Alexander Ernst, a former German business owner and information engineer, participates in an interview with Epoch Times at Marienplatz in Munich, Germany, on March 13, 2021. Alexander Ernst, a former German business owner and information engineer, participates in an interview at a protest against the government’s blockade of the Chinese Communist Party virus at Marienplatz in Munich, Germany, March 13, 2021.
“I can understand people’s fear of the (Chinese Communist) virus, but I’m worried about the loss of freedom.” Alexander K. Central told the Epoch Times that what he wants to say most to people is, “Take to the streets and fight back. If we do that, this will all be over soon.”
Alexander Ernst (D-N.Y.), a member of the National Assembly, said he would like to tell people to “take to the streets and fight back. Alexander Ernst’s words came during an interview with The Epoch Times on March 13, 2021, at Marienplatz Square in Munich, Germany, where he participated in a protest against the government’s viral blockade against the Chinese Communist Party. On that day, similar events were held simultaneously in the capitals of all 16 German states.
On March 13, 2021, people took part in a protest against the government’s blockade against the Chinese Communist virus at Marienplatz in Munich, Germany. People chant “freedom, peace, democracy.
In the current upsurge of opposition to the government’s blockade policy against the Chinese Communist Party virus in Germany, most of the German people this reporter met were from the German middle class, many of whom have their own businesses, and their businesses and jobs have been affected in one way or another at a Time when the Chinese Communist Party virus is sweeping through Europe. Some of them, whose businesses or jobs have not yet been affected, have come out of their homes to join the struggle out of concern for the current state of freedom and democracy in Germany. Centralst is one of them.
Stock rises due to the Epidemic to help those in need
Mr. Centralst, an information engineer and business owner, had sold his company before the Communist virus hit. The reason was, “because the business was growing too fast, considering that employees could have better working conditions in a big company, for the sake of employee job security, while the buyer offered very generous terms at the time.”
After selling the company, Mr. Yonster, who was on sabbatical, did not suffer financially from the economic hardship caused by the spread of the Communist virus. “So I’ve had a lot of time to read a lot of books since last April.”
Mr. Centralst feels fortunate at the moment that he does not need to apply for a government payment for the related damage to the CCP virus, however, he is also concerned about where the money will come from in the future, as the German government is currently doing. “After all, all the money is now printed and produced.” He said he has a lot of shares, “I have to say I am a profiteer and my shares rose very well during the crisis of the New Crown virus (CCP virus).”
“Because of that, I gave a lot of money to people who were not doing well. I also invested a lot of money in demonstrations and resistance movements.” Centralst said, “There is a ‘private property obligation’ in the Basic Law that says to keep your house clean, you have to clean the street in front of your house. Or, if you own a forest, you have to maintain that forest and not let that forest rot. For that reason, this law came into being.”
“I think it’s also time for Germans to understand that the law of private property obligation, whoever owns property now has to use it to protect this country from dictatorship.” Centralst said.
Transparency in government practices dictatorship is important
“For four months, I haven’t been able to dine at a restaurant once. Now for the second time, I can’t celebrate my birthday properly with my friends. I can no longer see people’s faces when I go shopping, everyone keeps their distance and it feels strange to be present.” Centralst said.
The current measures taken by the German government against the Chinese Communist virus are “definitely wrong” in Mr. Hengst’s opinion, “not only wrong, but the whole approach is wrong.” He said, “No expert opinion was taken, only the opinion of three or five experts. Even at the Robert-Koch-Institute, a government agency, there are a number of people who favor completely different measures or no measures at all, or only measures that specifically protect the elderly, rather than what is being done. In my opinion, what the (government) is doing now has nothing to do with health protection.”
Mr. Hengst feels that the German government’s approach to the measures taken against the Chinese Communist virus is “very authoritarian”: “I am an information engineer and I have observed how surveillance is progressing everywhere. Parliament has forced a law through, and the first five pages of the law that was just passed are all about the New Coronavirus (the Chinese Communist virus), but the people don’t even know about it. Our country is striding closer to being a surveillance state like China.”
“I’m not against high technology and think 5G is a great thing. It’s getting clearer now that 5G networks are getting tighter, and with that, the location and surveillance of people is getting more and more obvious.” Centralst said, “I see cell phone apps with green or yellow or red signal signs, and that’s happening in Germany right now.”
Nevertheless, Mr. Yonster has faith in Germany, “I believe that the country can still be saved, that the state and the Basic Law can still work.” He believes that transparency is very important, “To steer things back in the right direction, transparency will make a very important contribution.”
“It means that there are too many things going on behind closed doors today.” He said, “People know, for example, that next Wednesday there will be certain who-knows-what ministers sitting there with experts who have made certain decisions, and by the evening you will learn in the news what was decided. But no one knows who made which argument and which government individual disseminated which decision.” He says transparency is first and foremost very crucial, “Once there is transparency, the new grassroots democratic structure in this country will automatically take effect.”
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