How nice to see Andrew "Brillo" Neil on the BBC again: the former head of the "Sunday Times" as an interviewer with horribly dyed red hair but brilliant analyses. Or "Times" columnist Melanie Phillips, who brought the term - loosely translated - German "virtue-boasting" into play. Or columnist Tim Montgomery, who wonders about laos rcs data the "German democracy" with which Berlin has annulled treaties such as Dublin and Schengen.
It was and is British journalists who provided better, more accurate information about the refugee crisis: border guards and refugees, how young refugees kicked down gates and threw stones. Instead, the ARD Tagesschau showed women and children crying. And so I am (unfortunately) not surprised that the chief commentator of the SZ, Heribert Prantl from Nittenau in Upper Palatinate, has mutated into a bigoted Merkelian.
But Prantl, controversial in his editorial office because he described what goes on in the kitchen of a constitutional judge without having been there himself, still has to work his way up to the Augstein-Spiegel family. Why? Prantl, who is in a relationship with the "Spiegel" heiress Franziska Augstein, would like to become editor-in-chief of "Spiegel". That's what they say. Exactly: are you still allowed to ask questions? Or? Are they already forbidden.