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preroll music
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Herald Angel: What does Big Brother see
while he is watching?
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Simon Menner is talking to you about this:
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"Uncovering Images from the secret Stasi Archives."
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He was born 1978 in southern Germany,
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now he lives and works in Berlin.
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He does a lot of stuff with photography
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and history. And he has been researching
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for three years in Stasi files and images.
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And he is going to show us why this is
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still relevant today, or even
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more relevant than ever.
Give him a warm welcome.
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applause
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Simon: thank you.
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I was told to use this rather than the
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lavalier mic, so I hope it works.
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First a disclaimer: I'm an artist
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I am not a historian, so my approach to
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the material I am going to show you is
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somewhat different from what you might expect
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from a regular historian. But we can
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discuss this as we go on.
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And very very briefly, before I am going
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to show you images I have found at the
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archive of the Stasi and some very few
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I have found at the archive of the BND -
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I am going to show you three bodies of work
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that brought me to my interest in the
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Stasi files. So, I am a trained artist.
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I'm a photographer and normally I do
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things like this. I am very interested in
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the relationship of perception... what
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perception does within the context
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of modern conflict. It turns out,
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more importantly, perception is a battle field.
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And fear is a weapon. And this is actually
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not just a set of landscape images.
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It is actually a set of photographs for
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which I had to have support by the German
Army.
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They supported me with snipers.
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They were hiding in the landscape and were
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aiming at the camera, and therefore at the
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viewer. Which is ... okay ... of course.
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So, the sniper would be here. And in most
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of the pictures from this series there is
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actually almost no trace to be seen from
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the sniper. But this is the way
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a sniper looks within the landscape.
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So they were ordered to aim at me.
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Even though I couldn't see them. So,
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sometimes, when they were posing, I told
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them: "Well, just don't hide behind a tree
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and I don't see you." And they told me:
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"No no, don't worry, we are aiming at you."
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laughter
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Of course, the whole thing is artificial.
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Because they would never choose this kind
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of setting and this kind of environment
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for their... To pose a threat.
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There's a sniper here, or
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there's a sniper here.
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But this is something that really plays an
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important role in today's conflicts
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That you try to occupy your opponent's mind.
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And influence his or her behaviour
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in that way, through creating fear. That's
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another set of images, it's based on
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handbooks by the US Army on how to
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construct booby traps out of ordinary
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objects. Like here, a TV set or radio.
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If you switch it on, it blows up. A box,
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or a pipe - as an artist, I find this
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image very intriguing, because there is
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this one very famous painting by Margritte
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´This is not a pipe' - actually, this is
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not a pipe, laughter
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even though it is supposed to look like a
pipe.
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applause
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So be aware, that's from the sixties, from
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the US Army, and these handbooks are now
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out there and used by the opposing forces.
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By forces they encounter. And the
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whole story behind these manuals is, well,
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you're supposed to create fear in your
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opponent. Here is a German chocolate bar,
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if you break it, it blows up in your face.
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Or a tea kettle. The more ordinary objects
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are, the more terrifying it becomes.
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Because once you realise that there is no
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way for you to avoid this idea of fear
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everything is dangerous. Of course
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the other side does this as well.
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This is from videos I found online.
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This is the last video frame before the blast.
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So the last video frame before a car bomb
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or roadside bomb or something like this
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explodes. And the same here.
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So, it's the same technique. The more I
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was... the more research I did,
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in this big topic of fear and
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perception within conflict,
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I started to think more and more
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about the topic of surveillance.
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Because the interesting aspect
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would be to look at images from, of
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surveillance. Because that would show us
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these mechanisms from the other side.
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but the strange thing is, we talk so much
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about surveillance. And much of what we
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talk about is image based. So,
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'Big Brother is watching you.'
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That has something to with images.
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But we take it for granted that there's
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nothing for us to see.
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Big Brother is watching us, but is hidden
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behind some curtains. But I came to realise
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that actually, withing the very unique
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history of Germany we have this huge
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opportunity in the Stasi archives that are
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accessible to the public, to do, try to
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show what Big Brother actually sees.
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And I approached them because I could only
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find written references to images they have.
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And asked them: "Why?"
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I could never find any images. So,
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do they still exist? And they told me:
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"Sure, come over." And that was the start
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of a three year, or lengthy, research project.
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And first I am going to show you images
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I was then, in the end, not really
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interested in. Images we know exist.
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So, from now on, that's authentic Stasi
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material. There is some from the Czech Republic
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ČSSR. I will point them out and in the end
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there is some from the BND, I'll point
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those out as well. That is something
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we expect to see: shots taken through
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button holes and surveillance industries.
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That's the US embassy in East Berlin.
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And the entrance doors were all under
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constant surveillance. With photo cameras
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and video cameras. But be aware, in the 80s
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the video equipment was not that sophisticated.
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So, at night time, the Stasi did record
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eight hours of darkness. But it still
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ended up in the files. laughter
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That's the state of mind we are talking about.
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So, everyone was photographed,
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and then we have, quite often we find post
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boxes, where everyone posting a letter is
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photographed. No matter, who he or she is.
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Even if it's an elderly lady. Remember
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these images, because I am going to
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reference to them later. I was more interested
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in something like this. So, the
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internal view. And now, two years ago I
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was able to publish a book and now I am
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going to somewhat follow the structure
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within the book, because I was really
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interested in how do you become a spy?
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And I encountered a lot of material
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that was meant for training purposes.
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These images are from a training session
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on how to disguise yourself as regular citiizens.
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laughter
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Which I found quite strange, because
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normally that's nothing you should have to
learn.
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But still, and then you have a soldier.
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These ordinary citizens: some of them look
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like they live now in Berlin, amongst the
hipsters
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like this one laughter that was entitled
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'Western Tourist' laughter
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Another tourist, like, the photographer.
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So, the Stasi photographed something that
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tried to look like a photographer. So.
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Women work for the Stasi as well.
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The same thing, disguising manuals.
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What do you need to dress up like this.
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And in what circumstance would you use
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something like this. He looks like from
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'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy' I think.
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But be aware, that's not meant to be funny.
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That was not meant to be seen by any one
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of you or me. That was meant to train agents.
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And we are going to see later it was
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actually used, here we have a hitchhiker,
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at a motor way around Berlin. And that is
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from the ČSSR archives to which I was
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granted acces earlier this year. They did
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the same thing, so it's not just something
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the Stasi did, they did it as well.
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And then you had other certain aspects of
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how to disguise, like how to wear a wig.
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Or how to stick a fake mustache.
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For privacy concerns, the images had to
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be pixeled. But I could see the faces
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while researching the archives.
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Much funnier, actually. So, to stick fake
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mustaches... Then, again from the ČSSR,
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you could also disguise cars. Like,
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you could draw something that's from a
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steel mill in the ČSSR. And then, in a way
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a disguised stroller, with a video camera.
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And that is actually a video camera from
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Japan, they imported this type of surveillance
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equipment quite frequently. Then you
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encounter other material, like how to
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transmit secret signals and how to transmit
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codes, the codes are not known now,
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but still, the photos exist and they have
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a strange beauty in them.
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And then, once you got your training, you
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had got to be taught how to arrest someone.
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And then you first knock the door, and
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then you arrest him and - notice the piece
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of cloth on the floor, cause they didn't
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want to ruin his white shirt -
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and maybe he wants to fight, so you have
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to fight laughter So. But the Stasi
always
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wins. And again, the ČSSR they took things
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very seriously. Things they wanted to
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escalate much quicker. So you have to shoot
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people - booh - and again,
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it quickly escalates, he has to be shot.
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And then, when you know that, you have to
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be taught how to follow people around.
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This - sometimes you find these very
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elaborate stories where you follow people
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around, this is just a very short exception.
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So, she is at the bakery, and then she goes
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to the doctor's office, which is already
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something the Stasi maybe shouldn't know.
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But still - and then she does a phone call
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And here she is smiling at the camera.
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Of course, the whole thing is staged for
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the colleagues. But this sometimes is
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very lengthy, you see this guy shopping,
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and shopping, and walking at Alexanderplatz,
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and meeting an other guy... It's like a
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photo love story. laughter
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And then they take the car and he gets off
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the car in the middle of the woods, and
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then he walks and an other car comes.
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And then they meet...
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Why do you take such pictures?
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What's the point of that? But still,
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that ends up at the archive.
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And is part of the training operation.
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Now, the training is done,
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This then is a real surveillance photograph,
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you see a black arrow, that's supposedly
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the person they were shadowing, and then
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you see, 'okay, we are not in the
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training manual anymore, but we are
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already a step ahead, and that's then the
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real material. He or she is followed
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around the country. Again, the Czech Republic,
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you have, like, ordinary citizens
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being shadowed entering a house.
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After the shadowing comes also the
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breach of privacy. And here we have the
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room of a teenager, which looks very
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innocent to us - but I am very positive
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that this - I guess it's a guy -, that he
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never entered university in East Germany.
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Due to the fact that they could prove that
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he was a fan of 'Wile E. Coyote' and the
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United States, or so they thought, they
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couldt prove. And they took such images
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as evidence for your thinking. Which is
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a problem of a surveillance operation,
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I would argue. And then here we have,
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- I don't know if you can see - there
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might be the biggest Madonna fan of all of
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Communist Eastern Europe. laughter
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Same thing, probably would never be able
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to study law, or medicine, or something
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like that. And then you have, frequently,
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- sorry, cover your eyes maybe - frequently
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you have images such as this. And that was
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classified as 'Western Pornography', and
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the funny thing about this classification
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is, very often you find files, that read
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'Western Pornography', and the photographs
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are missing. laughter
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So, someone went to this appartment,
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documented everything, archived it, and
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maybe the guy was persecuted, and when no
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one was looking, they took the pictures.
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Which then shows the absurd nature of the
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system. For me, this is a very... key image.
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And a set of images. But this is actually
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one of the images that brought me to
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contacting the Stasi Archive. I read about
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those images, this is a Polaroid, as you
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can see by the white background.
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And, as a matter of fact, the Stasi
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frequently purchased Polaroid films or
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confiscated ones sent to East Germany.
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And the reason for that was, when they
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broke into peoples' homes, and you should
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never find out, the easiest thing was: You
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break in, you look around, what's interesting,
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you take a Polaroid, and with the help of
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the Polaroid you are able to put everything
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back into the original position.
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So, this is an absolutely brutal image.
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Because it shows the deepest possible
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breach of privacy imaginable.
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And most people in fact never found out
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their apartment was searched, and that was
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absolutely illegal, even in East Germany.
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And, so it was very revealing last year,
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a German TV Station thought it was a clever
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idea to bring me, hook me up with a
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former Stasi general. And he - And I told
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him about the Polaroids. And he said:
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"Yeah, but, eh, ähm, please, keep in mind,
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I've, I never broke into peoples' apartments."
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And I said: "Yeah, well, did you order it?"
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"Yes I ordered it, but I never broke
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into peoples' houses!"
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And I thought, what stupid excuse is that?
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Who then is responsible? Because normally
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the excuse is always, oh, I was ordered to.
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And his excuse was, yeah, I just ordered
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them, but I didn't really, why would
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they do it? gasping I just ordered
it...
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Was not my intention... So that really was
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revealing to me, like, the state of mind
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within such a system. So, you have
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folders and folders and folders of those
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Polaroids. And when they found something
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incriminating, they might have returned
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a few days later with the police and a
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search warrant. Because they needed a
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search warrant, even in East Germany.
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So, and now we realise, even though it looks
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funny, the way they disguise themselves,
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it's meant seriously. And it's a terrible,
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brutal system. Which you also see in these
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images from the ČSSR, where the people
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are forced to stage their own attempt of
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fleeing the country. So they were made
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to stage the thing they were arrested for.
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Even a young child was made to reenact
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their failed attempt to flee the country,
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and this is brutal.
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And, so, sometimes you find images that
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are completely out of any category.
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laughter
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Like a guinea pig - I told you earlier - to
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think back - remember the post box with
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the old lady. That's an image of one of
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those files. So you have an image of
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a post box, you see it, taken from a high
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angle. And, maybe, out of a private apartment.
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And my, and then, you have this shot after
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shot after shot. And two pictures of
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this guinea pig.
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And then the surveillance operation
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continues. And what I read out of that is
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that he was in a private apartment, and
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was bored - and there ran this guinea pig.
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And he lies flat on the ground,
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takes two shots, and then continues the
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surveillance operation. Knowing, that the
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material is going to end up at the archive.
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And gets its archive number.
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That's German bureaucracy, I guess.
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Very revealing - so these guys, that's
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actually a British spy, there were some
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officially registered Western spies within
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East Germany. The Russians had the same
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thing for West Germany. And the Stasi's
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job was to follow them and document what
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they were doing. They couldn't do anything
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to them, they could only document it.
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And you find many of these images.
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A spy taking a picture of a spy, in an
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endless circle of surveillance. laughter
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And what's very revealing is the fact
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that I tried to gain access to the, to
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their material - it's still classified.
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laughter
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I am very positive I know what the images
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show: It's very much the same thing.
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laughter
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But, so, I tried to understand what
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these people are thinking. But, it turns out,
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even though they were fighting each other,
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they seemed to share a very common
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state of mind.
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But, so, that looks like the end point
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of surveillance.
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No, it's not.
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It's one step further: Stasi agents,
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watching Stasi agents watching other people.
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That's a triangle of surveillance, ja.
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Common as well, never be sure about
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your colleagues, they could be up to something.
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So, better spy on them as well.
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But then, I present you, the absolute
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high point and end point of surveillance:
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Which is the surveillance selfie.
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laughter and applause
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I give you another one.
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And they knew it was going to end up at
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the archive. So they are spying on
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themselves, while spying on others, while
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they are spying on themselves.
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So, it's this: it's almost meditative.
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And now, who are these people?
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Now we are really at the internal view.
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The Stasi looks at itself. Here is a
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group photo. Remember this guy -
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we encounter him later.
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That happens to be the phone surveillance
unit.
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Highest ranking officials here,
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that's the boss of the whole bunch.
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And, of course, the Stasi, Eastern Europe...
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they like their medals. And then an
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award ceremony. Flowers, medal, piece of paper.
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And there is the guy from the phone
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surveillance unit, again, so, he gets
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really shabby flowers. And, piece of paper.
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That's odd: see this, the wax seal? And,
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it's burnt at the side?
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Because: He was knighted.
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A knight of the phone surveillance unit.
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timid laughter, applause
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See this, to the Non-Germans here:
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That Section Symbol stands for the Code of
Law,
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this isn't widely used outside Germany,
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He knew that they were breaking the law,
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and they're mocking it.
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They're mocking it with this ceremony.
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So now, here, you are the knight
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of the phone surveillance unit.
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Congratulations. Haha, what a good joke.
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Another set of images, which is very
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revealing, is this:
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Strange finding in the Stasi archive.
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A strange combination, see. The bishop
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and a soccer player, and back there,
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with the blue shirt, that's a Party youth
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member. And see the ballerina there?
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Strange. The guy in the suit: It's his
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birthday. And he is the boss of them.
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Theses are all highest ranking Stasi officials.
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And they're surprising him with a birthday
party.
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And the surprise is to dress up as
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those people you put under surveillance.
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So, see, Party Youth, soccer player,
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another soccer player, the ballerina.
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Beautiful, very beautiful.
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Soccer fan, of course you have to put
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them under surveillance. A doctor!
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Of course, who cares about the right
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to confidentiality of doctors. A judge.
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Of course, you have to put that judge under
surveillance.
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And that is a disguise, a dress-up,
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hardly to be understood outside Germany.
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He's dressed up as a peace activist.
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He wears this 'Swords to ploughshares'
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("Schwerter zu Pflugscharen') sticker
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on his head, and some other peace stickers
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there, and he is very proud of himself.
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Why is that? Because it was such a successful
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costume...
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I think: 'Where did the get the costume from?'
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The easiest thing, for someone
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like him, would be to take it from
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somebody he put in jail.
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Because you could at least lose access
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to university for wearing one of these stickers.
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At least. Or you could serve some, short,
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time, but some time in jail.
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You could lose access to good housing and
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everything. Why is he able to mock it?
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Because he is the one who would decide
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whether or not you lose access...
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And this is the terrible thing about these
images.
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They are very revealing.
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--I am very fast...--
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So, these images are now, what,
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25, 30, years old. Why do I think they
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are still relevant today?
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It's because of something like this:
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there was a short period, after
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the fall of the Berlin Wall, so the
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Wall fell in November '89, and the Stasi
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wasn't desolved until January. So there
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was a very short period of time
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where the Stasi could actually try to
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destroy material. They managed to do
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destroy a huge bunch of material.
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Not very important sets - except for
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espionage, that's almost gone.
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But if it would have been up to them,
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that would have been the fate of all these
images.
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Destruction.
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We would have had never been able to look
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at these images. And,
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even though we don't know what these images
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stand for - that's a group of gay men -
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and they infiltrated it and it was
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compromising to one of their colleagues
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that they infiltrated it, they did things
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like that. But, they tried to destroy it.
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So, 25 years after the fall of the Berlin
Wall,
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even more now, why do I
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still think this material is really relevant?
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I am going to show you something
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that's even more special and more rare,
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than the material I showed you just now.
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It's this:
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Over the course of approximately a year
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I tried to convince the BND to grant me
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access to their material. Which would
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be amazing because in Germany we have
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this one society with the two
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opposing systems. So the view on the
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cold war would be absolutely astonishing
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if we would be able to look at all
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the material.
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And, after a year, I got the call,
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and they told me: "yes, we have something
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for you, come over."
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There was actually, they have a small,
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relatively small section in Berlin.
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So I went there with my Scanner and they
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gave me the - I would call them -
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14 most boring pictures of
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the BND history.
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It's a match box.
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This...
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and that.
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And, when I looked at these images,
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I was like, 'are you kidding me?'
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What do they show?
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And this guy was very serious and told me:
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"Unfortunately I can't tell you because
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the information is still classified."
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laughter
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But then, he told me, as far as
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he knows, these are the only images
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they ever released.
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And, yeah, toothpaste.
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There´s a huge problem I have
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with this, of course.
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Not with this young lady in particular,
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but in general with these images.
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They can decide which images to show.
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And one of the guys I was in contact with
told me:
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"Of course we have these disguise pictures...
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and dress up, and things like that."
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But, keep in mind, even though back then
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he might have been the lowest in the hierarchy.
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He might be the head of the department now.
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Or the one who brought in the guy who is now
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the head of the department.
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Of course it's not in their interest
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for these images to be released.
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And then I think, 'but it's in my interest'
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And in our interest, to decide, what images
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are worth looking at or not.
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And there is another problem with images
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like this. We have almost nothing that is
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accessible from the Western archives.
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This is rare, this is very special.
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Looks like shit, but it's very special.
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But we have a trove from the Eastern archives.
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And there is always, like the Merkel, and
like, everyone --
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when one of the Eastern countries decides,
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'maybe we should limit access to our former
Stalinist archive...'
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they say 'no, don't do that!!'
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'it must be open' - but what happens when
we
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have access to just one side?
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And see all the terrible things they are doing?
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And have no access to the other side?
-
I am not saying that the BND did the same
terrible things
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the Stasi did. But the BND was certainly breaking
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our laws as well...
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And so, but it does look more innnocent,
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because we only know, have access to a very
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terrible looking archive.
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And if we look to West Germany,
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it's like: 'Nothing there.'
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Must be fine...
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And that is a terrible thing.
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There is a lot wrong with that.
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-- I am almost at the end, I was rushing through...sorry
--
-
-- But…I can show you two…well --
-
Just because I was too quick: from the Czech
archive,
-
two videos. audio isn't important.
-
Oh, sorry, maybe it's not going to work.
-
It seems things escalated much quicker.
-
In the ČSSR... than in ... Sorry...
-
Live in the ČSSR must have been very dangerous.
-
These weapons, everywhere...
-
soft, pacy music
-
But the best thing comes now:
-
laughter
-
Who would carry something like that, there.
-
applause
-
And just, if you wonder - that's a very long
film -
-
that's just a short part of it.
-
If you are ever attacked by someone with a
chair...
-
[in German] Ne, das ist nicht wichtig.
-
Audio ist ganz furchtbar.
-
That's like, six or seven times he shows that.
-
And now he shows it again.
-
And then it is going to be used, but look
-
closely how it is used, the technique they
just learned.
-
Okay, do this the next time you are attacked
by someone with a chair.
-
So, he is going to be attacked by someone
with a chair,
-
watch closely, he implements it quite properly.
-
laughter
-
Well, he didn't really.
-
And, things always, in this long film, always
escalate very quickly.
-
And here are two very long shots,
-
and you are supposed to spot them, that are
-
unnecessarily long...
-
laughter
-
So, of course they find the black guy smuggling.
-
And he explains to him now, in English:
-
'Do you have more?' And he says no, no.
-
And still, the porn is in the shot.
-
And then he tells him, yea, it's going to
be
-
very serious if you don't confess now.
-
And the black guy says. no, I don't have anything
-
to confess...
-
And now the guy on the left gets suspicious.
-
Look at him.
-
Very suspicious, this black young man.
-
He doesn't want to sign his confession.
-
He gets suspicious, too.
-
Very, very, very suspicious.
-
And, fortunately, the camera man made the
slight move to the left...
-
Not to zoom in on the penis [sic]
-
No, no, he doesn't have anything.
-
But it turns out, he has something.
-
Because he's black and suspicious looking.
-
See.
-
Oh, he's moving his arm.
-
laughter
-
So, it turns out his arm is not broken.
-
Sorry, that was somewhat long, but I rushed
through before.
-
And for some reason, he hides batteries
-
in his cast.
-
applause
-
So, he could bring in the watches, but he'd
better hide the batteries.
-
Because that is, whoo....
-
So - any questions?
-
applause
-
Herald Angel: thank you
-
Simon: I hope you got what you paid for...
-
laughter
-
Herald: Maybe before we start Q&A, everybody
who wants to leave, leave now.
-
Simon: oh wow.
-
Herald: We are going to take one minute so
you can leave
-
and the others who want to stay have it quiet
for the Q&A
-
And remember to use the rating system.
-
Simon: Oh, I brought post cards, if you want
some.
-
Because we have to make fun of them as much
as we can
-
applause
-
They're all the same motive, but take as many
as you want, if you want any.
-
Herald: Thank you
-
somenone too quietly to be understood
-
Simon: Uh, with the microphone, I guess
-
Herald: There are two microphones for Q&A,
no, four even, if you need them.
-
And we have questions from the internet.
-
Five seconds.
-
Okay. So, we will start with you!
-
Q: Just a short question, first, thanks for
the wonderful talk.
-
It was very very interesting.
-
Can you give us the title of your book, please?
-
Simon: Oh, it's pretty much top if you google
my name,
-
it's available in your local book store, or,
if you want, Amazon.
-
It's still available, but there are not that
many
-
copies left, starts acting so you should all
get it as soon as possible... laughter
-
It's just 'Top Secret' and Simon Menner...
-
Or just Menner, my family doesn't write that
many books... more laughter
-
Herald: Thank you, over here…
-
Q: Would you be so kind to go back to the
photo with Coyote and the American flag?
-
Because I thought I saw Yugoslav air transport
logo on the ...
-
yes, YAT,
there you see it.
-
Simon: Oh yea, here.
-
Q: He flew with, now it's called Air Serbia...
-
Simon: That must have been the reason.
-
Q: Yes, it must have, I just wanted to check...
-
Simon: Sure, thanks!
-
applause
-
Herald: We have a question from the internet...
-
Signal Angel: Yes, frankie2 is asking, how
does this
-
compare to today's surveillance?
-
Simon: The problem is, in a way, that is a
-
treasure trove, but it's a very weird one.
-
If I could decide, freely choose, what material
to look at,
-
I would definitely look at, try to look at,
the
-
last two weeks of NSA's surveillance.
-
Like we all would.
-
But, unfortunately, this is as close as we
can get this kind of material.
-
But keep in mind, back in it's days the Stasi
was at least as sophisticated as the BND.
-
In fact, they were more advanced in the technology
they used.
-
And the Stasi would definitely use the same
-
techniques BND and CIA and everyone else uses
today.
-
They would try to listen in on our phone conversations.
-
That might not be the right material to look at
from a technological point of view.
-
But I think this material is
very interesting and important
-
if you want to find out something about their
-
state of mind. Which is, absurd. And keep
in mind,
-
the excuse you hear from the NSA,
-
they just want to protect the law, and that
is why they break the law,
-
that's an excuse you regularly find with the
Stasi as well.
-
And you find parallels, and that's why it's
very important to look at this material.
-
Even though it's very old.
-
And back then, the whole archive, consists
out
-
of somewhere between one and two million photographs.
-
Which is absurdly little, if you think that
the system
-
was in operation for forty years.
-
That's fifty thousand picture a year.
-
They had 85 thousand agents.
-
From today's standards, that's nothing.
-
Today, they would be far more sophisticated
I guess.
-
Herald: Thank you, we have a question over
there, is that a question, yes.
-
Q: Firstly, thank you for your talk.
-
So, you showed that some of that archive had
been
-
destroyed or attempts had been made.
-
But there was still much to look through.
-
What happens in future generations,
-
given that now surveillance is done all digitally,
-
you said the Stasi had a number of weeks from
when the wall fell,
-
and they had time to destroy things,
-
given now how quickly and easy it is
to erase digital
-
information, what do you say to people coming
after you?
-
Future generations, who might want to find
similar things
-
in dissolved surveillance operations.
Are they completely stuffed?
-
Simon: Unless there is going to be a revolution,
-
they are not going to be able to look at anything.
-
That would be my guess.
-
Because you need this abrupt shift in the
whole system,
-
that pretty much decapitates this operation.
And so,
-
they lost everything, and now it is frozen
in time.
-
So, the guy at the BND told me:
-
"It's up to us to decide what we reveal and
what not, because we have a veto."
-
Of course, nothing is then revealed.
-
Ever.
-
So, as long as this stays the policy, and
it is the policy currently everywhere,
-
from what I understand,
-
you are not going to be able to look at anything.
-
I am not very optimistic in that respect.
-
Next Question: How do you
decide
-
what faces to anonymise, and which not?
-
Simon: Besides the Czech Republic archive…
…with the Czech Images I did it.
-
With those images you can do anything and
whatever you want, and that's weird.
-
And terrible, in a way.
-
With the Stasi images, the archive had to
decide.
-
And they decided on the basis that once you
work for,
-
in an official position, in times of historical
importance,
-
- like that - you lose your privacy rights.
-
You don't share the same privacy rights.
-
So, once we could find written evidence
-
that a person shown in the image
was working for the Stasi,
-
like him or her,
-
they lost their right of privacy.
-
If the slightest doubt remained, it had to
be pixeled.
-
So it wasn't done by me.
-
German privacy rights are very strict.
-
Next Questioner: You said, when you talked
about surveillance,
-
watching each other, that this would be the
highest state of surveillance.
-
But don't you think that now there is a much
higher state,
-
and also before things were much more clear,
-
everybody knew that there was a regime
-
trying to stay in power and trying to put
down everybody.
-
But now, in a situation where they don't even
have to break the law,
-
they just make it legal to surveil, like we
can see in France,
-
now with the law on intelligence,
-
that passed just after the Charlie murders,
-
and now we got the murders again,
-
and you have people who have
-
to stay in their home, because
-
the intelligence has said that
-
they might protest, and they don't have
-
to go through a judge, actually making it
legal.
-
And we are at a stage were people surveil
each other.
-
Simon: That's Facebook today.
- Yes, somehow.
-
applause
-
And the general problem with survellance operations
-
- I would argue - and I hope someone here is
from the BND and they come forward
-
and I give a talk to them,
because I would really like to find out.
-
So please, my email was there -
-
I would argue, is that this type
of surveillance can not work.
-
What you are trying to find proof for
-
is a state of mind, is thoughts,
is not something you did,
-
but some things you think about,
or you might wanna do.
-
And photography - I am a photographer -
-
I know how bad photography is.
-
You were looking at images of landscapes,
-
where no sniper is visible, and each one of
you saw it.
-
That's how bad photography is as evidence.
-
And this can be proof for everything.
And nothing.
-
Q: They don't need photography now.
-
S: No, they use it.
-
Q: They just bring the paper to the prefect
police,
-
and he says 'okay, they're dangerous', and
tells
-
them they have to stay at home.
-
S: Ja, but they need proof or evidence for
something.
-
Q: They don't.
-
S: Maybe not... Now you leave behind such
a trail of evidence yourself.
-
That could be read somewhere in the future.
-
What happens in ten years, when in the US
-
like smoking, drinking
isn't socially acceptable anymore.
-
What happens to you then, with your Facebook
entry
-
that's twenty years old then.
-
It's a weird system, yeah, but…
shrugging
-
Herald: We have another question from the
internet.
-
Signal Angel: Somebody from IRC is asking
whether you have tried
-
to contact other agencies?
-
S: Yes, like the BND, which was not very successful.
-
And regarding the spies taking pictures of spies
I tried with the British archive.
-
I know these pictures still exist.
-
I know where they exist.
-
But... sorry.
-
With the Czech, I was asked by the Goethe
Institut to approach them.
-
It was difficult and too lengthy
to explain now,
-
it was very difficult working with them.
-
Language wise and because of the structure
-
of the Archive itself.
-
But they were very open, and if you want to
do more research,
-
go to the Czech Republic first, because it's
much easier to work with them
-
on a bureaucratic level, than with the Germans.
-
But the Germans are, in a way, more organised.
-
laughter
-
Well, they are Germans.
-
Herald: Your question:
-
Q: How hard was it to get the material, although
it is not classified anymore?
-
How much time did you invest?
-
S: The hardest time was the waiting periods
in between requests.
-
German bureaucracy takes forever.
-
But I am quite sure, I am from West Germany,
but now I have a huge file in this archive.
-
Because they compile everything.
-
So they keep track of every picture you're
looking at.
-
But the funny thing is, it's not hard at all,
you can do it as well.
-
You don't have to be a researcher.
-
And the archive considers research a human
right.
-
Which I learned then, and it's a very convenient
thing.
-
There are some elderly Stasi agents who spend
their retirement researching something something.
-
They can do that.
-
And the weird thing was, most of the pictures,
no one had looked at before.
-
That could be proven, because they keep track
of everything.
-
The process is lengthy but very easy
-
Q: When you decided to dig through the archive,
-
did you have to apply for a certain section.
-
or could you just walk in and say, show me
all your pictures.
-
S: No, they were very open, they may have
closed after me.
-
For them, it was strangely overwhelming,
the amount of feedback they got
-
after my book came out.
-
And they want to be left alone,
I think… (laughing)
-
You have to formulate it quite clearly.
-
Q: What exactly, your aim?
-
S: A theme. But for me, because it was new
to me, and to them as well,
-
the topic, 'Surveillance and Photography',
was very broad.
-
Now they get requests like 'We want to see
what Simon Menner saw.'
-
They don't accept something like this.
-
So, you have to come up with something more
clever.
-
Q: And how much time did you spend in their
dungeons?
-
S: Well, it took three years...
-
On and off, but it's mostly waiting,
in between.
-
Be patient.
-
Herald: Okay, your question.
-
Q: Modern state agencies,
including NSA and BND, have this
-
mentality of 'Collect it all' passive intelligence.
-
It has this ability to minimise the impact
and damage.
-
No human eyes looking at specific pieces of surveillance.
-
Of course we know that's not true,
-
and they can zero-in if they want to.
-
Doesn't this make it very difficult,
as an archivist how do you
-
try to understand the state of mind,
when you have so much data, unprocessed?
-
How do you get in their mind, filtering through,
not no documents, but a hundred million documents?
-
S: One has to be very careful with such material,
because you look through their eyes.
-
That can be dangerous.
-
That's why I try not to provide that much
'background information'
-
because, that would be text compiled by the
Stasi agents.
-
So there is guilty and not guilty written
in the text.
-
And I don't want to look at these pictures
through their eyes.
-
But still I find it very revealing
to look at the raw material.
-
And the Stasi would have collected all
-
if they had been able, they opened every parcel
to East Germany, every letter.
-
Paranoia wise, they were several steps ahead
of the NSA.
-
They had a university, and when you were studying
there, you could do your PhD, but you
-
weren't allowed to keep your notes during
the day,
-
they were locked away.
-
In safes with doors on two sides...
-
So they would copy them at night,
-
And you weren't allowed to keep your PhD thesis,
-
because it immediately became top secret.
-
And that really is paranoia.
-
I can not prove it. And that's
the problem with the whole thing,
-
because one side remains closed.
-
And I guess they are
quite happy with that situation,
-
they can still say, no, we did something else.
-
Well, we can't tell you, but it's not like
this.
-
That is very vague, but I think the state
of mind is the same.
-
Q: What is the copyright on these pictures?
Are they in the public domain?
-
Can I use them for memes?
-
S: Uhm, no.
laughter
-
Well, most are on my website in a low resolution.
-
Which the archive doesn't like, but it's there.
-
The problem is that: There is a law that covers
the archive.
-
It's not like other archives in Germany.
It has its own law.
-
And that was written in the early 90's by
lawmakers.
-
We all know them and love them.
-
And they never thought of an artist coming
along and show them.
-
So the law covers publication.
-
Once you got access to material,
you are allowed publicize it
-
Nothing else is stated.
-
But you aren't allowed to hand over the files.
-
And I had lengthy debates with the Archive
about what that could mean.
-
Since, when you have it on the website, you
hand out the files.
-
But I said no, it's publicising it
-- no, no, no.
-
So, what's the difference? Well,
-
we don't really know but, ahem.
-
So, it's tricky.
-
And so many people copied it from my website,
so it is out there and gone.
-
Which I think is good.
-
Herald: We have time for one more question.
-
S: And I will be around, if you recognise
my bald head, talk to me.
-
Q; Where you able to access files other than
images?
-
Like audio from phone surveillance?
-
S: Ah, that is a very tricky thing.
-
You could listen to those, but getting them
is almost impossible.
-
Because, German privacy laws again.
-
And their argument is, whenever you speak,
you could reveal something private.
-
And that's their argument. Even though
you might be Erich Honecker
-
or Helmut Kohl or something like that.
But still it could be private what you're saying.
-
That's why they could never release them, and
-
you could not publish that, because it could
be private.
-
So, it's a somewhat strange law.
But noone is going to change anymore.
-
Herald: And the last question over here.
-
Q: I am interested from where you know
what was shown by the photographs.
-
Were there captions like "spies spying on spy"
or thought you about an explanation by yourself?
-
S: There are gazillions of km of files.
-
And just very few photographs, so there is
always alot of background information.
-
And the greatest thing… and why I…
people I am absolutely thankful towards
-
are the… - there were only ladies -
working really at the archive,
-
handing me the files, giving me copies.
Because the most important thing
-
- and that is always true
working with an archive -
-
the trickiest part is, how do you find
something you don't know exists.
-
Because you can't ask for it.
-
'I am really looking for ...
is there a birthday party?'
-
You will never ask for something like this.
-
But once you've earned the trust of the people
working there, they provide you
-
and provided me with these images.
-
Because they knew, in what direction
I was looking for material.
-
There was in most cases
background information.
-
There was one image I didn't include in the
talk of a dead swan.
-
It's a famous set of four images.
-
It was only known that it was found in a vault
owned by Erich Mielke, the head of Stasi, personally.
-
It's four images of a grave of
a dead swan with a GDR flag.
-
That is very famous for being the biggest
mystery in the Stasi files,
-
because nothing can be found
about these images.
-
I didn't include them in the talk, sorry.
-
But it's a dead swan, very mysterious,
must have been important. laughter
-
Herald: Thank you Simon, very much.
Simon: Thank you.
-
applause
-
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-
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