I have no idea, I was five at the time and we didn't learn about it at school. What kind of legal procedure could there be about it? Isn't it inherently a political thing? The previous government of the DDR left and didn't resist, what would lawyers argue about? Whether such a unification was fine according to the DDR's constitution?
It was an absolute, not a relative statement and it still stands.
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"Topic is tired and needs a nap." - Tosa Inu
http://www.focus.de/politik/ausland/...d_4438784.html
Originally Posted by article
Originally Posted by word-for-word translation
You should get the point, the Ukrainian government rewards soldiers for destroyed enemy vehicles now and wants to pay them 50 Euros for every day in the war zone. Soldiers however complain that the government still owes them their basic wages in the first place.
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"Topic is tired and needs a nap." - Tosa Inu
That's actually not an unreasonable question - the DDR would have had to sign something that declared it effectively ceased to exist, as it's constituent states simply became part of the German federation, or whatever you guys call yourselves today.
If the DDR didn't sign itself out of existence legally then you would technically be talking about an annexation with less of a rubber stamp than Crimea.
Also - it is pretty weird, bordering on disturbing, that this isn't taught in German schools given that it's the most important event in German history since the end of World War II.
"If it wears trousers generally I don't pay attention."
[IMG]https://img197.imageshack.us/img197/4917/logoromans23pd.jpg[/IMG]
Why? It's all on Wikipedia anyway. In history classes we covered the french revolution at least threee times since it was obviously the most historically significant event of all times.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_...ication_Treaty
The Volkskammer, the Parliament of East Germany, passed a resolution on 23 August 1990 seeking the accession (Beitritt) of the German Democratic Republic to the Federal Republic of Germany as allowed by article 23 of the West German Basic Law, effective 3 October 1990.[7][8] In the wake of that resolution, the "German reunification treaty",[9][10][11] commonly known in German as "Einigungsvertrag" (Unification Treaty) or "Wiedervereinigungsvertrag" (Reunification Treaty), that had been negotiated between the two German states since 2 July 1990, was signed on 31 August 1990. This Treaty, officially titled Vertrag zwischen der Bundesrepublik Deutschland und der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik über die Herstellung der Einheit Deutschlands (Treaty between the Federal Republic of Germany and the German Democratic Republic on the Establishment of German Unity), was approved by large majorities in the legislative chambers of both countries on 20 September 1990[12] (442–47 in the West German Bundestag and 299–80 in the East German Volkskammer). The amendments to the Federal Republic's Basic Law that were foreseen in the Unification Treaty or necessary for its implementation were adopted by the Federal Statute of 23 September 1990. Under article 45 of the Treaty,[13] it entered into force in international Law on 29 September 1990, upon the exchange of notices regarding the completion of the respective internal constitutional requirements for the adoption of the treaty in both East Germany and West Germany.
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"Topic is tired and needs a nap." - Tosa Inu
Lots of negotiation and paperwork and publicly recorded votes on both sides favoring approval.
The Russian claim that this was an annexation only flies if the Russians are asserting that East Germany was never a real state of its own in the first place and that their legislature, therefore, had no authority to enact such a treaty. While arguably correct on one level there are too many public assertions regarding the "independence" of Warsaw Pact nations by the Soviets to make this argument readily acceptable.
Writ large, the Russian claim is based on Hungary and Czechoslovakia having been Soviet responses to "internal" dissent -- they had a right to squash them because they were REALLY just provinces -- and that the "province" of East Germany really still belongs to Russia as the inheritor of the Soviet Union.
In short, this is just political theater.
"The only way that has ever been discovered to have a lot of people cooperate together voluntarily is through the free market. And that's why it's so essential to preserving individual freedom.” -- Milton Friedman
"The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule." -- H. L. Mencken
Perhaps, some will call it propaganda, yet the reason why I'm posting this one is to let people from outside Ukraine see one of the important factors keeping the Ukrainian army afloat.
http://mashable.com/2014/12/28/ukrai...eers-soldiers/
On Russian soldiers in Ukraine:
http://www.newsweek.com/2014/09/19/r...InQwA.facebook
The DDR had free elections at the end of its existence, after which the new Volkskammer voted to split the DDR into several smaller entities, which entered the BRD separately as new Länder. I suppose that the vote might have been contrary to the DDR's constitution, I have no idea.
The point is that it hardly matters whether it fit the DDR constitution as hardly anyone wanted to keep that anyway. The Russians retreated from there (IIRC they were paid a hefty sum of money for it), there was no resistance by the population that I'm aware of, quite the contrary in fact, and their representatives, however representative they actually were, voted in favor of it. Their top politicians left/fled the country and the army didn't resist either unless I missed that war entirely.
It's questionable whether anyone could actually have a legitimate complaint given that there were none at the time it happened. Where would complaints come from? From the countries or people who watched it happen or agreed to it at the time?
I mean if another country says it was not agreeable enough as an event the way it happened, then I can probably find an argument for how that country should be disbanded based on its own disagreeable foundation. Most major countries I can think of have "integrated" people or geographical locations in far more violent ways, in the Germany case it was even a re-unification, basically just a return to a status that had previously existed instead of the addition of entirely new territory. Even a banana import restrictions reform leaves more ground for complaints than that.![]()
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"Topic is tired and needs a nap." - Tosa Inu
It is neither. However, since you don't believe me anyway, you can believe it is both.
In fact, you are as bad at detecting irony as I am.
Yet if you adopt an edifying attitude, you should have at least taken pains to get the names correct. It is Count Rostopchin. Is is ignorance or deliberate lies? No, it is
The problem is that very similar arguments are put forward by Russia trying to justify the annexation of Crimea. Replace "Germany" with "Russia" and "DDR" with "Crimea" and you can debate with yourself to your heart's content.
Gathering of clouds?
http://www.interpretermag.com/moscow...ne-golts-says/
"Is is ignorance or deliberate lies? No, it is" No, just simple spelling mistake due a different alphabet. As usual, you lack of knowledge. Does it change the reality of your claim based on ignorance? No.
Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. Voltaire.
"I've been in few famous last stands, lad, and they're butcher shops. That's what Blouse's leading you into, mark my words. What'll you lot do then? We've had a few scuffles, but that's not war. Think you'll be man enough to stand, when the metal meets the meat?"
"You did, sarge", said Polly." You said you were in few last stands."
"Yeah, lad. But I was holding the metal"
Sergeant Major Jackrum 10th Light Foot Infantery Regiment "Inns-and-Out"
Believe me or not, at school and at University I studied the subject called "The history of the USSR", so I am well aware of the fact you refer to. You again fail to see that it wasn't a "claim based on ignorance" (and my awareness of the correct name of the 1812 arsonist is a proof), but a sarcastic remark aimed at showing stupidity of the claim forwarded by Russian Duma. Husar's posts are full of sarcasm, somehow you never accuse him of ignorance or other sins. Yet you go on spouting vitriol only at me following the logics: "If he doesn't understand something - he lacks brains, if he (as I believe) doesn't know something - he is know-nothing, if he expresses a different view of things - he is an obsurantist nazi". If France is full with the likes of you, I don't wonder you will have other Charlie Hebdo style accidents.
And speaking of nazis:
http://www.timesofisrael.com/ukraine...s-rebel-chief/
Any crying foul on how nazism flourishes in DNR?
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