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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Elsewhere who wrote (11767)10/11/2003 5:24:59 AM
From: Tom Clarke  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793843
 
Germans Criticize Leaders, Admire 'Arnold Effect'
Fri October 10, 2003 10:56 AM ET


By Erik Kirschbaum
BERLIN (Reuters) - Call it the "Arnold Effect."

The straight-talking Hollywood action star's election win in California has had an electrifying impact on Germany, leading to calls Friday for top politicians to voice clear ideas in simple language or be swept away at the polls.

"The more confused we are by what they say, the greater our longing for a man or woman with simple words," wrote Bild newspaper columnist Franz Josef Wagner. "The only problem is that it's the wrong ones who usually master simple language."

Schwarzenegger's victory in the California race for governor has led to editorials calling for German politicians to abandon their barely comprehensible speaking style in favor of "Klartext" (straight talk).

But Wagner and others also warn of the dangers of falling for simple remedies from loud Austrians who enthrall the masses. Austrian-born Adolf Hitler still casts a long shadow in Germany.

Celebrities, columnists, ordinary citizens and even some politicians have joined the chorus of calls for less talk and more action to get Germany moving again after years of economic stagnation and political standstill.

"My first thought was 'Oh my God, not another Austrian emigrant -- the first one caused enough damage"' wrote Peter Boenisch, a former government spokesman and newspaper editor, in an analysis on Schwarzenegger for the tabloid Bild.

"But Germany urgently needs something Schwarzenegger-like: a can-do spirit, unconventional thinking, courage, strength and vision. We're facing the worst crisis since the war," he wrote.

Manfred Guellner, managing director of the Forsa polling institute, said there is widespread discontent with politicians.

"The dissatisfaction is growing every day," he told Reuters. "Germany and Europe are ripe for the same sort of phenomenon. People feel they're being messed with. They want simple language and simple remedies."

A survey by the Emnid institute to be published Saturday in the conservative daily Die Welt found 49 percent even want a popular television game show host, Guenther Jauch, to lead them.

The irreverent left-wing newspaper Tageszeitung voiced concern about the calls for straight-talking leaders, noting that Hitler had attacked the German parliament as a "Talking Shop" before abolishing it.

"People want to be entertained and not bothered with problems," wrote the liberal Sueddeutsche Zeitung. "People want a strong leader."

Ordinary Germans said Arnold would cut a good figure here. "I can imagine someone like Arnold would be good for Germany," said Karin Rittmeister, 59, a university librarian in Berlin.

Ronny Zibinski, a 19-year-old Berlin technician, said he liked the idea of a Schwarzenegger-type chancellor for Germany. "We need someone like that to clean up the mess and blow away the lousy politicians," he said.



reuters.com



To: Elsewhere who wrote (11767)10/11/2003 6:22:53 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793843
 
Schadenfreude", "Blitzkrieg", "Angst" - my, oh, my

The English language is the largest in the world. And uses more words from other languages than others do. That's one of the reasons it is becoming the Universal language.



To: Elsewhere who wrote (11767)10/11/2003 6:34:59 AM
From: Ilaine  Respond to of 793843
 
More words like "Kindergarten" are needed to leave a more balanced trace of German in US English before it disappears :-)

Bildungsroman?

I'm thinking, I'm thinking.-g-

Seriously, some of my favorite "German words" are Yiddish.

Alte kocker. That's John M., Lindybill, and FaultLine.;^)