Andrew Korybko
They’ve
been shared by the vast majority of humanity throughout history in their own
contexts
Germany’s domestic intelligence agency designated the AfD,
just topped a recent poll as
the country’s most popular party, as “extremist” before withdrawing it
pending litigation. This label would legitimize surveillance of them and can
set the pretext for banning them. Vice President JD Vance condemned this earlier move as equivalent to
building a new Berlin Wall while Secretary of State Marco Rubio called on
Germany to reverse its decision and also end its “dangerous open border
immigration policies”.
Lost amidst a lot of the debate over this controversial decision
is the basis upon which it was made:
“The party's prevailing understanding of the people based on ethnicity and
descent is incompatible with the free democratic basic order.” The AfD believes
that ethnic Germans have a special connection to their country due to their
shared culture and experiences, which non-ethnic German citizens lack,
especially those from civilizationally dissimilar societies across the Global
South who only recently arrived there.
These views actually aren’t extremist at all since they’ve been shared by the vast majority of humanity throughout history in their own contexts. In fact, they’re still popular in non-Western societies, the same places from which most of Germany’s non-ethnic-German population originates. From Africa to West Asia and the Indo-Pacific, most of these countries believe that original inhabitants have a special connection to their country, which can take several generations for newcomers’ descendants to share.
It’s only the radical liberal-globalist ideology espoused
by the Western elites that denies this special connection or pretends that it’s
always shared by all newcomers once they step onto foreign soil. To be clear,
acknowledging this special connection doesn’t imply that members of non-titular
nationalities who obtain another country’s citizenship don’t deserve any
rights, rather it’s meant as a safeguard of the titular nationality’s
socio-cultural rights. It’s here where the Russian example is instructive.
One of the constitutional amendments that entered into force
after 2020’s referendum stipulates that
“The state language of the Russian Federation throughout its territory is the
Russian language as the language of the state-forming people, part of the
multinational union of equal peoples of the Russian Federation.” It reaffirmed
the equality of all Russian citizens while emphasizing the role that ethnic
Russians and their language have historically played in forming their
cosmopolitan civilization-state.
Separately, legislation was passed mandating that
foreigners pass tests on Russian language, history, and legal basics in order
to obtain long-term permission to reside in Russia, let alone citizenship. This
is meant to mitigate the socio-cultural threat posed by those who refuse to
assimilate and integrate, which Patriarch Kirill drew attention to on three
occasions in 2023 and 2024 here, here, and here. He and Putin, however, also united
in condemning ethno-religious hate speech after
the Crocus terrorist attack.
What the Russian example shows is that a titular nationality’s
special connection to their country can be recognized without doing so at the
expense of other nationalities. The same goes for having policies for ensuring
that migrants assimilate and integrate. None of this is “extremist”; it’s
respectful, pragmatic, and sensible, which is why the AfD wants the same in
Germany. These views on nationality are the historical norm for humanity, not
the exception, which makes the liberal-globalists the real extremists.
Andrew Korybko, Substack, May 9, 2025
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