Tag: Gregory Gysi

  • TV review of “Maybrit Illner”: Wanted too much again

    TV review of “Maybrit Illner”: Wanted too much again

    Whe didn’t know that Gregor Gysi was born in 1948, has known since Thursday evening at the latest. The foreign policy spokesman for the Left Party could not have mentioned his year of birth to Maybrit Illner much more often in order to explain why Germany should not supply weapons to Ukraine. The post-war period…

  • First Merz, soon Scholz?: Politicians, visit Ukraine!

    First Merz, soon Scholz?: Politicians, visit Ukraine!

    Et is noticeable which politicians travel to Ukraine – and which do not. Federal President Steinmeier stayed at home. He wasn’t welcome in Kyiv for weeks; that only changed after a phone call with the Ukrainian President this week. Chancellor Scholz, on the other hand, felt that the German head of state had been prevented…

  • Sweetheart stories: You are naked, but only mentally

    Da we have when we read the headline of a message in the “echo of the woman” saw, knowingly nodded: “Gregor Gysi – scary job”. And then we were surprised that Gysi’s temporary job as a narrator on the “Rocky Horror Show” was meant. We find Gysi’s main job as foreign policy spokesman for the…

  • “What politicians don’t say”: As Gregor Gysi whispers in plain language

    Gregor Gysi is a politician who says what sounds good to set the tone. This is roughly how you could describe the Gregor Gysi method with the Gregor Gysi method. The politician on the left is known for being a good speaker, although the question of what makes a good speech can be answered in…

  • Political correctness: It’s just Kubicki!

    WWhen it comes to the question of what one is still allowed to say today, there is rarely any talk of why someone wants to say something at all. The career of Wolfgang Kubicki shows that these two questions are related. Kubicki is one of the few German politicians who speaks in such a way…

  • Ukraine conflict: what does Putin really want?

    Et was expected that NATO would strengthen its eastern flank. The tensions that Putin caused with his march on the border with Ukraine are so great that the alliance cannot avoid sending a signal that it at least takes the defense of its members seriously. The signal is still more political than military in nature.…