Reinhold Oberlercher

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Reinhold Oberlercher (born June 17, 1943 in Dresden ) is a former activist of the Socialist German Student Union (SDS) and later right-wing extremist thought leader who sees himself as a "national Marxist". With his various concepts of the Reich, including those from 1999, he became an early source of inspiration for the Reich Citizens' Movement .

Life

According to his own information, Oberlercher attended various primary schools in Saxony and Thuringia from 1949 to 1957 . In 1958 he moved to Hamburg , where he attended high school until 1960. He dropped out of school and finished school in 1965.

From 1965 to 1971 he first studied psychology , later sociology and finally education and philosophy at the University of Hamburg . During this time, he said he was involved in the Socialist German Student Union (SDS). Der Spiegel called him Hamburg's Dutschke: the education student Reinhold Oberlercher, 24, member of the Socialist German Student Union (SDS) and, like his Berlin role model, a refugee from the GDR.

From 1969 to 1975 he headed a working group on the formalization of Karl Marx's capital . He finished his studies in the spring of 1971 with a treatise on the didactics of political economy . Oberlercher was editor of the journal Theory and Class from 1971 to 1975 . Scientific criticism sheets .

From April 1973 Oberlercher received a doctoral scholarship. In 1975, he was with a thesis on theories of the work force in the recent history of educational and philosophical thought Dr. phil. PhD. In the following years he worked, among other things, briefly as a lecturer at the University of Hamburg and increasingly wrote articles, first in various right-wing conservative and finally in clearly right-wing extremist publications.

From the late 1980s he was active in right-wing extremist circles. With his colleagues Horst Mahler and Uwe Meenen at the end of the 1990s as a German College .

Horst Mahler and Reinhold Oberlercher, together with their renegade colleague Günter Maschke, published a "Canonical Declaration on the 1968 Movement " on December 24, 1998 on the website of the German College and in the right-wing extremist magazine Staatsbriefe 1/1999 give a national revolutionary interpretation. They asserted that the movement of 1968 stood up neither for communism nor for capitalism, neither for third-worldly nor Eastern nor for Western concepts and power interests, but "solely for the right of every people to national revolutionary and social revolutionary self-liberation" .

In 2004 Mahler, Meenen and Oberlercher were jointly accused in Berlin of calling for violence and arbitrary measures against minorities. But already after the first trial date, for strategic reasons as well as for procedural reasons, the split occurred. Meenen at that time still in Würzburg and Oberlercher, as always in Hamburg, did not want to travel to Berlin for every trial date, when Horst Mahler's strategy consisted, among other things, of dragging out the trial as a defendant as long as possible and attending endless lectures to hold anti-Semitic quotations from Martin Luther to Karl Marx.

His works include The Modern Society. A system of social sciences (Bern, 1987) and doctrine of community (Berlin, 1994; Czech translation, Prague , 2000), in which he openly positions himself against the Enlightenment, rationalism, democracy and human rights. He deals with the dialectics of community and society. In 1993 issue 1 of the right-wing extremist magazine Staatsbriefe , a hundred-day program of the national emergency government , written by Oberlercher, was published, in which concrete steps for the “national camp” in the event of a seizure of power were proposed (pp. 7-10). The following points were listed, among other things: a ban on hiring foreign and alien workers , the shooting of drug owners , a ban on the ideology of humanity , a ban on pacifism and the restoration of the German Reich .

Oberlercher's distinction between a “mediocre conception of capital”, which for him is “technical-historical and settled-producing” or “German-Germanic”, and “objective conception of capital”, which he describes as “extra-historical and extractive-nomadic” or “American- “Jewish”, evaluates Fabian Virchow as a reproduction of the classic anti-Semitic differentiation between “creating” and “collecting capital”.

Oberlercher is considered to be the "inventor" of the "word-taking strategy" with which nationalists everywhere, as a prelude to a future "seizure of power strategy" and analogous to the "uncertainty strategy" of the 1968 movement, are supposed to highlight topics in public and occupy them provocatively.

In 2004 Oberlercher was on trial with Horst Mahler and Uwe Meenen on charges of sedition . Horst Mahler had submitted to the court, among other things, that the accused did not accept the court because it had no jurisdiction over them as “Reich citizens”, because the Federal Republic of Germany did not exist as a subject under international law. The German College , led by Oberlercher and Meenen, was counted among the "best-known representatives of the German Reich idea" in the 2006 report of the Federal State of Hamburg for the protection of the constitution. Oberlercher is listed separately in 2012 in a publication by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution on "Right-wing extremists, ' Reichsbürger ' and 'Reichsregierungen'" under the title How right-wing extremists try to make a disc out of the earth . As a result, he stands for the connection of the “Reich governments” to the “right-wing extremist milieu”. The State Center for Civic Education Brandenburg lists Oberlercher in 2016 in an online lexicon of political terms with the keyword "Reich Citizen" as an example of a "right-wing extremist Reich Citizen".

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Wolfgang Kraushaar : Sixty-eight. A balance sheet. Propylaea, Berlin 2008, ISBN 978-3-549-07334-6 , p. 50.
  2. cf. Andreas Speit (ed.): Reich Citizens. The underestimated danger . Ch. Links Verlag, Berlin 2017.
  3. The flag - blow!
  4. ^ Court hearing How Hamburg's "Rudi Dutschke" became a citizen of the Reich By Alisa Pflug, Hamburger Morgenpost , July 24, 2018.
  5. ↑ Got mad . In: Der Spiegel . No. 52 , 1967 ( online ).
  6. Archive link ( Memento of the original from November 24, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.reich4.de
  7. ^ Yearbook Extremism & Democracy. Volume 22, Bouvier Verlag 2010, p. 247.
  8. Horst Mahler, Günter Maschke, Reinhold Oberlercher: "Canonical Declaration on the Movement of 1968". In: State letters. 1/1999, p. 16; The quote was published in at least three secondary sources, here Klaus Biesenbach: To the idea of ​​terror. Volume 2 of On the Presentation of Terror: The RAF Exhibition. Steidl Verlag 2005, p. 135.
  9. Reichsbürger: The Underestimated Danger Andreas Speit Ch. Links Verlag , 04.10.2017 - 215 pages
  10. Fabian Virchow: Against civilism. International relations and the military in the political conceptions of the extreme right. Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, Wiesbaden 2006, p. 173
  11. See web link Klaus Parker.
  12. State Office for the Protection of the Constitution Hamburg p. 194.
  13. State Office for the Protection of the Constitution Brandenburg April 12, 2012
  14. Reichsbürger, Die. In: Politik-bildung-brandenburg.de. Retrieved January 8, 2017 .