After months of largely cloudy weather and subzero temperatures, we've had a few glimpses of sunshine. Today it was warm enough, at around 6°C when I checked my phone, that the snow caps on parked cars have melted away. A wave of days up to over 10°C is impending. So I've felt encouraged to bed out the sprouted flower bulbs from our pantry in plastic pots with fresh soil, and put them into my south-facing window.
I've had my first week of the holiday career preparation course, which will largely be about Excel. Since I use spreadsheets and calendars a lot e.g. to track how expensive groceries are at different times of year, and want to round out the knowledge of spreadsheets from my last job for my c.v., it is interesting and rewarding. That said, I still feel battered from the semester itself, as well as the job search, budgeting, and the weight of international politics. The room where the Excel classes take place is also a little stifling, although the instructor airs it during the 15-minute break half-way through the 3.5 hour class. So perhaps it's not surprising that Tuesday through Thursday I routinely developed a migraine headache after the first hour or so, trotting home in faintly nauseated misery in the equally airless U-Bahn — except during the minutes where I walked between stations to get fresh air and exercise, and felt marginally better.
In Germany's national news: Our Chancellor recently claimed that we Germans of working age have been picking up part-time work as a 'lifestyle,' depriving our Nation of the good ol' 40-hour week that we should invest instead (unless we are caretakers for children). Statistically I think that Germany's job productivity is fairly high if one compares other EU countries, but 'mine not to question why' our dear CDU has decided that the German economy needs to kill our work-life balance, rather than make a concerted effort to remove bureaucratic hurdles or attract foreign skilled workers. Anyway, it's still being debated. There was some equally charming critique with which our Chancellor was trying to drill the delinquent German workforce into renewed Prussian virtue, but I've forgotten it.
The CDU is generally full of ideas lately. Their pension reform I haven't read about in detail, although the pitched battles between the CDU party proper and the CDU party youth organization sound dramatic.
The happiest development, at the same CDU party conference where these issues are being hashed out, was that Angela Merkel appeared for the first time since she stopped being Chancellor. My cold, pessimistic soul thawed a little when the Tagesschau showed her in the hall.
I'm wondering when the tide in Germany will turn in the direction of Spain's recent pragmatic acceptance when it comes to immigration. Given that the CDU has just decided (in the first days of the holy month of Ramadan) that they want to ban full-body veils, which I suspect are worn by such an infinitesimal percentage of Germany's population that this ban is even more of a mere racist dog-whistle than it would otherwise be, I'm guessing it will not turn yet.
And Merz's oscillation between firm criticism of wilder trans-Atlantic policy announcements, and wide-eyed Peter Pan insistence that the US federal government will grow fairy wings again if we clap our hands and believe, is also making me dizzy. To be fair, judging by the two dignitaries from Germany's business community who commented in the Tagesschau news on US tariffs today, he's not the only one oscillating in that fashion.
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Anyway, I become especially dogged, cynical and resentful about politics if I don't make little positive changes where possible, so I've been trying to nudge ahead my Detrumpification programme.
A main part is tech independence. A former colleague posted a website that lists online services based in the European Union that can be counterparts to US products. Disenchanted with Google's leadership and not eager to send my data into the claws of the Mar a Lago regime, I've been trying out the French video platform Dailymotion instead of YouTube. So far, the content seems to be different, so a 1:1 comparison is impossible. But news organizations like Deutsche Welle do upload worthwhile reports and I am sure there is more to explore. Dailymotion's videos also offer an 'eco' setting, which is even easier than checking for low-resolution 144 or 240 pixel settings; I usually do that so that I don't waste resources streaming high-resolution video that I don't need. ... Aside from video platforms: If I can figure out how the coding works, I'm planning to migrate my Wordpress blogging to Typo3.
In terms of other aspects of my programme, I've also found that Ms. Magazine's website is a motherlode of leftwing intellectual property. Almost every line of every article would probably make the current administration cringe, so I've been reading the articles regularly.
I also visit other US websites because they are doing good work: e.g. the New York Times, the New Yorker, and (admittedly) the YouTube presence of PBS NewsHour. The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, The Daily Show, and Jimmy Kimmel too, but late night comedy feels more like a Job's comfort than the press's reporting, and — despite their fact-checking — I think the shows' writers do get a few details wrong.
Besides I watched the recent livestream of Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's discussion at the Technical University here in Berlin. It was interesting — revealing, too, about German politics, even if Germany wasn't the focus. For what it's worth, I didn't watch video of AOC's panel from the World Economic Forum so I can't speak to how she 'did' there in terms of expertly answering foreign policy questions. Regardless, I've considered her clever and quick on her feet ever since she was first elected to Congress. And her point, made in Berlin, was valid: it is more important to discuss progressive politics in general, also as a way to expound future alternatives to the 47th President, than to speculate if she wants to be a progressive presidential candidate in particular.... Also, I was amused as the university president and the former Mayor of Berlin giggled their way through their introductory speeches — dedicated AOC fans.
My campaign to read Canadian books to support Canada's economy is progressing. I'm reading an audiobook memoir and a contemporary fiction ebook. As both books have a depressing subject matter, I'd say that watching episodes of the comedy show This Hour Has 22 Minutes (especially the one where the production travelled to Greenland and interviewed Greenlandic parliamentarians, the mayor of Nuuk, and other citizens) has been the happier choice.
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Lastly, not related to Detrumpification, but just to mention Berlin news: this evening the Berlinale film festival ended. I watched livestreams of film press conferences, but didn't take any photos this year.
In other news, the escalators at Berlin's main train station are operational again!