Nazi slogans: Expert on Sylt clip: Normalization of right-wing extremist content

Nazi slogans
Expert on Sylt clip: Normalization of right-wing extremist content

A short video clip is shared countless times on social media, young guests at a party chant racist slogans to a pop hit, a man makes a gesture that is reminiscent of the Hitler salute. Photo

© Georg Wendt/dpa

Young people shout racist slogans along to a party hit – a video of this sparks outrage. An expert on right-wing extremism explains what this does to those affected.

From the point of view of expert Pia Lamberty, the Sylt video with racist slogans shows a Normalization of right-wing extremist content in society. “Without any form of opposition, social norms are simply broken,” says the co-director of the Center for Monitoring, Analysis and Strategy (Cemas), which investigates radicalization tendencies and conspiracy theories on the Internet.

“People can express extreme slogans in public without hesitation.” The racist incident at Pentecost in a posh restaurant on Sylt has sparked outrage across the country. In the short video, which was shared on social media, young people chant “Foreigners out” and “Germany for the Germans” to the party hit “L’amour toujours” by Gigi D’Agostino. State security is investigating.

In recent months, there have been repeated incidents in which Nazi slogans have been shouted while the song is being played – for example in Bavaria and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. The song “L’amour toujours” is now increasingly associated with racist slogans, says Lamberty. “That does something to the brain.” In this way, right-wing extremists have managed to gain acceptance of such slogans in society at large.

Right-wing extremism is not a marginal phenomenon

For the Cemas expert, the case makes it clear: “Right-wing extremism is not only a problem that one sees in East Germany or among people who have a lower income, but also among higher classes.”

The main threat to those affected is the structural power that these people could potentially wield. The video shows: “Racism also comes from people who have studied at universities or are in management positions.” Right-wing extremism and racist attitudes are something that can be found throughout society.

In Lamberty’s view, those affected by racism could avoid places where racist statements are made without being challenged, as in the current case, in the long term.

dpa

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