What did they say? Something in German I bet.
Basically just using sarcasm to show how ridiculous it is what she said.
So if I understand you correctly, making fun of women being sexually assaulted and raped by groups of foreign men is the correct response. If it was your girlfriend, wife, sister, daughter or mother would your opinion change?
You don't understand me correctly.
Making fun of what the mayor of cologne said, with the arms length and stuff, some of it is even covered in the BBC-article I believe.
If someone says something ridiculous, sarcasm is a better response than outrage imho.
Btw. a bit more about Merkel perhaps.
So the thing is, her party, the CDU, is the most right that is 'acceptable' in the main public's eyes. Everything that is more to the right is seen (and pretty much justifiable) as neo-nazi-parties. Some stupid idiots roaming around there.
So basically no matter how much to the left her policies were, her party did not change in the stances.
Which means that the people had no other acceptable choice but to still vote them if they wanted more right-wing policies.
Its actually an interesting dynamic too since they have a sister party in the CSU that is a tad more to the right, but on the national theatre both of them together form the Union.
So the CSU is a perfect instrument for her to cater to the people who want to vote reasonable right-wing, and also provides her with politicians to talk the right-wing talk and see what the public thinks. Not only on immigration, refugees, but also the EU and everything else.
And she can seamlessly dig into that or distance herself from that without any backlash on her. While using the CDU-politicians and even ministers from a coalition party for other issues in a similar way.
Impressive.
She knows how to play the game and has an iron grip on her party internally.
And for voters, she made herself alternativeless for large portions of the public while not being tangible on many issues at all.
But if, then she knows how to make a good move and conquer issues of other parties.
Like the nuclear thing, can you imagine such an extreme decision in any other big country with similar systems? She basically showed 20 middle-fingers to an industry and companies with a lot of pull, a big lobby and a lot of capital, that largely supported her and especially her party and coalition. She imposed her will on everyone, including her own party. She got balls man.
For other politicians that would have been their last decision in power. She comes out of it unscathed.
Whether I vote for her party or not, this woman - who seemingly lacks any charisma - and how she does it is very interesting to me. And should be to everyone following politics.
Interestingly though, recently a new party formed that is a little right of the CSU, and far right of Merkel, in the AfD. They have to walk a difficult line in not getting too far right though, but can potentially break into that dynamic and make her lose a significant amount of voters.
Furthermore, she constantly seeks to undermine and impose her will on the sovereign democracies of Western Europe through her hegemony of the European Union.
Now the machinations in the EU seem a bit inscrutable. And yeah, the system is fucked in a lot of ways, but we have to deal with how it is right now.
(beware, clear antagonist role, a bit played up)
And personally I do not find it wrong that we as Germans take a leading role since we by far are pumping the most money into it and are taking the most risks. Its just the way it goes.
A lot of the complaining is political banter as well.
I don't think we are taking an unreasonable approach at large, and if they don't want to deal with us, don't take our money, bitches.
Is it not correct that we bleed a lot for the EU? We pay the most, we have the largest roles in bailing out the countries, we take the most refugees, we do this, we do that, we take the most risks.
You can't just expect to take advantage of us all the time, and if we have demands ourselves you go back to the world-wars or complain that our economy is too strong.. Well tough shit.
Its not our fault that other countries failed to manage their economies well before and/or after the switch to the Euro, but we understand that the Euro makes it hard for some now, and we are willing to support. But unconditionally? Where does it stop then? We have to think of ourselves as well and what is reasonable to us. That is a normal process I think.