The armaments business of Mr. Gabriel and Co

At all costs, the German arms industry should benefit from the upgrade of the Saudi royal clique. Whether the Yemeni people are suffering from the Saudis war against Iran, the German political class is not interested, and the shareholders of the arms companies certainly not.

When the refugees from Yemen reach the German border, Seehofer, Dobrindt and Co. say Halt, we have already taken in 200 and Gabriel throws himself in the chest and his party is charitable or points out that we don't have enough mini-wages: Who should look after our old people, who keeps our front gardens in order and cleans the streets and there are no workers on the construction site and are not satisfied with black wages and the parcel deliverers are already protesting because they have to leave with a parcel delivery in the morning to deliver them need ten to twelve hours, while they only get eight hours of the minimum wage paid. The Bundestag also needs mini-wage earners with chain contracts. And the construction boom would collapse if the construction workers were successful with their wage demands. Schröder was right when he boasted that he had kept the coffers full in Germany thanks to the largest low-wage sector in Europe.

Mrs. Petry is outraged by such conditions and would prefer to defend the borders with the machine gun against refugees, after all she cares for blonde offspring herself. And Özdemir wants to export armaments only moderately, with the condition that they may not be used for military purposes. Almost the entire political class derives its profits from arms exports.

Although it is known that in this type of business always cash change hands. Blessed Franz-Josef preferred suitcases for the transport of banknotes and Scharping thought it was more clever to hire them and was equipped with suits from the men's outfitter.

For the Social Democrats, more serious is the political corruption, the serving of the propertied class: Look, we'll do it right, we can do it, not just the CDU. Martin Schulz has to deal with this burden, an almost impossible task.

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