December 9, 2022

Mainstream media headlines are sensationalizing a round-up in Germany of alleged “far-right” conspirators determined to overthrow the Federal Republic of Germany.  Such extremists doubtless exist, but parallels of the arrests — and of the neo-liberal American media’s reporting about them — with rising claims of “far-right extremism” in the United States are worthy of study.

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Increasingly, American mainstream media clamor against “Christian Nationalism,” “right-wing extremism,” and so-called threats to democracy by those (on the right only) who question election or voter integrity, the science of COVID vaccinations, Critical Race Theory, gender theory in schools, or the existence of a “Great Reset.”  Per the leftist mantra, these ideas demand militant campaigns to silence “disinformation.”  Free speech must not be permitted to include erstwhile protected expressions of opinion or political views if they are labeled “hate speech” or dangerous.

The parallels in American reporting about Germany’s recent arrests are similar to histrionic claims that January 6 displayed a 911-like attack on American democracy.  According to the ubiquitous (and lockstep) MSM reports, 25 people were detained, on “suspicion of ‘membership in a terrorist organization,'” from a group of “an estimated 50 people” called Reich Citizens Movement, who “follow a conglomerate of conspiracy myths consisting of narratives of the so-called Reichsbürger as well as QAnon ideology.”

The idea of Germany being overtaken by a Reich monarchy of 50 fringe nationalists is a tad difficult to imagine.

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For a criminal conspiracy, American law requires overt acts taken in furtherance of the alleged criminal enterprise.  It has yet to be determined whether the German detainees engaged in such actions:

The German prosecutor’s office said in a statement … there was “the suspicion that individual members of the association have made concrete preparations to forcibly invade” the German lower house of parliament, the Bundestag, “with a small armed group.” … “The details are yet to be worked out,” it added.

American law would require more than mere “suspicion” — people are allowed to hold fringe ideas.  Yet American media outlets have pounced on this story like a California wildfire, with headlines that echo the rising fear-mongering against conservatives in the U.S., such as “Searching for an emperor and fascinated by guns.”  Comments reference Trump, the Rule of Law, and parallels between this tiny group of arrestees and Americans.

These Germans believed in a “deep state” controlling their nation, included many military veterans, and challenged the COVID narrative.  NBC reports:

Reichsbürger activists and members of other closely-related groups commonly take part in protests against Covid-19 restrictions. The pandemic was a rallying cause for far-right actors across Europe, adding to baseless accusations of a wider government plot to control citizens.

The article links (“far-right extremist plot”) to an NBC article from 2021 titled “Far right spies an opportunity in Europe’s new wave of Covid pain and protest,” the crux of the “plot” being this: