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Today, Helga Zepp-LaRouche tweeted: “Oct 2-3 1990, German Unification, to be celebrated, but the British called it a ‘4th Reich’ and deployed the Antideutschen #Antifa into the streets for rioting. The same now vs the US Constitution. Oct. 2 (EIRNS) - Today, Helga Zepp-LaRouche tweeted: “Oct 2-3 1990, German Unification, to be celebrated, but the British called it a ‘4th Reich’ and deployed the Antideutschen #Antifa into the streets for rioting. The same now vs the US Constitution.

Bundestag speaker Wolfgang Schäuble, who was the most important official of the Kohl government during the reunification process, admitted to mistakes in the reunification — but not the biggest one. “One of the biggest failures made in the reunification was the recognition of professional qualification of people from the D.D.R. [East Germany],” Schäuble told newspapers of the Funk media group. “We underestimated the capacities of many people and that has certainly affected the self-assurance of East Germans.”

Bundestag speaker Wolfgang Schäuble, who was the most important official of the Kohl government during the reunification process, admitted to mistakes in the reunification — but not the biggest one. “One of the biggest failures made in the reunification was the recognition of professional qualification of people from the D.D.R. [East Germany],” Schäuble told newspapers of the Funk media group. “We underestimated the capacities of many people and that has certainly affected the self-assurance of East Germans.”

There was a much larger, fundamental failure of the reunification policy, namely the adoption of the “shock-therapy” neoliberal approach instead of the productive approach suggested by Lyndon and Helga LaRouche, Alfred Herrhausen, and Detlev Rohwedder. The first was imprisoned and the last two assassinated in the process that led and followed German reunification.There was a much larger, fundamental failure of the reunification policy, namely the adoption of the “shock-therapy” neoliberal approach instead of the productive approach suggested by Lyndon and Helga LaRouche, Alfred Herrhausen, and Detlev Rohwedder. The first was imprisoned and the last two assassinated in the process that led and followed German reunification.