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In Germany, Threats Grow as Far Right and Pandemic Protestors Merge – The New York Times

DRESDEN, Germany First vaccine opponents attacked the police. Then a group of them chatted online about killing the governor. And one day an angry crowd beating drums and carrying torches showed up outside the house of the health minister of the eastern state of Saxony.

The minister, Petra Kpping, had just gotten home when her phone rang. It was a neighbor and he sounded afraid. When Ms. Kpping peered out of her window into the dark, she saw several dozen faces across the street, flickering in the torchlight.

They came to intimidate and threaten me, she recalled in an interview. I had just come home and was alone. Ive been in politics for 30 years, but I have never seen anything like this. There is a new quality to this.

The crowd was swiftly dispersed by the police, but the incident in December represented a turning point in a country where the SA, Hitlers paramilitary organization, was notorious not just for showing up at the homes of political rivals with torches and drums, but for attacking and even murdering them.

It was the clearest indication yet that a protest movement against Covid measures that has mobilized tens of thousands in cities and villages across the country was increasingly merging with the far right, each finding new purpose and energy and further radicalizing the other.

The dynamic is much the same whether in Germany or Canada, and the protests in various countries have echoes of one another. On the streets of Dresden one recent Monday, the signs and slogans were nearly identical to those on the streets of Ottawa: Freedom, Democracy and The Great Resist.

In Germany, at least, the merging of the movements has taken an increasingly sinister turn, with a specter of violence that is alarming security agencies. Since December, the threats have only intensified.

Last month the far-right Alternative for Germany party called for another protest outside of Ms. Kppings home. (The police stopped it.) Hospital staff in Dresden, the Saxon capital, have been attacked. A second governor has received death threats. And when the police raided the homes of nine people who had debated ways to kill Michael Kretschmer, the governor of Saxony, on the messenger service Telegram, they discovered weapons and bomb-making ingredients like gunpowder and sulfur.

As the pandemic enters its third year, Germany is emerging from another long winter of high case numbers that are now slowly receding. While the government is preparing to lift restrictions, Chancellor Olaf Scholz is determined to turn a general vaccine mandate into law ahead of the next fall.

The debate about Covid restrictions has energized a far-right scene that thrives on a sense of crisis and apocalypse.

Germanys far right, which in recent years used anger over an influx of refugees and Europes debt crisis to recruit, has seized on the virus as its latest cause.

If the issue is different, the messaging of those organizing the protests is eerily familiar: The state is failing, democracy is subverted by shady globalists and the people are urged to resist.

Now as then, what began with demonstrations against government policy has become personal. The number of verbal and physical attacks on politicians tripled last year to 4,458, according to federal police statistics. It is no longer just regional and local politicians who are targeted. The federal health minister and the chancellors chief crisis manager on the pandemic are among a growing group of officials requiring police protection.

Two and a half years after a regional politician who defended Germanys refugee policy was shot dead on his front porch by a neo-Nazi, security agencies worry that far-right militants want to use the pandemic to unleash another wave of political violence.

Violent resistance to democratic rules is now a frequent demand in the anti-corona protests, Dirk-Martin Christian, domestic intelligence chief of the state of Saxony, said in an email interview. The routine assertion that we live in a dictatorship and under an emergency regime that must be eliminated, and against which public resistance is legitimate, is evidence of the progressive radicalization of this movement.

There is an increasing willingness to use violence in the context of the protests, Mr. Christian added, noting the fantasies of murder targeting Mr. Kretschmer, the Saxon governor, and the SA-style procession outside Ms. Kppings house.

The radicalization of protesters against Covid measures is most visible in the former Communist East, where far-right extremists now dominate the organization of the protests and control the information and disinformation on popular Telegram channels associated with the movement.

Saxony, the most populous eastern state, has a long history of far-right protests, starting with the annual neo-Nazi marches on the anniversary of the Dresden bombing in 1945.

March 4, 2022, 6:06 a.m. ET

In 2014, the anti-Muslim Pegida movement short for Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West was founded there, then spread to other cities. For years its supporters marched on Monday nights, like the protesters who brought down Communism a quarter century earlier.

We are the people, the slogan associated with Pegida marches, is now popular at the coronavirus protests on Monday nights too.

The parallels are worrying, officials say, because prolonged street protests have proven to be powerful incubators of far-right violence.

Regular protests have the effect of giving extremists the feeling that public opinion is with them and that the time to act is now, said Michael Nattke, a former neo-Nazi who left the scene and has been doing anti-extremism work for the last two decades. It creates its own dynamic.

For intelligence officials, too, its no longer a question of if, but when.

We are very concerned about the possible radicalization of individual perpetrators, said Mr. Christian of the Saxon intelligence service.

One concern is that far-right extremists are tapping into the frustrations and fears of ordinary citizens who march alongside them every week. That regular proximity erodes boundaries.

Something is becoming normalized that mustnt be normalized, said Ms. Kpping, the health minister. Its worrying that you cant distinguish anymore who is on the streets because of vaccines and Covid restrictions and who is already radicalized.

On a recent Monday night in Dresden, eleven different protest walks, which had been advertised on Telegram, snaked their way through different parts of the city before coalescing into one march with some 3,000 people. Some carried candles, like the peaceful protesters who marched against the Berlin Wall in 1989. Others waved the flag of the Free Saxons, a new party that is so far right it considers the Alternative for Germany party establishment.

New Zealands Covid reckoning. For much of the past two years, the coronavirus was a phantom presence in New Zealand. Now, the island nation is being hit by a major outbreak of the Omicron variant, with the virus spreading at an extremely fast rate.

N.F.L. drops protocols. The league and the players union agreed to suspend all Covid-19 protocols, effective immediately. The N.F.L., which is not in season, is the first of the major professional sports leagues in the United States to halt its coronavirus-related policies

In the crowd was Betina Schmidt, a 57-year-old accountant in a red woolly hat. Ms. Schmidt said she was not just protesting government plans for a general vaccine mandate but also a broader conspiracy by powerful globalists to destroy the German nation.

Until a few years ago she voted for the Greens. Now I know they are not green, they are totalitarian, Ms. Schmidt said. What they want has nothing to do with the environment. They want the destruction of Germany.

She stopped watching news on the public broadcaster last summer and is now getting most of her information on Telegram. Like many others here, Ms. Schmidt cited The Great Reset, a book by Klaus Schwab, the founder of the World Economic Forum in Davos, which Ms. Schmidt says reads like a script for how a group of powerful globalists plan to destroy the German nation and create a mishmash of people that can be led easily.

I didnt believe it either six months ago, she added.

Matthias Phlmann, the author of Right-Wing Esotericism, a book about the fusion of far-right conspiracy theories with alternative views, said such theories were spreading fast and well beyond the milieu of people traditionally open to far-right ideas.

These conspiracy theories are powerful accelerators of radicalization, he said. If you believe someone wants to erase you, that you live in a dictatorship, violence is justified.

Germanys federal intelligence service, which is known as the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, recently created a new category for dangerous conspiracy theorists dubbed delegitimization of the state. It has also set up a special organization tasked with monitoring some 600 channels on Telegram associated with the protest movement.

Security agencies have been caught off guard before. Asked in September in Parliament whether there was a concrete danger coming from the pandemic protest movement, the government denied this, saying only that some protesters showed signs of radicalization and a greater readiness to commit violence.

Ten days later an employee of a gas station was shot dead by a customer after the employee asked him to put on a mask. The attacker had been a regular at the protest marches.

They have been very slow to understand the risk, said Mr. Nattke, who regularly meets with officials about the far-right threat and says he has been warning them for months. It wasnt really until the torchlight procession outside Petra Kppings house that they took it seriously.

In Dresden, the group that fantasized about killing the Saxon governor, and is now under investigation for plotting terrorism, was first discovered by journalists. Now Mr. Christians office has its own team of half a dozen Telegram watchers, who scroll through hatred and disinformation to identify serious threats.

Its frightening how many people are following these calls for mobilization, Mr. Christian said. The erosion of the political center has already begun.

Christopher F. Schuetze contributed reporting.

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In Germany, Threats Grow as Far Right and Pandemic Protestors Merge - The New York Times

Quincy Tea Party hosts candidates as filing time is around the corner Muddy River News – Muddy River News

Two GOP candidates for governor, Gary Rabine and Darren Bailey, address the Quincy Tea Party Tuesday night. Moderator Mecki Kosin is also pictured.

QUINCY Two Illinois gubernatorial candidates, a congresswoman and an assortment of other politicians made their way to Quincys industrial section of the Riverfront Tuesday evening.

The Quincy Tea Party has been holding its meetings in the lower level of Tower Pizza and Mexican, but with a larger than usual crowd expected to gather, the organization sought a larger venue and held the event at The Well, 711 Front Street.

The forum gave candidates an opportunity to present their platforms and circulate petitions. The Tea Party is planning to host more formal debates at future meetings this year, with the June 28 primary and November 8 general election looming.

The first day of filing for the 2022 election is Monday, March 7.

Two of the GOP candidates for governor, Gary Rabine and State. Sen Darren Bailey (R-Xenia) met privately on Baileys campaign bus before the event was under way. Both have made previous stops in Quincy.

The appearance was timely in that the states chief medical advisor, Dr. Ngozi Ezike, had just announced her resignation as director of the Illinois Department of Public Health.

Bailey said her stepping down was a relief for Illinois. His full interview is below.

The Bailey campaign also used the opportunity to take Twitter and link Ezike and Governor JB Pritzker to one of his rivals running for governor, Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin.

Republican Congresswoman Mary Miller, who is running in the newly-configured 15th District against another incumbent member of Congress, Rodney Davis, said she wanted to be with salt of the earth people in Illinois Tuesday night as opposed to being in the U.S. Capitol to watch President Joe Biden give the State of the Union address.

Davis did attend the State of the Union and released a statement:

The state of our Union is in crisis because of President Joe Biden and one-party, Democrat rule in Washington. The President will try and rewrite history, but on every major issue, his Administration and his Democrat allies in Congress are failing the American people. We have a border crisis, an economic and inflation crisis, an energy crisis, a crime crisis, a national security crisis, and more. Every single crisis has been created or made worse by the policies and rhetoric of President Biden and Democrats in Congress.My Republican colleagues and I will continue to hold President Biden and Speaker Pelosi accountable for pursuing an out-of-touch, far-left agenda and press for real solutions to the issues the American people face and care about.

Congressman Sam Graves, who represents Missouris 6th District also responded:

The difference between what were feeling in North Missouri and what the President says were feeling is stark. The supply chain crisis, coupled with out-of-control inflation, is driving prices through the roof and making it more difficult for families, farmers, and small business owners to succeed. This crisis isnt going to end until President Biden stops passing the buck and starts living up to his promises.

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Quincy Tea Party hosts candidates as filing time is around the corner Muddy River News - Muddy River News

Olive & Junes Spring Collection Is A Tea Party For Your Nails – Yahoo Life

Even though we may be huddled in cozy fleeces and turtlenecks, find solace in this factoid: Spring starts this month. (*Cue confetti*) As such, were getting ready to shelve our moody jewel tones in lieu of lighter, brighter nail polish hues and Olive & June is coming through in a major way with their dreamy High Tea collection, which drops today. Our Spring collection is inspired by our love of tea parties, Olive & Junes vice president of content Olivia Van Iderstine tells Refinery29. The colors of spring are some of our most-loved, best-selling shades and after a chilly winter, we couldnt be more excited to bring out the color!

Olive & June stans already know that a new collection drop means a few things: A brand-new Mani System box (the brands signature DIY nail-care kit) and colored Poppy (a wide, grippy attachment that helps wield brushes for an extra-precise color application), plus plenty of new polish shades to play with. But this season, theres more in store: Five limited-edition styles of the brands cant-keep-in-stock press-on nails. The colors are all gorgeous pastels, but with our little twist so theyre slightly unexpected, explains Van Iderstine. Ahead, we chatted with the Olive & Junes in-house mani whisperer to get the low-down on each new hue, plus the biggest nail trends to look out for this spring.

For the ultimate spring nail refresh, splurge on Olive & Junes Mani System, which includes the entire polish collection, top coat, all tools to DIY the perfect salon mani, plus a limited-edition mint green Poppy.

Instead of a minty pastel green, we went for a fresh green shade inspired by cucumber tea sandwiches, says Van Iderstine of this delectable seafoam hue.

Brighten up your day with Golden Afternoon, the sunny hue thats far from your basic primary color. Everyone loves a yellow in spring, but our take is a little mustard-y marigold, explains Van Iderstine.

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We cant resist scones and jam at tea, but our Jam, Please shade is a glowy, loud, and bright magenta for an unexpected pop in an otherwise pastel palette, says Van Iderstine of this punchy fuchsia.

Pastels and sheers are our go-to colors this season, Van Iderstine says. Its all about getting together with the people you love (IRL or virtually) to welcome a new season with yummy nail looks and treats. Enter, this light-as-air pink.

Weve said it once and well say it again: Neutrals dont have to be boring. You dont need a bold color to make a big impact, says Van Iderstine. Were obsessed with layering sheers to create our very own bespoke combinations. What is more special than creating your own custom formula? It feels super luxe and personal. One way to nail the look? This warm mauve thats equal parts ladylike and cool.

Channel light, bright vibes with this delightful pale lilac, which feels as refreshing as the first 70 day. The French mani isnt going anywhere, but for Spring were embracing our favorite pastels for the tip, predicts Van Iderstine. Try a lavender tip across all your nails, or mix and match shades to create an ombre pastel rainbow tip.

From soft neutrals to detailed micro florals, Olive & Junes pressies have something for every mani mood. This season were excited to wear some really intricate, delicate nail art looks, explains Van Iderstine of the new styles dropping for spring. But dont worry you dont have to DIY them yourself!

At Refinery29, were here to help you navigate this overwhelming world of stuff. All of our market picks are independently selected and curated by the editorial team. All product details reflect the price and availability at the time of publication. If you buy or click on something we link to on our site, Refinery29 may earn commission.

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Olive & Junes Spring Collection Is A Tea Party For Your Nails - Yahoo Life

Dudley’s Mayor to host jubilee tea party in honour of the Queen – Stourbridge News

DUDLEY people turning 70 are invited to a special jubilee afternoon tea party with the Mayor of Dudley in honour of the Queen.

The event on Wednesday May 25 at Dudley Town Hall is open to residents celebrating their 70th birthday between February 6 and June 2.

The Mayor of Dudley, Councillor Anne Millward, said: Its a privilege to be serving as Mayor during the Queens jubilee year and we thought hosting a tea party for people turning 70 during the 70th year of her reign would be a fitting tribute.

Tickets are on a first come, first served basis so I would urge people to get theirs while they still can.

Places are for two tickets (one plus guest). Tickets must be reserved in advance.

The tea party is among a host of activities the council is organising to celebrate the jubilee.

To request tickets for the event or to find out more about the boroughs jubilee activities visit website mayorofdudley.org.uk/jubilee.

Other events taking place include a tree planting event on Friday March 11, one of a number of planting events as part of the Queens Green Canopy activities, the lighting of a beacon at Dudley Castle on June 2 and the waiving of fees for road closures for streets hosting street parties.

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Dudley's Mayor to host jubilee tea party in honour of the Queen - Stourbridge News

Why aren’t Republicans worried their fanatical culture war will hurt them in the midterms? – Salon

Ten years ago the Democratic Party faced dire election prospects, similar to those it faces today, with widespread disappointment in the economic recovery and too much complacency among Democratic voters and a fired-up right wing opposition. Barack Obama's re-election may look like a foregone conclusion in the rear-view mirror, but it very much was not. As the New York Times noted at the time, Obama had to overcome "powerful economic headwinds, a lock-step resistance to his agenda by Republicans in Congress and an unprecedented torrent of advertising." In what was perhaps a bigger surprise, Democrats managed to overcome those forces to gain two seats in the Senate, even as Republicans held control of the House.

Blame the Tea Party. That far-right movement was focused not only on pushing Democrats out of office, but also on seizing control of the GOP. On that front, they had considerable success. But as the 2012 election demonstrated, it came at times at great cost, as radical-right candidates who performed well in primaries often faltered on the main stage. The most notorious case is that of Todd Akin, the Republican who lost a Missouri Senate race to Democrat Claire McCaskill after claiming that no rape victim needed an abortion, because, "If it's a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down."To those who followed the religious right's rhetoric, the comment came as no surprise that's pretty mucha standard belief in the anti-choice movement that dominates the Republican Party. But for ordinary voters who don't follow politics closely, it was a shocking wake-up call that led to Akin's loss.

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In the decade since, however, Republicans haven't moderated on these issues at all. On the contrary, the strategy in 2022 seems to be to go all-out on pushing a radical religious right agenda. The examples just from recent weeks are overwhelming.

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In Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxtonissued a directive that parents who support trans children should be investigated for child abuse, even though that means doctors are supposed to report parents for taking the best medical advice.

In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis is supporting a billthat would allow parents to sue teachers who acknowledge the existence of LGBTQ people, even in small ways such as allowing kids of same-sex parents to talk about their families during "show and tell."Florida Sen. Rick Scott releasedan 11-point GOP plan for America that states heterosexual marriage is "God's design for humanity," which isn't just an insult to LGBTQ Americans but the nearly 50% of all adults who aren't married. Florida Republicans also invited legislative testimonyfrom an anti-choice activist who argued against legal birth control, claiming, "The contraceptive mentality is what fuels the bloodthirsty abortion industry."

In Michigan, all three GOP candidates for attorney general affirmed support for a state's "right" to criminalize access to birth control. In the same state, Republican gubernatorial candidateGarrett Soldano said rape victims should not be allowed abortions, but instead should be told to be happy because, "God put them in this moment" and that we should "protect that DNA" instead.

And in Ohio, the frontrunner for the GOP senate primary, Josh Mandel, has been declaring that the separation of church and state is a "myth." (The phrasecomes directly from Thomas Jefferson himself.)

RELATED:Democrats can win the culture wars but they have to take on the fight early and often

What is remarkable is how none of these fools seem worried about these outrageous views coming back to haunt them in a general election, as they did for Akin. These aren't politicians from deep red states, after all. Florida, Michigan and Ohio all are swing states, as Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio, both Democrats, can attest. Even Texas, which has been controlled by Republicans for decades, isn't a sure bet. Abbott's opponent in the general election will be former congressman Beto O'Rourke, who got within a couple of points of beating Sen. Ted Cruz in the 2018 midterms. That was before the disastrous statewide blackouts and massive COVID-19 debacle that happened on the GOP watch.

Republicans aren't worried, however, because they're likely counting on two things: The increasing nationalization of partisan politics and the fact that most voters just aren't paying enough attention to understand how far to the right the GOP has gone.

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On the former, the bet is quite simple: Voters are blaming Democrats for our currently bleak landscape, because a Democrat controls the White House. Republicans want to make the 2022 elections a referendum on President Joe Biden's supposed failures to end the pandemic or bring inflation under control, even though the former is wholly the fault of Republicans themselves for encouraging vaccine rejection and the latter is not something, say, re-electing a Republican governor of Texas will change in any way.Indeed, the laser-like focus on national politics is such that Paxton blew off a primary debatelast week in favor of attending theConservative Political Action Conference (CPAC).

On the latter, well, Republicans have a good reason to believe those moderate and swing voters they need to win will never find out about their extreme statements and actions. As political scientistsYanna KrupnikovandJohn Barry Ryanargued in the New York Times in 2020, "most Americans upward of 80 percent to 85 percent follow politics casually or not at all." They will never hear about Republicans pushing to allow birth control to be criminalized, or Republican candidates calling rape-caused pregnancy a gift. So conservatives can happily play up far right bona fides to their rabid base, content in the belief that the majority of voters will never know how terrible they are.

RELATED:First, the book-banners came for CRT and LGBTQ. Now they're censoring women's history

We saw how this worked in the Virginia gubernatorial election, where Republican Glenn Youngkin was able to win with a two-pronged strategy. For the deeply invested right wing base, his message was pure MAGA, which successfully turned out the hardcore Republican vote. For the rest of the public, however, he hid behind a demeanor of normalcy that lulled Democratic voters into feeling it would be safe not to vote and allowed moderates to believe he's not one of Those Republicans. Now Youngkin has gone all-out on a far-right agenda of defunding essential programs and banning books. His approval ratings are already underwater, which is rare this soon after an election. Virginia voters apparently are surprised at how conservative Youngkin is, even though even a cursory examination of his past would have revealed that fact. But most people simply don't pay enough attention, until it's too late.

The situation is incredibly dire now, as there's been a dramatic decline in the public's interest in the news and politics in the past year. As Axios reports, just 34% of Democratic voters report paying a "great deal of attention to national news in 2021, compared to 69% in November 2020." Independent voters have also tuned out dramatically. Republican interest, however, has barely dropped off at all, relative to these numbers. Republicans are counting on the people who would be alarmed at their extremism not paying enough attention to notice.

The situation isn't impossible, however. The reason why Akin's comments about "legitimate rape" actually hurt him in the general election is that Democrats went after him hard and made sure the public heard about it. And not just in Missouri, either. High profile Democrats, including Obama himself, made a point of rebuking Akin by declaring "rape is rape" frequently. They nationalized the debate over whether or not some rape victims are "legitimate" and in doing so put Akin's offensive views on the radar of less-engaged voters.

RELATED:Republicans pick Putin over democracy and Rick Scott's creepy blueprint for America shows why

Democrats need to Akin-ize the Republicans by making a spectacle of the grotesque, sadistic, far-right views their opponents are touting. It shouldn't be hard. Republicans aren't exactly hiding what they believe. They flat-out banned abortion in Texas!They are running a nationwide campaign to ban books, something more than 85% of voters oppose. They're coming for birth control and want to shape the law to make heterosexual marriage compulsory. People hate this crap and will vote against it if they know about it.

Unfortunately, President Joe Biden's State of the Union speech Tuesday night largely focused on a laundry list of important-but-boring policy priorities. It's a troubling indicator that Democrats have not learned their lesson. While Biden did defend trans rights, he skated over abortion rights and ignored the red-hot book banning issue. Democratic policies may be popular, but this snooze-fest approach is simply not enough to penetrate the wall of ignorance surrounding most voters. Democrats need to give people something to vote against.

Biden seems to get it on the issue of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, where he nodded towardsthe unpopular pro-Putin viewsespoused by Donald Trump and Tucker Carlson. Baiting Republicans into showing who they really are is smart politics. But Biden and the Democrats so far seem reluctant to go for it on all the culture war issues that have a chance of actually waking voters up. If they don't start taking the fight to Republicans, November really will be an ass-whupping.

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Why aren't Republicans worried their fanatical culture war will hurt them in the midterms? - Salon