German study community

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The German Study Association (DSG) based in Leonberg was founded in August 2000 by well-known right-wing extremists . According to the Baden-Württemberg Office for the Protection of the Constitution , it is one of the right-wing extremist circles whose aim is to provide the scene on a broad front with the most uniform and intellectual equipment possible in terms of ideological-theoretical basic equipment. It has set itself the goal of "examining political problems through mutual information and joint studies, drawing conclusions about the content and supporting the opinion-forming process."

Leadership group of the German study community

The DSG represent:

Activities and self-image

The DSG issues resolutions again and again . They often turn against immigration to Germany, which they see as infiltration of the German people ("Immigration is land grabbing and can cause unrest and civil war in the long term", from the resolution "Population policy. Demographic change and immigration", adopted at the Eisenach conference in October 2002). The DSG stands up for the “biological-ethnic population” of the “German people”, which it sees as being endangered by immigration and demographic findings: In 2004 the “German Study Community” (DSG) published the appeal “The identity of the German people ":

“The German people are seriously threatened in terms of their biological-ethnic existence and their cultural identity . Resolving this threat is a responsibility of every German. [...] Despite timely warnings by population scientists, a population policy that safeguards the German people has not been implemented for over thirty years. The attempt to replace the missing Germans with another immigration of people from completely foreign cultures is not a solution. On the contrary: such immigration accelerates the dissolution of the German people and is therefore to be rejected. This dangerous threat requires an immediate turnaround […] The restoration of healthy family structures is an essential prerequisite. The unchangeable provision of the Basic Law, according to which "marriage and the family ... are to be placed under the special protection of the state order", does not allow a softening in favor of unlife-defying communities. [...] The most densely populated Germany must not be a country of immigration for ecological, economic and cultural reasons. In particular, immigration from outside the EU must be prevented [...] "

The undersigned as editors of this appeal were: Felix Buck, Albrecht Jebens, Rolf Kosiek, Uwe Rheingans, Günter Poser, Edmund Sawall, Walter Staffa (German Study Group DSG).

The DSG describes itself as “a non-partisan initiative by independent personalities”.

The Baden-Württemberg Ministry of the Interior announced in 2002 that leaflets had been distributed at events of the right-wing extremist scene. The Baden-Württemberg Office for the Protection of the Constitution published that the DSG operates a website on which it posts texts that also deal with typical right-wing extremist topics. To provide information to those interested who do not have internet access, the DSG publishes the "Series of publications of the German Study Community" and a booklet entitled "Information Service of the German Study Community (DSG)".

Environment and networking

The “German Study Community” maintains close ties with the right-wing extremist “ Society for Free Journalism ”. “The who's who of German right-wing extremism meets in both organizations”. The DSG wants - as it says - to make a contribution to a "contrast program to the daily indoctrination of a ' politically correct ' thinking that corresponds to the zeitgeist, but which has an effect that destroys its substance and future". In addition to well-known right-wing extremists, the DSG executive committee also includes former NPD top officials. The German political theses of the DSG were not only disseminated by the study group itself, but also by Thomas Niggl OSB , an old abbot of the Weltenburg monastery belonging to the Engelwerk , in a journal of the Catholic Scouting Society of Europe .

Similarity of names

An older "German-European Study Society" DESG with its Young Forum series belongs to the same camp.

swell

  1. a b c Application by Abg. Stephan Braun et al. SPD and statement by the Ministry of the Interior: Right-wing extremist associations, organizations and parties in Baden-Württemberg ( Memento of the original from October 26, 2007 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. (pdf; 26 kB), printed matter 13/1171 from July 11, 2002.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.landtag-bw.de
  2. ^ Franziska Hundseder : Right Kaderschmiede. The time of April 10, 1987
  3. Anna Hunger: Good in German. Context: weekly newspaper of October 17, 2012
  4. ^ Stephan Braun, Daniel Hoersch (editor): Right networks - a danger. Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften 2004. ISBN 9783810041531 , on Google Books
  5. ^ Anton Maegerle / Stephan Braun: Albrecht Jebens. A "jack of all trades" . In: Stephan Braun / Daniel Hörsch (eds.): Right networks - a danger . Wiesbaden 2004, p. 108f.
  6. Quoted from Anton Maegerle / Stephan Braun: Albrecht Jebens. A "jack of all trades" . In: Stephan Braun / Daniel Hörsch (eds.): Right networks - a danger . Wiesbaden 2004, p. 109.
  7. ^ Theory and strategy formation in German right-wing extremism ( Memento from January 13, 2006 in the Internet Archive )
  8. ^ Anton Maegerle / Stephan Braun: Albrecht Jebens. A "jack of all trades" . In: Stephan Braun / Daniel Hörsch (eds.): Right networks - a danger . Wiesbaden 2004, p. 108, as well as "Glossary right-wing extremism" from the "Federal Agency for Civic Education", see: http://www.bpb.de/themen/CNCDW9,17,0,Glossar.html#art17
  9. ^ Glossary of right-wing extremism from the Federal Agency for Civic Education
  10. Heiner Boberski : The angel work . Otto Müller Verlag, Salzburg 1993, p. 235
  11. Catholic Fundamentalism: Scouts on the wrong track. (PDF; 82 kB) ARD Monitor (July 22, 2004), archived from the original on September 8, 2012 ; Retrieved September 23, 2009 .
  12. Thomas Niggl: Germany's future. In: Pathfinder of Mary, 2nd quarter 2003, p. 3 f
  13. ^ German study community: Confession to the German people. ( Memento of December 10, 2004 in the Internet Archive )
  14. on the DESG in detail: online : people, other organizations, theories, publications

Web link

Former website of the DSG ( Memento of July 8, 2006 in the Internet Archive ) in the Internet Archive