I’m guessing it was meant to be edgy and it fit from the meaning, but a lot of people suffered horribly under that.
But yeah, Germany really dropped the ball on going digital. I recently had an appointment at a government agency to discuss something, and the worker was complaining and apologizing that he could barely see me behind all of his new monitors and how he wished he had his paperwork back
My favorite story has to be either that when the position of a Internet Minister was first proposed it was created under the jurisdiction of the Ministry for Transport since you also call it “Data highway” so naturally it was related to cars and highways
Or the time the ministry slowed down the development of making Germany more digital and instead focus on investing into flying taxis
I’m guessing it was meant to be edgy and it fit from the meaning, but a lot of people suffered horribly under that.
Yes, it’s probably meant to be “edgy”. I think some people need more history lessons. I removed the poster, did the edit federate?
But yeah, Germany really dropped the ball on going digital. I recently had an appointment at a government agency to discuss something, and the worker was complaining and apologizing that he could barely see me behind all of his new monitors and how he wished he had his paperwork back
I’m from the Netherlands and there was a massive hack recently which made them disconnect their networks from the internet so I can relate.
My favorite story has to be either that when the position of a Internet Minister was first proposed it was created under the jurisdiction of the Ministry for Transport since you also call it “Data highway” so naturally it was related to cars and highways
Self-deprecating joke. We may not SAY “Arbeit macht frei” but that doesn’t mean there isn’t a sizable group of people who think “if you don’t work, you don’t deserve a nice life”. Also, this is polandball, it’s tradition.
“Arbeit macht frei” was and is usually found on a sign on top of gates the concentration camps, since they typically were forced to perform labor under horrid conditions. The most infamous one with a sign was called Auschwitz.
Originally used for prisoner of war from Poland, the nazi soon built Auschwitz II-Birkenau in 1942 where 700 people could simultaneously killed but you would be locked up on the killing chamber for up to a week, with no food and water, until it was “worth it” to kill enough people at once…
Why use nazi rhetoric?
Comic creator added that for some reason and I didn’t spot it
I’m guessing it was meant to be edgy and it fit from the meaning, but a lot of people suffered horribly under that.
But yeah, Germany really dropped the ball on going digital. I recently had an appointment at a government agency to discuss something, and the worker was complaining and apologizing that he could barely see me behind all of his new monitors and how he wished he had his paperwork back
My favorite story has to be either that when the position of a Internet Minister was first proposed it was created under the jurisdiction of the Ministry for Transport since you also call it “Data highway” so naturally it was related to cars and highways
Or the time the ministry slowed down the development of making Germany more digital and instead focus on investing into flying taxis
Yes, it’s probably meant to be “edgy”. I think some people need more history lessons. I removed the poster, did the edit federate?
I’m from the Netherlands and there was a massive hack recently which made them disconnect their networks from the internet so I can relate.
🤣 It’s grouped with kingdom relations here for some reason.
Ouch
Self-deprecating joke. We may not SAY “Arbeit macht frei” but that doesn’t mean there isn’t a sizable group of people who think “if you don’t work, you don’t deserve a nice life”. Also, this is polandball, it’s tradition.
What part of it is nazi rhetoric?
“Arbeit macht frei” was and is usually found on a sign on top of gates the concentration camps, since they typically were forced to perform labor under horrid conditions. The most infamous one with a sign was called Auschwitz. Originally used for prisoner of war from Poland, the nazi soon built Auschwitz II-Birkenau in 1942 where 700 people could simultaneously killed but you would be locked up on the killing chamber for up to a week, with no food and water, until it was “worth it” to kill enough people at once…
There isn’t “arbeit macht frei” on the comic though.
The poster kindly edited it out
Ah OK, so I haven’t completely lost it yet. Thanks.
I didn’t see it at first but @Sakychu@lemmy.world pointed it out and I removed it.