QUOTE (Ruthie @ Feb 18 2008, 12:07 am)

Am I the only person here who finds Rhyntyntyn alarming? I also think it is stupid of you to say I am calling Muslims something like "nigger" because I apparently misspelled the word as "Moslem" -- please show me where that is a derogatory term. You don´t want me to call them names, yet you have such a screwed up opinion otherwise? TBH, quite a few of the views expressed on this thread are alarming.
Edit: to get a bit more concrete: Rhyntyntyn said Germany belongs to the ethnic Germans and they are free to decide what to do with anyone who is not ethnically German living in their country. WTF?!?!?! Need I say more?!?!
No Ruthie, you need not say more, ever again. Please. You might think it's stupid of me to point out that you are being insensitive because you are ignorant. You are wrong, and you have a lot to learn. There are plenty of sources for how to deal with Muslims without being an offensive bumpkin out there. The Brits try really hard to be sensitive. There's a wealth of information out there written in English. It's not stupid to learn things. Try it sometime.
Heres one link:
http://www.communities.gov.uk/documents/co...ties/pdf/151921 And the quote within "Is it correct to write Muslim or Moslem? Muslim is preferred. People refer to themselves as Muslims. Many regard Moslem as a term of abuse, like people of African descent dislike being called negroes. Also avoid Mohammedan and Musselman." There are others, but you are on your own.
And Germany belongs to the Germans and the non-Germans who have citizebnship. It's their country. Just like France belongs to the French. To whom should it belong then? You? The world? They can legislate anyone they want. Why is that alarming? What I find alarming is that while you don't hesitate to ascribe all of the problems of the middle east to the faults of the United States, you continue to display our culture's biggest faults: ignorance of other cultures and a corresponding refusal to learn, and the idea that the US is the mold and every other country has to fit into that mold. That's what I find alarming.
QUOTE (RainyDays @ Feb 18 2008, 12:24 am)

I don't know if Ryhntyntyn's views are alarming, but on the subject of ius soli and ius sanguinis in German nationality law, they are not up to date. The legislative reform introduced elements of ius soli, so that children of non-German parents can be German citizens by birth under certain preconditions:
Ryhntyntyn, I don't quite understand what you mean by saying that Germany "doesn't do civic identity" – if someone is naturalized, he/she is a citizen, regardless of ethnicity; that is a civic identity, isn't it? Whether this person feels German or is regarded as such by every compatriot cannot be legislated. It takes time to change attitudes.
Citizenship does not equal a civic identity. You are of course right that a citizen in Germany has all the rights thereof. But in Germany especially that is a legal status and not an identity. In France for example the Identity is Civic. One says the word, joins the club learns the language (In France at least) and voila! one is supposed to
be French. The day before one could have been Russian, but after naturalization... In theory anyway.
What it means to be a German is different, this in spite of the legal reforms you pointed out. Here you can naturalize and you are a German citizen, but you are still not a German. One cannot legislate ideas or opinions of course, but the concept of the civic identity does not exist in the German people or in the relevant foreign populations. Naturalizing makes one a citizen, not a German. To the Germans the idea of being German is rooted in descent. I suspect they could learn to be more accepting, but crossing the line to the French or American Model will not happen.
And the reform you rightly mention changes the law to allow the naturalization of german born children of foreigners. What it doesn't do is change the right of return for anyone who can prove German descent. Their laws still recognize that anyone descended from Germans is a German. It wasn't a flip flop from Jus Sanguinis to Jus Soli. It was a mild reform to try and introduce a bit of of Jus Soli to a system that remains overwhelming Jus Sanguinis.
QUOTE (jamie @ Feb 18 2008, 12:33 am)

Is that right...
As a matter of fact according to the 93% of the Germans that don't vote Green on a regular basis it is. At least they have a sense of humor though.
German Blood or Decent will get someone citizenship faster and in a far less complicated manner than being born here to foreign born parents. That much hasn't changed in spite of the their reforms. Is that good? I don't know. Is that the state of things? Yes it is.