"For anyone who's interested in the deeper context of the Mud Wizard: In Germany there are ongoing protests, because the government plans to demolish a vacated village just for a huge energy company (RWE) to mine the coal under it. Many people see the village as a symbol for environmental protection and the preservation of nature, so they stayed there and occupied the village, prompting the police to vacate the village (again). The Mud Wizard is one of the protesters who protested the government and he went viral." -June Drecshel
Have to feel like in USA this would have been where the cops called in the airstrike and broke out the tanks...Police States are fucking scary.
*shoves glasses up nose*
Well, actually ...
... the protestor was mostly called "the monk" in the German media. There even was an article asking what real monks thought about a violent protestor who kicked cops in the stomach while dressed up as a monk because he didn't just throw mud.
The protests are not so much about saving the village of Lüzerath (which has been abandoned for a while) but against digging for coal (because that is obviously CO2 poison). It's not about preserving nature in Lüzerath, but about climate action. The "deeper context" is that we have a relatively progressive government that claims to be big on climate action. However, they made a deal with RWE (a huge energy company) which says that RWE will become climate neutral several years sooner than initially agreed and in exchange they get a permit to dig up those coal reserves in Lüzerath. Opinion in Germany is wildly divided (even among supporters of the Greens and within the environmentalist movement) whether that deal was a good thing overall or if the government let itself be bamboozled by RWE. RWE claims that the country needs that coal for energy security. Some studies support their claim, other studies suggest that's not true. There have been claims of police brutality, but also countreclaims and little evidence either way, as far as I know.
If you want an even wider social context, it's about an inner debate of the environmentalist left. One of the biggest political topics over here are Extinction Rebellion and Last Generation, especially young protestors glueing themselves to streets, monuments, etc. to protest for more decisive climate action. For the extreme far-right climate action is bullshit anyway, for the center-right, center and center-left their goals are laudable but their methods are unacceptable and for the left and far-left their methods are perfectly justified. There was a famous case in Berlin recently where an ambulance couldn't get through to the site of an accident because climate protestors had blocked the road, at least that was how the tabloids portrayed it.
The biggest debates and conflicts are now ironically between the more radical protestors and the Greens who are now in government and forced to deal with compromises, legal issues and all that stuff. In the eyes of the protestors the Greens are sell-outs, in the eyes of the Greens the protestors are unrealistic extremists.
Even wider wider context: Germany may have given the world the word Realpolitik, but lareg parts of the country are highly idealistic and ideological when it comes to politics. My hubby told me about an article explaining that to the British football (soccer) is a busines and has been one for decades so protesting for human rights (LGBTQ) at the World Cup is hypocritical. In Germany however every village has a not for profit soccer club and people on some level still associate the sport with community service and high ethical standards. Their disgust at FIFA corruption is genuine. Same thing with the war in Ukraine, there are genuine moral discussion going on that go far beyond what is or isn't in the national interest. I am not saying that Germans are in any way more ethical, just that they tend to be more naive and idealistic and have high expectations of those in positions of power or influence (which can obviously lead to disappointment and cynicism). It's a romantic streak that goes back centuries (and does have a darker, more problematic side to it, but that is another even longer story).