International law, in its three-element doctrine, defines the state as the unity of territory, people and force. Only the constitutional state is considered a constitutional state, because the law is a necessity of freedom and the state is a necessity of the law. Without the state there is no law and without law there is no freedom. The state is thus a constitutional state and a free state, but not necessarily a parliamentary republic.
The reality of the party state is oligarchic and wants to be justified. Almost all party members are interested in posts, benefices and advantages. Decisions are dictated and imposed on party leaders from outside, from other states, from the economy, especially the internationalized industry and finance, from associations, etc. The Chancellor is regularly the leader of the strongest party in the Bundestag and has the power of office allocation, the most important authority in the power system, but also the greatest power in the nomination of his party's candidates. This systemically leads to a negative selection of the members of parliament, if only because no ruler tolerates competitors. As a result, it is primarily followers without sufficient political substance and usually without any particular interest in the common good who sit in Parliament. This form of parliamentary rule regularly leads to a majority decision in Parliament representing the minority of the people.
The parliamentary age is irrevocably over. Its forms no longer do anything, they only burden us. Those who are at the height of their time had to be democrats in 1830 and the opposite in 1930, just as they had to be absolutists in 1730 and not in 1830. We are a monarchical people in Germany through our whole past and our situation, may the regent be called Kaiser or Kanzler. The need for new forms of government will come to us one day.
Genre: RELIGION / GeneralLanguage | Status |
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French
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Already translated.
Translated by Zoran Ivanc
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