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8 votes
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Silvio Gesell, who wanted to create money that expired, is making a comeback
9 votes -
We put a “sin tax” on cigarettes and alcohol. Why not meat?
15 votes -
A modest proposal to make domestic air travel obsolete
10 votes -
Greta Thunberg takes climate fight to Germany’s threatened Hambach Forest
5 votes -
'Youth and workers uniting behind this crisis': German labor union urges two million members to join global climate strike
5 votes -
Microsoft 365, Google cloud and Apple cloud deemed illegal in Schools of Hesse
13 votes -
Sopor Aeternus - Beautiful Thorn (1994)
5 votes -
Would the German population more or less readily believe the Holocaust today as compared to 1945?
This is something I was thinking about. When I read about the end of the second world war, the thing which surprises me the most is how easily the German population accepted that their government...
This is something I was thinking about. When I read about the end of the second world war, the thing which surprises me the most is how easily the German population accepted that their government really committed such atrocities (Yes, I used Holocaust in the title, but I mean any genocide commited).
I was wondering how it might go down in our current culture with the emergence of Fake News and alternative "facts"; our post-fact culture. Would they more readily dismiss it as a photoshopped image? Would the impact be mitigated by the meme-ification of genocide?
(To a mod: The title should say « more or less »)
12 votes -
Russia wants concessions from Ukraine for continuing gas transit to Europe
9 votes -
Eastern Front of WWII animated: 1944/1945
6 votes -
Germany has a terrorism problem, foreign minister says
11 votes -
German patients get the latest drugs for just $11. Can such a model work in the US?
8 votes -
Nextcloud signs public letter, opposing German plan to force decryption of chat
23 votes -
Mogli - Another Life (2019)
4 votes -
When street food builds one community, and rankles another: Berlin’s Thaipark has long represented the best of what informal food markets have to offer. So why does the city think it’s a problem?
4 votes -
Germany: 1,000-year-old sarcophagus opened in Mainz
8 votes -
Arsenal player Mesut Özil celebrates his upcoming marriage by funding surgery for 1000 children in need
8 votes -
European Drug Report 2019 directly contrasts US drug crisis, tells a story of relative calm
7 votes -
To fight anti-semitism, German tabloid prints cutout Kippah
10 votes -
The hyper-specialist shops of Berlin
8 votes -
Why Berlin's fifteen-year-old airport has never had a flight
10 votes -
The twilight of combustion comes for Germany's empire of engines
5 votes -
Enigma - Modern Crusaders (2000)
3 votes -
WhatsApp has become a hotbed for spreading Nazi propaganda in Germany
16 votes -
Crypt Witch - Bad Trip Exorcism (2019)
6 votes -
Rammstein - Deutschland (2019)
10 votes -
Why is my SCHUFA information contradictory?
Hi everyone. I'm in a more or less of a dilemma here. For the ones that don't know, SCHUFA is monopolistic credit agency in Germany. The good news is that my wife is pregnant and now we need to...
Hi everyone.
I'm in a more or less of a dilemma here.
For the ones that don't know, SCHUFA is monopolistic credit agency in Germany.The good news is that my wife is pregnant and now we need to move to a new apartment with one extra room. Luckly, a friend of us is also moving and we simply got in contact with his landlord. We sent the information about our salaries and answered a few general questions and all is well for him. But, the landlord also wants our SCHUFA score.
We weren't worried at all because we don't have any credit cards or any loans and we are very frugal with our money. We really only spend money for our basic necessities and doing our holidays. We don't have any debts; we pay everything in a timely manner.
Then, my SCHUFA-BonitätAuskunft arrived. I look at the first page, which is in this diploma-like format and it says: "We had only positive contractual information at our disposal." (Es liegen uns zum XX.XX.XXXX ausschliesslich positive vertragsinformationen vor.)
"Great!", I thought. Then, I turned to the next pages and I see "Explanatory informations for your certificate" and there it says that I'm a high risk person. Basically, my result is 335, right in the middle (scale from 100 to 600).
We have a high netto salary and it seems this doesn't count for anything. My guess is that they don't have almost no history about me (I'm only living in Germany for 4 years) and since we are not big spenders, basically we are high risk because they don't have data to infer the risk. A few months ago I opened a new bank account on Commerzbank and I guess my SCHUFA score was good enough to open a new bank account, so I don't understand.
How is it possible that in my certificate diploma-like paper says that they have only have positive information about me and then on the explanatory pages say that I'm a high risk person in basically every sector (Banken, Telekommunikation, etc)?
Now we also asked the SCHUFA score only for my wife and let's hope for the best.
3 votes -
YouTube face-off: Berlin police break up mass brawl
5 votes -
Climate change: Angela Merkel welcomes school strikes
11 votes -
In 1939, 20,000 Americans rallied in New York’s Madison Square Garden to celebrate the rise of Nazism
16 votes -
Eastern Front of WWII animated: 1943/44
5 votes -
Holocaust Memorial Day: How the pink triangle became a symbol of gay rights
8 votes -
Europe’s most important river is running dry
15 votes -
A German mint just released a coin commemorating seventy years of currywurst
6 votes -
German cybersecurity chief: Anyone have any evidence of Huawei naughtiness? We won't be having a word with local firms until then
11 votes -
First Muslim superhero returns after seventy years – just in time to take down a few Nazis
7 votes -
Kindertransport children to get 2,500 euros in compensation from German government
4 votes -
A toy monkey that escaped Nazi Germany and reunited a family
6 votes -
Becoming Anne Frank - Why did we turn an isolated teenage girl into the world’s most famous Holocaust victim?
7 votes -
Cry me a river: Low water levels causing chaos in Germany
7 votes -
American Nazis in the 1930s—The German American Bund
10 votes -
How alt-right is Friedrich Nietzsche really?
6 votes -
Deutschland 86: Spy drama rebooted, braced for communism's collapse
4 votes -
Green Party ends conservative CSU’s 61-year political dominance in Bavaria
14 votes -
Germany's plans to win WWI
3 votes -
1787 Beer Soup from Germany - Townsends
6 votes -
Was Adolf Hitler a socialist? A response to a common argument.
11 votes -
A graphic history of the rise of the Nazis
8 votes -
Eichmann in Jerusalem (1963)
7 votes