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- cross-posted to:
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Germans under 25 gave the AfD 16% of their vote in the European elections, with particular support in the east
Paul Friedrich, 16, could not wait to cast his first ballot and had no doubt which German party had earned his support in the watershed European elections.
“Correct, I voted AfD,” he said proudly in the bustle of the commuter railway station in Brandenburg an der Havel, an hour from central Berlin.
The far-right Alternative für Deutschland made particularly stunning gains on Sunday among young voters. For the first time in a national poll, 16- and 17-year-olds could cast their ballots – a reform that had been strongly backed by left-leaning parties.
After overwhelmingly supporting the Greens five years ago, Germans under 25 gave the AfD 16% of their vote – an 11-point rise – helping place the party second behind the opposition CDU-CSU conservatives and well ahead of the Social Democrats of the chancellor, Olaf Scholz.
The AfD tapped deep wells of support in the former communist east, winning in every state including Brandenburg, where it claimed 27.5% of the vote.
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And his concerns echo those of many teenagers and twentysomethings in town: fears of war spreading in Europe, inflation, economic decline, “unchecked” immigration and, above all, violent crime, which they say is rampant when they use public transport or hang out in public spaces at night.
Sorry I’m not a native speaker I guess social program isn’t quite the word I was looking for. It’s more of a distribution of wealth thing, and distributing it more evenly is what I meant by social programs.
There is a clear correlation between individual wealth and criminal activity. The more poor people a society produces the more potential for crime exists. This is partially rooted in the fact that if you are poor and you don’t see a perspective for a positive turnaround, jailtime suddenly loses its impact.
I think It’s not like back in your youth there were way more police, more likely there are a lot more people disappointed and disillusioned by the system so they stopped caring.
I don’t think just spending more money on police will fix that unless you employ enough police people to physically stop crime as it happens which isn’t going to be economical at all. I think restoring people’s faith in the system by improving the wealth distribution would be way more efficient.
I’m not in the USA but I want to live in society where most people choose to abide by the law out of respect for the rules that provide wealth to us all. Not out of fear. If you need fear to control a big portion of your population you are doing it wrong. (Of course you’ll always need some police there will always be people that will not want to follow the laws but I’m talking about the general case)