmidt wrote:

> > It seems to hold particularly true for Germany, but maybe only because that
> > country witnessed three radical changes in state-systems in less than three
> > generations: from nazism to communism to, err, democracy.
> 
> to equal nazism (german fashism) to stalinistic socialism called
> communism appears to be a pretty un-historical approach to what happened
> and what is happening in germany. there is still a differance between
> german fashism's goal of total annihilation and the regime of stalin and
> his followers.
 <...>


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