• TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    2 months ago

    Also the article is from 2021, and mentions that the movements is at the beginning. Is the movement still active? Are the issues the same as the main BLM?

    How is that relevant? The same fucking issue was protested all over the place. Hell, even my fellow punks are still at it.

    Since June, the group say “racist scenes” on Sylt have increased attacks on refugees and asylum seekers after a clip of Germans chanting the Nazi slogan “Germany for the Germans – foreigners out” in a nightclub went viral.

    The fight is the same, the location is the difference.

    • sudneo
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      2 months ago

      How is that relevant? The same fucking issue was protested all over the place. Hell, even my fellow punks are still at it.

      All over the place -> links article mentioning protests in Germany.

      I really don’t know how to be clearer than this:

      • Europe is made by many countries. EU is made by 27 of them alone.
      • No, it was not “the same fucking issue” being protested. Issues (including racism against) with refugees and systemic racism in US are different things.
      • The BLM movement is nonexistent in Europe. The fact that in 2020 - in response to a specific event - there have been protests in solidarity is not an argument against my point. Which is very simple: US and Europe have different problems in this area. In Europe a movement like BLM, which is fundamentally linked to police violence against black people didn’t develop because that is not a major issue in Europe. I used this as an example to show how different the racial dynamics are different.

      The fight is the same, the location is the difference.

      There are commonalities, but it’s very different. You are only taking Germany, where the battles are different from France, where they are different from Italy, and where in general these have to do with immigration and handling of refugees. In US a lot has to do with systemic racism within the society. They are two different things. Of course there are also racist people in Europe, no shit. The point is that racism is not institutionalized in the same way as it is in US. Since the conversation initially was about immigration policies, not random people, then this matters a lot.