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reversi
05-03-2009, 10:51 AM
^ http://www.dw-world.de/ (http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4073394,00.html)

Right-Wing Extremism | 04.03.2009
Germany Launches Massive Crackdown on Neo-Nazi Music

Police raided apartments and offices throughout Germany in the biggest-ever action aimed at stamping out the radical-right music scene. The historic operation was two years in the making.

http://www.dw-world.de/image/0,,619162_1,00.jpg
The CDs confiscated aim to use music to stir up hatred

German authorities searched more than 200 locations on Wednesday, March 4, confiscating 45,000 CDs, more than 170 computers and some 70 weapons.

They are also investigating 204 suspects. Though no one was arrested, the head prosecutor in Stuttgart, where the operation was based, characterized it as a significant contribution in combating racist and neo-Nazi subcultures.

"Music represents the gateway through which young people are lured in," Siegfried Mahler said at a press conference. "Millions of euros of business is done every year producing and distributing recordings of extreme right-wing music."

Bands such as Landser or Macht und Ehre -- whose lyrics glorify the Third Reich and encourage hatred of and violence toward ethnic minorities -- have been part of a small, but difficult-to-eradicate neo-Nazi music scene in Germany.

"Using aggressive, xenophobic, anti-Semitic and Anti-democratic lyrics, they spread extreme right-wing ideas and expressions of hate," Mahler said.

Music with such lyrical content is prohibited by the German Constitution. Selling neo-Nazi music is a crime, although possessing it isn't, as Mahler said at the press conference.

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Police keep a careful eye on Germany's small scene of neo-Nazi skinheads

Wednesday's operation was a continuation of an effort begun in 2007, when the Office for the Protection of the Constitution discovered an online auction house that was selling neo-Nazi music.

Police then formed a task force, which spent the past two years analyzing data concerning some 20,000 sales, 1,000 recordings and 800 registered users from that initial investigation.

"Above all, the point was to uncover the entire distribution structure," Carsten Voss, the head of the politically motivated crimes division at the Federal Prosecutor's Office, told reporters.

Voss added that the operation was unique in Germany history.

The person thought to be at the center of the neo-Nazi music ring was a 34-year-old man from the southern German state of Baden-Württemberg, but police have not released the names of any suspects.

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darketernal
05-03-2009, 03:01 PM
What the police did something positive for a change?

Now if they could just get the heroic and coke off the streets with it, I might give them a pat on the back for once.

size_of_light
05-03-2009, 03:11 PM
I caught a documentary on this scene a few years ago which suggested that this subculture is nothing more than bored, socially-dysfunctional teenagers recruited and manipulated into the philosophy by older guys with shady backgrounds.

I wouldn't be surprised if the whole movement wasn't just another front funded by intelligence agencies to create another polarity.

darketernal
05-03-2009, 03:22 PM
SOL it is my experience that the entire "white supremist" movement at least in my country is funded, infultraited and heavily influenced by the Illuminati.

starstuff
05-03-2009, 03:27 PM
I'm more concerned with the "thought crime" aspect of this. As far as I can tell, nobody did anything except buy sell or own music, even if it was anti-establishment hate-based music.

Also, 88?

size_of_light
05-03-2009, 03:30 PM
SOL it is my experience that the entire "white supremist" movement at least in my country is funded, infultraited and heavily influenced by the Illuminati.

Yeah, it only makes sense, I guess.

I can understand why it draws in dissatisfied young people in Germany. It's illegal to possess this material, so there's the thrill of the taboo, the excitement of belonging to an underground subculture and the righteous indignation that German culture is being censored and suppressed.

If the material hadn't been made illegal after the war, I think the thrill would have faded long ago, so keeping it taboo and underground has probably been an effective way for them to control it over a long period of time.

darketernal
05-03-2009, 03:30 PM
88 is a common identifier of Neo-nazies. If you go to any of their forums half of them have names like Adolf88, Whitepower88, Jewkiller1488 etc.