• gnuhaut@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    What you’re saying is absolute horseshit.

    They banned many many protests in Germany (before they happened, at the permit phase). The excuse the authorities give is usually vague security concerns, and they always argue that something antisemitic or glorifying violence might be said. And they explictly define any fundamental critique of Israel as antisemitism and any positive mention or symbol of any armed resistance group as glorifying violence, but only for pro-Palestinian groups. You can show support for the IDF as much as you like, in fact providing not just symbolic support, but support in the form of actual lethal weapons is facilitated at the highest levels of the state. That is legal and encouraged. Saying “Palestine will be free.” gets you detained.

    • Cobrachicken@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      The person you replied to was solely writing about the treatment of young kids. So what you are writing is completely out of context, and, pardon me please, abdolute horseshit.

      • gnuhaut@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        Check again what the parent poster said:

        As long as they are not violent they can protest all day long.

        Which is what I replied to, and which is clearly not true, they ban nonviolent protests all the time.

          • gnuhaut@lemmy.ml
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            5 months ago

            Tons. This on is from Oct 30 in The Nation:

            The German state’s show of support has led to an outright banning of most pro-Palestine protests. […]

            The reasons for the bans seemed unambiguous: German police said that there was an “imminent danger” that the assemblies will result in “inciting, anti-Semitic slogans,” as well as “glorification of violence.”

            Preemptively. Because antisemitism and “glorification of violence” might occur. And by antisemitism they mean things like this:

            On October 13, Berlin police declared uttering the slogan “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” forbidden and indictable. That same day, Berlin’s education senator, Katharina Günther-Wünsch, sent a letter to all Berlin school principals offering them the option to ban students from wearing “pro-Palestinian symbols such as the keffiyeh.” “Any act or expression of opinion that can be understood as advocacy or approval of the attacks against Israel,” she wrote, “constitutes a threat to school peace and is prohibited.”