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Abgeordnetenhaus - Piratenpartei (2) Christopher Lauer zur Regierungserklärung 12.1.2012.avi

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    >> PRESIDENT: Please, Mr. Lauer
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    (Pause)
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    >> LAUER: Yes, how much time do I have left? 18:01, great.
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    >> PRESIDENT: Ten minutes.
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    >> LAUER: Dear Mrs President, ladies and gentlemen,
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    dear Mr Wowereit (he is the mayor of Berlin)
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    In Andreas' last speech he shed light on the programmatic aspect of the government policy address,
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    and I would like to rise to speak in order to explain some things that are
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    of a more general nature. The pirate parliamentary group has been part of this house since September of last year,
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    and after the euphoria and avowals at the beginning on behalf of the parties
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    that have already been part of the house to change their style of politics,
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    the daily grind seems to have creeped back in.
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    I can understand your hope that we will adapt to you rather than have you adapt to us,
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    but such black and white logic falls short. The entrance of the pirate party
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    into the Berlin state parliament marks a break. With us, a political party has entered,
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    whose members are socialized by new media and the internet. That's
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    a matter of fact you have to accept, if you want to understand our surprise and displeasure
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    regarding the events of this parliament. We grew up in a world that offered everyone,
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    who wanted to enter it, a neutral platform for free development of the individual. Of course,
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    this world - the internet - involves dangers, but name me just one place where that isn't applicable.
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    We perceived the chances of the internet to be greater. And the equality of opportunity
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    in the physical world, which is addressed in many election programs and this government statement,
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    is realized in the internet. Because there, indeed,
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    no one cares where you come from, what gender you have or what religion
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    you belong to. You just have to convince by what you do. Such
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    a parallel society - and I'm using this term intentionally at this point - is becoming
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    even more important in this moment, in which more and more citizens of our society are ignored
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    by the social system or don't want to be pressed in existing social conventions.
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    The pirates don't represent the schools' darlings, but instead
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    the Nerds, the outsiders; those that weren't invited
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    to the parties during their time in school; those that did not stand in the middle of the community *heckling sarcastically, pretending compassion.*
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    Yes, and a short while ago you talked about solidarity, and now you say 'Aww' at something like this; you should be
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    ashamed of yourselves! We had to find (....) - Unfortunally I've forgotten my cress.
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    If I had packed it, you could have collected it here and then
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    "hold the cress." (A term that could be loosely translated as "shut up".)
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    Because of the internet we are at the eye of the storm of a process involving all of society,
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    the end of which we can not see yet. The social change,
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    caused by the internet as a technology (...)
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    >> PRESIDENT: Mr Lauer, a second, excuse me. Ladies and Gentlemen, interjections are one thing
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    but a constant level of noise another. Please let the speaker be.
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    >> LAUER: I'm coming to the point. Because of the internet we are at the eye
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    of the storm of a process involving all of society, the end of which we can not see
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    yet. The social change caused by the internet as a technology
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    is noticeable, and we shouldn't let the chance go by to shape that change.
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    The internet ruthlessly changes the paradigms of the 19th and the 20th century.
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    What is knowledge, what is work, what are qualifications in a world that offers me all information
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    by the push of a button? At best we are engaging with the
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    symptoms of a changing world. But we have to start to engage
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    with the causes. At the same time we can't react with solutions from the 20th century
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    to the problems of the 21st century.
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    In the meantime the internet can do more. It is not just Google and eBay, but also the
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    democratic participation of many. As a parliament we can not ignore the technological leaps of the
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    last years. The problem is that this house does not reward innovation.
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    But why should it, since it itself is about continuity, and in the moment when 149 persons
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    as elected representatives substitute 3.5 million citizens of Berlin,
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    it is about a reduction of complexity. Yes, and it is about power. In the moment in which this
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    house decides the citizens' involvement in the political process,
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    it is about the fear to abolish itself.
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    But fear not: We abolished ourselves quite some time ago already.
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    Because what does your government policy address really mean, Mr Wowereit? It was you who
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    declared today what is supposed to happen during the next 5 years. How is it going to come about? Through
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    laws. Who decides on those laws? This house. But: Where are these laws written?
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    Who of the present representatives is Mr or Mrs "drafted-by-consultant"? Where
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    is this consultant sitting? He sits in the administration. It is a sad reality that this house is not
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    fullfilling its constitutional task
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    to generate laws out of its midst. It will be sad reality that over the next
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    5 years every change will come out of the Senate,
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    and every change will be nodded through by the (ruling) coalition, with them grinding their teeth or not.
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    And the opposition will cry. And the opposition will make suggestions, and the coalition will cry. At this point
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    I explicitly speak to the backbenchers in the parliamentary groups: Did you imagine it this way,
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    is this worth for you? To nod through what Mr or Mrs drafted-by-consultant wrote in some
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    senate administration for five years? The free mandate, anchored in the constitution,
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    is becoming a maculation in the state parliament week in week out. And who in here has the
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    backbone left to disagree with his or her parliamentary group in public
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    This toeing of the parliamentary party line, which again toes the Senate line
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    is a danger for democracy. When we are talking here about the dangers of lobbyism and more
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    transparency in this house we misjudge that the lobbyist comes to those
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    writing the law, not to those nodding the law through.
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    There are not debates taking place in this house anymore, but a Punch and Judy show,
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    the roles divided by coalition and opposition. There is a concentration of power at the Senate
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    taking place that is not healthy. In the light of the challenges facing the City of Berlin it is noteworthy
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    that we, as representatives, only obliged to our conscience,
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    put up with this. The solution is just as simple as radical: The state constitution
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    says in § 59 section 2: "bills can be contributed by the middle of the parliament,
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    by the senate or by public initiative". Let's remove
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    "by the senate". Let's provide the members of this parliament
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    with the authority to write laws, so that real
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    debates are taking place in this house - relevant and cross-party. Try
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    to imagine how motivating it can be, if you put
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    a bill through after a hard debate, on which you worked on with much blood, sweat and tears.
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    But of course I know: this is just wishful thinking. After my speech
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    you will argue with enough reasons to explain why the system that
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    we have for over 50 years now is good and must be continued. You will
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    in particular explain to yourselves that you play an important role in what
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    is taking place in this house. And even if what I just said should have reached you,
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    you will not be bold enough to discuss it within your parliamentary group,
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    within your party. During our election campaign we had a billboard with the slogan "Why am I hanging here,
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    you're not going to vote anyway?". Similarly you could put up one over this console
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    with the headline: "Why am I talking here, I know how you are going to vote
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    anyway?". The Pirate Party's success is also the result of a crisis of trust in
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    our representative parliamentary system. The Citizens of Berlin
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    wouldn't be demanding more participation if they felt they were
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    being represented adequately in here. Has nobody here ever asked himself
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    the question, why people, to whom electricity comes out of walls and money out of
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    ATMs, suddenly are interested in political participation?
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    If we want to convince the people of Berlin that the democratic
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    representational system is necessary, then we should all start very quickly to provide
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    reasons for it. With a business as usual intention it will not work at all.
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    Thank you very much.
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    >>PRESIDENT: Thank you.
Title:
Abgeordnetenhaus - Piratenpartei (2) Christopher Lauer zur Regierungserklärung 12.1.2012.avi
Description:

Abgeordnetenhaus - Piratenpartei (2) Christopher Lauer zur Regierungserklärung 12.1.2012 - Incl. English, Fresh, Katalan & German SUBTITLES
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Link zur grandiosen Rede: https://redmine.piratenfraktion-berlin.de/projects/plenar6sitzung/wiki/Christopher_Lauer_zur_Regierungserkl%C3%A4rung

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Video Language:
German
Duration:
08:54
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