Kingu Kurimuzon
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2013
- Messages
- 20,940
- MBTI Type
- I
- Enneagram
- 9w8
- Instinctual Variant
- sp/sx
Marjorie Taylor Greene is ratchet as fuck
That Nikki Haley sounds horrible. I don't know much about her, but noticed in her interview that she talks out both sides of her mouth saying nothing, but playing the game. My first impression is that she is working the scene to get as much prominence as possible - maybe a shot at being president, but more realistically she wants to be Trump's new running mate. That's why she praises him out one side and criticizes just the January 6 stuff out the other. It's also why he isn't saying anything too negative. He knows she wants him. It's gross. I'm not surprised she is negative and unfair with the LGBTQ+ community.
Yeah, nothing too surprising though. The coalition is an unconfortable one and most conflicts were foreseable. The FDP is the main obstacle when it comes to climate protection. A lot of it is due to Lindner (finance minister) having budget concerns which I might be able to understand but our minister for traffic Wissing is an absolute desaster. Traffic has always been the department with the most incompetent minister of the entire cabinet, for ages. It's a tradition to dump the least popular, least competent cabinet member in there. But Wissing is openly anti-progress, anti-change and a serious liabilty for the entire government coalition. I sometimes wonder if he has kompromat on the chancelor (and I remember thinking that about the previous minister for traffic from the CSU who was also the least popular and least competent of the lot and a public joke) as he really should be fired. Then again, in a coalition the post would have to go to another FDP politician and it might be hard to find one willing to do the job.
Yeah, nothing too surprising though. The coalition is an unconfortable one and most conflicts were foreseable. The FDP is the main obstacle when it comes to climate protection. A lot of it is due to Lindner (finance minister) having budget concerns which I might be able to understand but our minister for traffic Wissing is an absolute desaster. Traffic has always been the department with the most incompetent minister of the entire cabinet, for ages. It's a tradition to dump the least popular, least competent cabinet member in there. But Wissing is openly anti-progress, anti-change and a serious liabilty for the entire government coalition. I sometimes wonder if he has kompromat on the chancelor (and I remember thinking that about the previous minister for traffic from the CSU who was also the least popular and least competent of the lot and a public joke) as he really should be fired. Then again, in a coalition the post would have to go to another FDP politician and it might be hard to find one willing to do the job.
Differences within a coalition are normal, so I'm not worried about that. Neither am I worried about the Greens' poll numbers dropping (back to where they were for many, many years until shortly before the last elections - and it's normal to pay a price in popularity for actually governing) or the AfD being at 15% (where they have been before as they tend to move back and forth between 10 and 15% over time). What has me worried is Germany embarassing itself in Brussels and making the fight against climate change harder for everybody. We could be world leaders in alternative energies if we had persued it more in the 90s and early 2000s instead of leaving it to the Chinese and our automotive industry has spend millions and millions in lobbying to delay the unstoppable for a little longer instead of putting that money in research and development to be ready for what has to come eventually. That's something that has annoyed me for years.
In fact, from what I have been reading, the FDP (and in part the CDU) are not even speaking for the German industry when they fight climate protection measures and reforms. Most business leaders in Germany actually understand the need for change and are ready for it - they just want clear legal guidelines to know what to expect and maybe some incentives/help if possible. But mostly clear guidelines. New standards to adjust to. Remember that the backbone of German industry is small and medium sized family businesses that actually care about still being around a few decades/generations from now. I recently translated a brochure from one such company (an internationally known liquor brand) that is changing its packaging, supporting organic and sustainable production of raw materials, supports resusability, uses renewables and aims at CO2 neutrality. They are not some idealistic hippy start-up. They are an almost a century old company that wants to make sure they still have customers decades from now. It's business sense.