Thank you guys for the great talk about a very sensitive topic. Keep up the good work. All the best. Also, the whole setup looks so professional. I thought the channel has like million subscribers, that is how good the quality of the podcast is, the editing, the video quality all top notch.
Also jetzt mal ganz entspannt: Wenn Jemand exotisch aussieht und Thomas heißt und fliessend deutsch spricht, wird er in 1 von 10 Fällen vielleicht nach seiner Herkunft gefragt. Wenn aber Jemand exotisch aussieht und Salim heißt, sind 9 von 10 Menschen einfach am Gegenüber interessiert und wollen gern den Namen einer Kultur, einem Land oder sonst was zuordnen und mehr erfahren. Interesse am Gegenüber ist primär erstmal etwas positives.
Nee sry, ich sehe exotisch aus und spreche akzentfrei Deutsch. Werde immer noch nicht als wirklich Deutsch angesehen. Mich stört das nicht, aber kann Menschen verstehen, denen das stört.
Nein. Überhaupt nicht. Interesse an sich wäre gut, wäre Sie nicht ummantelt in diesem rassistischem Stigma. Es wäre viel reflektierter, wenn man fragen würde wo die Wurzeln seines gegenüber liegen, weil man mit der Frage "Woher kommst du?" die Indentität des womöglich deutschen Salims in Frage stellt. Das ist so wie wenn Thomas Salim ein grundsätzlich positives Kompliment gibt "Wow Salim, du kannst aber gut Deutsch!" Die unterschwellige Botschaft im Kompliment ist dass Thomas impliziert bzw. nicht erwartet hat dass Salim villeicht Deutscher ist. Also ist es ein Kompliment mit einem rassistischem Unterton Darüber hinaus: Wie sieht denn jemand exotisches aus?. Ist Deutschland kein Einwanderungsland? Ist immernoch diese altertürmliche Weltansicht eines blonden und blauäugigen Ariers so weit vebreitet?
I'm a half-black Californian in Berlin, and I lived 10 years in Russia. I got asked all the time "Where am I really from?" At first I'd answer "Third-generation Californian," but then I learned what they meant, and I'd answer with a quick synopsis of my background. But what I learned in Berlin is that NOT EVERYBODY IS PROUD OF THEIR FAMILY HISTORY. I've met several people with white mothers and dark-skinned fathers who have poor relations with their fathers, and they don't want to be reminded of him. So I've given up asking my fellow dark-skinned people here about their ethnic origins (which I often do because I probably speak a couple of words of their language), but I do still ask East Europeans (although the war has made Russians cautious). People just need to chill. Too many young people today are looking for an excuse to be offended. We need to turn down the tension.
So Idk you but it not being about sensitive but that about being hurt. Look for example me I lived my entier life in Germany. I was born here and as a child it did hurt that alot of people ask were I'm really from. Its like people cant seem to understand that some part of society are not white but still identify more with germany than there ethnic backround bc they live here since birth. I think most people dont have a problem if being ask nicely about their ancestors or family backround.
@@sunshinehappymoarainbow9186 Have you traveled much? As you are growing up in a place, it is your whole universe, and and anything that makes you different is fuel for teasing. When you live abroad, you discover that poking people who are different is just human nature. For 99.99% of human history we lived our entire lives surrounded by people ethnically and religiously just like us. We still have bouts of pogroms, with Hutus and Tutsis--practically the same people--killing each other. It's a miracle that today we all get along so well. Countries fall on an immigration spectrum, from the US and Australia on one extreme to Korea, Japan, and most African countries near the end of the other. If you move to a traditional country, you will be noticed. If you have children there, they will be noticed. And it's sometimes tough on kids, until they get old enough to understand it.
Your name is Selim and you live in Germany. And somebody asks "Where are you from?". RACISM. I think people are starting to realise how annoying people like this are.
Austrian Psychologist Sigmund Freud said about germans: they are not tolerant towards the enemies of tolerance and they are not loving to hateful people. Vice Versa this means: when you are positive and open they will treat you positive and open minded.
@@Team_Fauda_Germany nice to know about it. I am mostly positive, but just in case, I think you should be mentally prepared. Also there are few bad apples in every country
@@ayushvikhe7294 exactly, when i worked in the US there were always people trying to trigger me by bringing germans in context with Nazis - as it is stereotyped in so many Hollywood movies
The center party (CDU) was a lot more extreme in their language 40 years ago than the AfD is now. The only thing that has shifted is the overton-window. And it has shifted very far left. As a child of Albanian immigrants I can safely say that AfD positions are nowhere near Nazi positions. The use of the term "Nazi" is grossly inflated to include center right positions. This guy sounds like a left wing extremist. Reducing uncontrolled immigration has nothing to do with national socialism. That comparison is just absurd.
and yes, you're a neutralised German ! You have a German passport, and your family immigrated there, BUT you have different roots, you're not ethnically German, and nothing is racist about it, If I got the German passport, I will never start saying I am "German "! I will always say Ï am "German - Libyan "!
i'm not german , i'm limey, but i fit perfectly cause i'm an arschloch, i fit perfectly, sometimes i speak with a caveman accent, they get "uh! diese arsch kommt aus einer cave".
Thank you guys for the great talk!
Thank you guys for the great talk about a very sensitive topic. Keep up the good work. All the best.
Also, the whole setup looks so professional. I thought the channel has like million subscribers, that is how good the quality of the podcast is, the editing, the video quality all top notch.
Also jetzt mal ganz entspannt: Wenn Jemand exotisch aussieht und Thomas heißt und fliessend deutsch spricht, wird er in 1 von 10 Fällen vielleicht nach seiner Herkunft gefragt. Wenn aber Jemand exotisch aussieht und Salim heißt, sind 9 von 10 Menschen einfach am Gegenüber interessiert und wollen gern den Namen einer Kultur, einem Land oder sonst was zuordnen und mehr erfahren. Interesse am Gegenüber ist primär erstmal etwas positives.
Nee sry, ich sehe exotisch aus und spreche akzentfrei Deutsch. Werde immer noch nicht als wirklich Deutsch angesehen.
Mich stört das nicht, aber kann Menschen verstehen, denen das stört.
Nein. Überhaupt nicht.
Interesse an sich wäre gut, wäre Sie nicht ummantelt in diesem rassistischem Stigma.
Es wäre viel reflektierter, wenn man fragen würde wo die Wurzeln seines gegenüber liegen, weil man mit der Frage "Woher kommst du?" die Indentität des womöglich deutschen Salims in Frage stellt.
Das ist so wie wenn
Thomas Salim ein grundsätzlich positives Kompliment gibt
"Wow Salim, du kannst aber gut Deutsch!"
Die unterschwellige Botschaft im Kompliment ist dass Thomas impliziert bzw. nicht erwartet hat dass Salim villeicht Deutscher ist.
Also ist es ein Kompliment mit einem rassistischem Unterton
Darüber hinaus: Wie sieht denn jemand exotisches aus?. Ist Deutschland kein Einwanderungsland?
Ist immernoch diese altertürmliche Weltansicht eines blonden und blauäugigen Ariers so weit vebreitet?
I'm a half-black Californian in Berlin, and I lived 10 years in Russia. I got asked all the time "Where am I really from?" At first I'd answer "Third-generation Californian," but then I learned what they meant, and I'd answer with a quick synopsis of my background. But what I learned in Berlin is that NOT EVERYBODY IS PROUD OF THEIR FAMILY HISTORY. I've met several people with white mothers and dark-skinned fathers who have poor relations with their fathers, and they don't want to be reminded of him. So I've given up asking my fellow dark-skinned people here about their ethnic origins (which I often do because I probably speak a couple of words of their language), but I do still ask East Europeans (although the war has made Russians cautious). People just need to chill. Too many young people today are looking for an excuse to be offended. We need to turn down the tension.
So Idk you but it not being about sensitive but that about being hurt. Look for example me I lived my entier life in Germany. I was born here and as a child it did hurt that alot of people ask were I'm really from. Its like people cant seem to understand that some part of society are not white but still identify more with germany than there ethnic backround bc they live here since birth. I think most people dont have a problem if being ask nicely about their ancestors or family backround.
@@sunshinehappymoarainbow9186 Does it hurt snowflake ?
@@sunshinehappymoarainbow9186 Have you traveled much? As you are growing up in a place, it is your whole universe, and and anything that makes you different is fuel for teasing. When you live abroad, you discover that poking people who are different is just human nature. For 99.99% of human history we lived our entire lives surrounded by people ethnically and religiously just like us. We still have bouts of pogroms, with Hutus and Tutsis--practically the same people--killing each other. It's a miracle that today we all get along so well.
Countries fall on an immigration spectrum, from the US and Australia on one extreme to Korea, Japan, and most African countries near the end of the other. If you move to a traditional country, you will be noticed. If you have children there, they will be noticed. And it's sometimes tough on kids, until they get old enough to understand it.
Your name is Selim and you live in Germany. And somebody asks "Where are you from?". RACISM. I think people are starting to realise how annoying people like this are.
I am coming to Germany next month. I am mentally prepared to face racism, I just hope it doesn't come in between job opportunities
You’re gonna make 💪
@@GutenTagThePodcast thanks
Austrian Psychologist Sigmund Freud said about germans: they are not tolerant towards the enemies of tolerance and they are not loving to hateful people. Vice Versa this means: when you are positive and open they will treat you positive and open minded.
@@Team_Fauda_Germany nice to know about it. I am mostly positive, but just in case, I think you should be mentally prepared. Also there are few bad apples in every country
@@ayushvikhe7294 exactly, when i worked in the US there were always people trying to trigger me by bringing germans in context with Nazis - as it is stereotyped in so many Hollywood movies
The center party (CDU) was a lot more extreme in their language 40 years ago than the AfD is now. The only thing that has shifted is the overton-window. And it has shifted very far left. As a child of Albanian immigrants I can safely say that AfD positions are nowhere near Nazi positions. The use of the term "Nazi" is grossly inflated to include center right positions. This guy sounds like a left wing extremist. Reducing uncontrolled immigration has nothing to do with national socialism. That comparison is just absurd.
Exactly. And this line of thinking is exactly why I’m voting for Trump. The left is insane
My question: If I called Selim a typical German guy, would he be offended?
😢 "I am a Rapper" offended of not been read as German.
this is why i would never take a german passport ..its so shaming, to take that ..
and yes, you're a neutralised German ! You have a German passport, and your family immigrated there, BUT you have different roots, you're not ethnically German, and nothing is racist about it, If I got the German passport, I will never start saying I am "German "! I will always say Ï am "German - Libyan "!
what a bs
Time for whoever cant ne German, to leave.
The nazi party 😂😂😂😂
stopped watching right there. If someone complains about how someone else uses framing to shape perception - I'm complaining about him. BTW: fuck AfD
i'm not german , i'm limey, but i fit perfectly cause i'm an arschloch, i fit perfectly, sometimes i speak with a caveman accent, they get "uh! diese arsch kommt aus einer cave".