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16 March 1968 – My Lai Massacre

This week in working class history


10/03/2026

On 16 March 1968, the US Army’s Charlie Company murdered hundreds of unarmed civilians in a planned attack on the Vietnamese village of My Lai. Homes were burned, wells poisoned, and villagers tortured. US soldiers carved the words “C Company” into some villagers’ chests. Even US government figures admit that over 20 women and girls—including 12-year-olds—were raped by US soldiers, including gang rape and sexual torture. Estimations of the death toll vary between 347 and over 500.

The My Lai Massacre came a few weeks after the Tet Offensive demonstrated that the US was losing the US-American War (as the “Vietnam War” should really be called). The night before the My Lai attack, Captain Ernest Medina said it would be: “A time for us to get even. A time for us to settle the score. A time for revenge—when we can get even for our fallen comrades.” When a soldier asked Medina if they should kill women and children, Medina replied: “kill everything that moves.”

The media reported a victory against Viet Cong troops. Colonel Oran Henderson, the brigade commander, falsely stated that “no civilians were gathered together and shot by US soldiers.” It was only 18 months later, following letters from former soldier Ronald L. Ridenhour, that some media outlets, including Time, Life, and Newsweek, published photographs by army photographer Ronald L. Haeberle and a critical report by Seymour Hersh.

Some soldiers were forced to stand trial. All were acquitted except Lieutenant William Calley, who was sentenced to life imprisonment with hard labour. Three days later, President Richard Nixon intervened and ordered Calley’s release under house arrest. The revelations of My Lai increased the unpopularity of the Vietnam War among both the US population and soldiers themselves. However, the war dragged on until US troops were forced out of Saigon in 1975.

The My Lai Massacre was ordered from above and subsequently covered up. It was official US Army policy. As historian Nick Turse concluded, My Lai and other atrocities were “not aberrations but operations.” This pattern continues with US military interventions today. As the US government stumbles into another “War of Choice”, we can expect more My Lais unless we stop them.

From Greece to Germany

How the new German asylum legislation codifies the practices deployed on the EU’s “hotspot islands” for years

Amidst these days’ horrifying news, the German parliament was able to pass the most severe tightening of asylum legislation in Germany since 1993 almost unnoticed. The adoption of several pieces of legislation which implemented the New Pact for Migration Asylum passed on February 27th with the votes of the CDU/CSU and SPD, except for one. This brought the EU-level reform of the Common European Asylum System (CEAS) into German law. While most of the EU legislation can be directly applied, each EU state reserves some level of discretion when implementing the reform. This article seeks to highlight some of the main consequences for people on the move in Germany that will follow the adoption of the Pact into German law.

The EU Pact, to put it simply, exacerbates the use of mass detention, deportations, surveillance, and externalisation in order to make it as hard as possible for people who arrive as asylum seekers to actually receive asylum, as I have analysed more thoroughly here. The German implementation, as the following analysis will show, furthers this process by moving the very deterrence and control strategies deployed at the EU borders to Germany.

Background: The New Pact on Migration and Asylum

The reform process of the common European rules on migration and asylum was initiated in 2016 by the Commission after the previous rules had proven dysfunctional and led to the catastrophic reception conditions that people on the move face in places like the Greek islands. After a lengthy negotiation process, the Commission, European Parliament, and the Council of the EU adopted the new legislation in April and May 2024.

The Pact was officially framed as a historic step to render the European asylum system more efficient and fair, as illustrated Commission president Ursula von der Leyen in April 2024:

“It will be making a real difference for all Europeans. First, more secure European borders. […] Second, faster, more efficient procedures for asylum and return. This means that those with no right to asylum will not be allowed to enter in the European Union, while those escaping war or persecution can count on the protection they need. […] And third, more solidarity with the Member States at our external borders. Because they manage the pressure from illegal migration.”

Following the Pact’s adoption on EU level in May 2024, member states had two years to develop implementation plans and transpose the reform into national law. Germany published its plan in December 2024, followed by last week’s vote on the legislation.

What is in the laws adopted by the German parliament on February 27th?

“Our goal remains clear: to regulate migration, limit secondary migration, and strengthen confidence in the rule of law’s ability to act,” comments Günter Krings, Vice Chairman of the CDU/CSU fraction in the parliament, on the CEAS reform passed on February 27th.

That day, the Parliament adopted two pieces of legislation: The ‘GEAS-Anpassungsgesetz’ (‘CEAS-adaptation law’) and the ‘Änderung des Ausländerzentralregistergesetzes in Folge der GEAS-Anpassung (AZRG)’ (a change to the central foreigners register), 200 pages of text that put together a list of changes that will be implemented in the already existing German legislation, especially the asylum and residence law. 

Even more ‘Lager’

At the new legislation’s centre is the introduction of so-called Sekundärmigrationszentren (‘secondary migration centres’). These are used to house people who apply for asylum in Germany but have already applied for asylum elsewhere according to the so-called Dublin procedure, or have been granted asylum in another EU state. As those individuals are deemed unlikely to receive asylum in Germany, their deportation shall be facilitated through concentrating them in one place. Germany is not even legally required by the EU to introduce these centres, but is pursuing its own migration policy priority to curb so-called secondary migration towards its territory. Those affected will be obliged to live in these centres until their asylum application is being decided or they are being deported, the default timeframe being 24 months and 12 months for families. 

If one wonders what a place like this will look like in practice, one can have a look at the already-existing centres (called “Lager” by many of those subjected to its violence) in Germany – desolate places in isolated, remote areas, lacking basic living standards. The Lager in Eisenhüttenstadt illustrates this, as it was built as a Dublin deportation centre solely to house those subject to deportation to another EU country. There, people report dire inhumane conditions such as a lack of food and psychological violence by the authorities. These conditions regularly spark resistance by the residents. 

Widespread detention disguised as mobility restrictions

Moreover, Germany attempts to expand its control over asylum seekers through the widespread, systematic, and default use of detention. Both during the normal asylum procedure and for those residing in secondary migration centres facing deportation to other EU countries, the authorities can impose a ban on leaving the facility for up to 12 months. An exception is given for families and children who can only be required to stay inside between 10pm and 6am. Requirements are few – the ban needs to be proportionate and a risk of escape needs to be given. However, the law states that the risk of absconding will be assumed by default and the respective person needs to prove there is no risk (“Die Fluchtgefahr ist widerleglich vermutet”) through their ‘personal circumstances and social relations in Germany’ – what this means in practice remains unclear. 

What is clear, however, is that it serves as a free pass for de facto detention for up to 12 months. Because even if the facility’s doors are technically open, the person is likely under strong psychological pressure to remain inside, especially given the possible sanctions for violating the ban. These sanctions include the decrease of benefits under the Asylum Seekers Benefits Act (Asylbewerberleistungsgesetz), with the possibility to cut all benefits altogether in certain cases, leaving the person effectively starving. 

This phenomenon of applying detention through the backdoor is not new, but has been applied in the EU migration regime systematically for a long time, notably on the so-called hotspot islands in Greece and Italy. There, most asylum seekers are obliged to remain on the islands throughout their often years long procedures and moreover underlie a curfew limiting their possibilities to leave the isolated, dire closed camps. The detention character is exacerbated by the prison-like infrastructure including containers and fences with turnstiles, as well as the ever-increasing surveillance infrastructure of drones, 24/7 CCTV, body checks, biometric data checks, and AI-based motion analysis. The rationale of detaining migrants de facto is to effectively control and immobilise them without having to apply the safeguards and formalities that would arise if a deprivation of liberty is officially (de jure) imposed as detention, such as legal assistance and remedies. Many survivors of these practices at the EU borders have reported severe mental and physical health impacts resulting from the year-long combination of deprivation of liberty and dire living conditions.

Expanded asylum procedures at the borders in closed facilities

Germany will expand the application of asylum border procedures at its airports and seaports: therefore those places where Germany ‘borders’ so-called third world countries outside the EU. There, certain people, among others those whose country of origin has an overall acceptance rate of less than 20% will have to undergo their asylum procedure at Germany’s ports and airports. Because of the 20% criterion, a large share of applicants will probably have to undergo the border procedures. During the border procedure, asylum seekers will be considered outside EU territory. This so-called fiction of non entry is an often-used trick in EU migration management to reduce legal obligations towards asylum seekers.

While these border procedures are already being carried out in German airports (‘Flughafenverfahren’), they are going to be expanded and prolonged. In the future, more than 300 people can undergo the procedure at any time, and its maximum length will be prolonged from 19 days to 12 weeks. How exactly these facilities will look remains unclear – in its national implementation plan, Germany envisions to carry out a pilot project in Frankfurt, Berlin and Munich airports. The effects of this can, again, be seen in the EU’s migration policy laboratory, the external border zones. The current Greek hotspot approach including the asylum procedures and the closed camps’ infrastructure served as a blueprint for, and are codified by the reformed border procedures. These are characterised by an absence of legal safeguards and systematic pushbacks.

However, in one point the reformed border procedure even exceeds the severity of the EU external border practice: the new rules allow for migrants illegally staying in the country apprehended anywhere in the territory at any point of time to be subjected to a screening and subsequently a border procedure if they fulfill the conditions. This means that potentially, one can have spent months in Germany, only to be apprehended by the Police and brought to a closed facility to do an asylum procedure there under de facto detention. 

The newly introduced Asylverfahrenshaft (asylum procedure detention) – also for children

Moreover, possibilities to detain people during the normal asylum procedure have been expanded (Asylverfahrenshaft). Detention is possible for up to two months, and the requirements are very low, for example if someone breaches the obligation to remain in a reception centre, as discussed earlier, or if a risk of absconding is being presumed. Even children can be detained under certain circumstances if it “protects” or “is in the best interest of” the minor. This provision lacks clarity on the grounds for detention, leaving plenty of room for arbitrary application.

Deportation detention

Deportations will be facilitated directly from the border for those who have undergone an asylum border procedure and received a rejection through the newly-introduced Return Border Procedure. This direct link between the asylum and the return procedure codifies what EU officials have been envisioning on the hotspot islands by the EU Türkiye Statement. EU states may now detain rejected asylum seekers for a period up to 12 weeks. Hence, someone rejected during an asylum border procedure and subsequently subjected to a return border procedure may undergo a period of six months of de facto detention in a closed facility at Germany’s border for the sole reason of having asked for asylum. 

All of this will be accompanied by more restricted access to asylum counselling and legal support, as well as increased surveillance and data storage further hampering the possibilities to escape the system’s violence.

How have the new laws been received in Germany?

While the ruling parties CDU/CSU and SPD celebrate the new laws as a milestone, all opposition parties have voted against. While the AFD unsurprisingly argues that the reforms do not go far enough to control migration, Lukas Benner (Alliance 90/The Greens) commented that the coalition had used every discretionary power “to make this law even harsher.”, and Clara Bünger (The Left) calls the reform a “European isolation regime” entailing “detention, camps, and disenfranchisement” in Germany. The criticism from the Greens seems somewhat cynical, given that it was the coalition of the SPD, Greens, and FDP that, after unsuccessfully advocating for some improvements in the treatment of minors, agreed to the reform proposals in 2023.

Among NGOs working on migration, both the Pact and the German implementation have sparked vast criticism. The two largest groups, ProAsyl and Amnesty International, called on the Parliament to stop the adoption. They argue for a human-rights conform reworking of the draft, including the removal of mobility restrictions, asylum procedure detention, and the reduction of possibilities for border procedures.

What’s next?

Most elements of the reform will enter into force on June 12 2026 – only three months from now. Once it’s implemented, the system’s current loopholes that sometimes allow people to slip through will get increasingly closed off through. Therefore, activists should resist the normalisation of violence, and closely monitor and fight against the ever-increasing crackdown on people on the move that very practically impacts the lives of thousands of people here in Germany. Alliances such as the O-Platz Berlin Refugee Movement, the Welcome United Network and other self-organised and solidarity structures fight every day against the living conditions in the Lager and to provide alternative housing and support structures. They should receive more support before repression gets even stronger. 

Which side are you on?

Response to “Red Flag: Defend Iran, but don’t support the theocracy!”


09/03/2026

History does not always offer a variety of stances one can take. For instance, what to do in face of imperialist attacks on a country whose internal politics and system of governance we do not quite like? If one is inclined to assert her political convictions, she is inevitably faced with some hard choices. Such choices are especially uncomfortable in the age of indefinitely customizable consumption of goods and information. We are not used to compromises; we just have to customize and optimize each choice down to the last detail.

Of course, ambivalence is always a way out. “Well, it’s too complicated.” It is, however, frowned upon among progressives.

The other way out—more popular, gratifying and utterly dishonest—usually entails intricate intellectual gymnastics, but can be narrowed down to “Yes, but…” statements. A recent piece by Nathaniel Flakin for The Left Berlin on the US-Israeli attacks on Iran is a prime example:

“[…] while we support the resistance against imperialist attacks, as socialists we also fight for the political independence of the working class. This means we never give political support to capitalist governments […].”

Marx and Engels would roll in their graves were they to hear of such gross abstraction in their names. Like it or not, we live in a world of nation-states. And in the case of Iran, like it or not, the “resistance against imperialist attacks” is organized and delivered by the state. The Iranian state enjoys wide—and currently increasing—support from the general population, including the working class. That is despite serious grievances and ongoing struggles and contrary to Flakin’s claims as well as the skewed image one might get from the Iranian lumpen diaspora.

The core problem is simple enough: a country is attacked by the genocidal forces of imperialism. Which side are you on? At this level, there is no distinction between the country, the state and the nation. And it matters not what the state is formally called and/or how we choose to describe it—the Islamic Republic, the regime, a capitalist anti-communist theocracy etc. etc.

The principled anti-imperialist stance would be: we stand with the country (i.e. the nation and their state) and we unequivocally reject the imperialist aggression. Period. That would also be the strategically wise position, as it allows a potentially broad coalition with all those who agree on that principle. Alas, strategically wise positions are not Marxists’ forte, and Flakin’s piece reads mostly like an attempt to bash the author’s least favorite Marxist organizations around the world.

Aside from the fellow Marxist bashing, the article has passages bordering on nonsensical, typical of such pseudo-progressive gymnastics:

“A handful of socialist groups in imperialist countries […] go beyond the elementary need to stand with Iran’s resistance—they say the working class should give political support [to?] the Islamic Republic. This [?] spreads illusions in a semi-colonial bourgeoisie and ultimately weakens the struggle against imperialism [emphasis added].”

I have read that passage several times and I still have no idea what it means. But if there is anything bourgeois to point out here, it is Flakin’s deference to Financial Times (for Marx’s sake!) on Khamenei’s culture and literacy.

The more troubling aspect of the piece is the utter ignorance it channels through a grossly orientalist gaze:

“This government draws its legitimacy from god, even though Iranians do not appear to be very religious.”

As already mentioned, the political mythology (theology) of the Iranian state does not matter here and now. Iran—the land, the nation, the state—is under attack by imperialists. Which side are you on?

Moreover, the claim that Iranians are not religious simply betrays a fundamental lack of understanding of the Iranian culture and history, and the central role of religion (spirituality) throughout the millennia of the Iranian civilization, including before Islam.

Finally:

“ ‘The Communist International must enter into a temporary alliance with bourgeois democracy in the colonial and backward [emphasis added] countries, but should not merge with it, and should under all circumstances uphold the independence of the proletarian movement even if it is in its most embryonic form.’

“That’s the Marxist and Leninist policy today—and it’s defended by Trotskyists.”

Aside from invoking the Marxist deity (who’s being religious now?), that passage betrays Flakin’s ultimate ignorance about Iran, a country that was never colonized. I shall not indulge the ultimately colonial adjective that follows.

Perhaps all of that could be ignored as secondary at this time, but the graphic published with the article reveals, perhaps coincidentally, the troubling nature of its supposedly anti-imperialist stance, which is hard to ignore. The photo shows a US Navy ship firing a Tomahawk missile on the first day of the attack. Taken from the ship’s helm, it is literally the imperialist perspective.

Sometimes history has only​ binary choices to offer.

Which side are you on?

The hidden ingredients in your food delivery

How do you like the taste of exploitation?


08/03/2026

A Lieferando worker on a bike.

We live in an age of ingredient obsession, where labels are read like confessionals and the exact origin of what we consume becomes shorthand for responsibility and wellbeing. “Organic”, “unprocessed”, “corn-fed”, “free-range” and “farm-to-table” are everyday aspirations in parts of society privileged enough to find morality on the supermarket shelf. Oils are ranked, grams are counted, transparency is requested at every stage, and for some the small print on packaging becomes more important than the price tag.

But when we don’t feel like cooking, we open an app and order dinner from a system built to keep its own less-than-palatable “ingredients” off the receipt. The small print that would, if it existed, mention extremely inhumane working conditions, social security fraud, risk pushed onto workers and customers, and a subcontracting business model that prizes entrepreneurial “freedom” over the people who prop it up.

How the subcontracting model works

In Germany’s food delivery sector, this is a structure which companies such as Wolt, Uber Eats and Lieferando have increasingly shifted toward. Lieferando was long considered a shining example in the industry, with the majority of its drivers directly employed by the company and having works councils in place. However, last year they announced plans to lay off 2,000 couriers.

When this happens, permanent contracts are phased out, the directly employed riders are let go, and the delivery work is outsourced to external fleets that appear days later offering the same jobs back, only now with fewer rights, lower wages, and little in the way of insurance or sick pay. On paper, the employer has changed, but on the street everything looks identical. It’s a murky world, even for Lieferando’s high-vis orange branding.

Once riders are in the subcontracting maze, they report to a so-called fleet manager who—despite being their de facto boss—offers no contract, insurance, or security. More often than not, it’s just a WhatsApp number, a delivery app login, and the hope they don’t block you or disappear before payday. If they do, you have no proof you ever worked, only the absurd risk of being fined (or worse, deported) for unauthorized employment you never got to choose. Meanwhile, the multibillion-euro platform that actually directs your labour shrugs and points at the subcontractor, who points at the fleet manager, who’s likely pointing at the departures timetable in the nearest airport.

“They call it subcontracting, but it’s not,” says Lieferando Works Council (LWC) leader Samee Ullah. “We’re just pushed into the hands of middlemen so they can make money. In Germany a subcontractor usually gives you instructions for the job. Here the instructions still come from Lieferando or Uber Eats but employment rights and protections disappear.”

The extra ingredients in your food order

Trying to understand any business model that relies on legal loopholes to exist can feel complex and labyrinthine—which, of course, is the point. To help unpack it, we’ve highlighted the things everyone should be aware of before tapping “order now”. 

Here are the extra ingredients in your delivery that don’t appear on the receipt.

1. Conditions of forced labor 

The delivery apps sell a story of flexible side hustles and entrepreneurial freedom. What they actually rely on is a workforce that can’t afford to walk away.

In Germany, most of the riders aren’t hobby cyclists topping up a comfortable income. They’re migrant workers and international students whose right to be in the country is tied to a fragile combination of paperwork and payments.

Increasingly drawn here by aggressive marketing promises of affordable education and high-paying tech jobs, many have to open a “blocked account” and deposit €12,000–14,000  before they even land. By the time they’re riding through winter traffic, they’re already in the red.

Add to that the cost of cramped, overpriced rooms, private university fees, and limited access to other legal employment, and the fear of falling behind is never far away. If riders default on tuition or fail to prove sufficient income, they don’t just receive a stern email from a bank—they risk losing their student status, their visa, and their legal right to remain in the country. 

This is not a labor market where people can weigh up offers and choose the best one—it’s a trap in which saying “no” can mean homelessness, debt collectors, or worse, deportation. So, when your food arrives a few minutes early, it may well have been carried by someone riding not just against the clock, but against a countdown built into their passport and bank account.

2. Theft from the social state

If a restaurant failed to pay VAT, we’d call it tax fraud. When delivery platforms and their fleets hollow out entire sections of the welfare state, it’s called innovation.

Germany’s social safety net—health insurance, pensions, unemployment benefits, and paid leave—depends on employer contributions tied to formal employment. But in the subcontracting world of the delivery sector, large platforms are allowed to step delicately around many of these obligations. 

Riders are reclassified as “self‑employed”, pushed onto the books of the aforementioned small fleets, and hired under “contracts” that amount to little more than WhatsApp or Telegram messages. 

The end result is simple: less money goes into the collective pot. Health insurance funds are deprived of contributions, pension systems lose out on payments, and accident insurance is left to pick up the bill when a rider is hit by a car. These costs don’t disappear, they’re pushed onto the public.

And then, when the numbers don’t add up, the same racist politicians who cheered on entrepreneurial freedom turn around and blame migrants for stretching the system. 

3. Delivering while sick 

When it comes to food and eating out, we’ve every right to be concerned about potential contaminants. We expect regulators to keep salmonella, listeria and mold at bay. If a kitchen cuts corners, we talk about hygiene scandals and public health.

In a normal employment relationship, health and safety laws are meant to guarantee that people don’t have to work while they’re ill—that they can stay home with pay and not gamble their rent on a blocked nose and a fever. In the subcontracting world, these protections are non-existent, because riders are hired through opaque fleets and middlemen who think of sick pay and workplace safety as little more than a fantasy.

For customers, that means something very simple: there’s no real guarantee that the person bringing your food could afford to stay home when they’re ill. If they have a temperature, a bad cough, or a stomach bug, they almost certainly ride anyway because not riding might mean not eating, not paying tuition, or not meeting the conditions of a visa.

4. Risk for profit

Delivery apps like to describe themselves as neutral intermediaries. They don’t own the kitchens, they don’t own the restaurants, and crucially, they don’t even own the bikes. This absence isn’t an accident—it’s by design.

Everywhere you look in the delivery chain, risk is pushed downwards. Riders are expected to rent or buy their own e‑bikes, often paying around €150 a month just to keep the wheels turning. An e‑bike becomes a depreciating asset workers can’t really afford but have to shoulder if they want the job. If the bike is stolen or if the battery disappears while they’re running up four flights of stairs to drop off a pizza, that’s their loss. 

And once bike rental and equipment costs are factored in, many riders report that their effective earnings fall close to—or even below—Germany’s statutory minimum wage, despite the promises of competitive pay.

Even the act of charging a battery becomes an unpaid hazard. Sometimes they just get warm and buzz, but other times they explode into flames and turn a shared flat into a blackened shell. No push notification pops up from the app to say: “By the way, one of our riders lost everything last night so that you could get your burger on time.”

When accidents happen—crashes, fires, long‑term injuries—the costs fall either on the individual or on the public services that patch them back together. The platforms that orchestrate the work keep their hands clean and their balance sheets light. Everything that might go wrong is quietly billed to someone else. 

5. Speed over safety

Food delivery lives and dies on the promise of speed. This urgency is marketed as convenience but in reality it’s backed up by a systematic refusal to invest in safety. Many riders have been in Germany for only a few weeks or months but are legally allowed to drive or ride on licences from countries with completely different traffic patterns. Instead of training, the companies provide little more than a branded jacket and an app login.

For Aju John, a Berlin-based lawyer and researcher who’s supported delivery riders in legal disputes, that combination is not accidental—it concentrates the risk on those least equipped to carry it.

“This is a job that even those with no experience are easily able to get into. They are especially attractive for those whose previous work experience and education are not valued in the German job market. Even those with no experience of the circumstances on German roads. Neither the fleet partner nor the platform corporations provide them with any training. In the first six months of your stay here, you are actually allowed to use an Indian driving license to drive around in Germany, and deliver for such companies. These are completely different driving circumstances. And who bears the risk of a traffic violation or an accident happening at that time? It’s either the worker or the state, rarely the corporation that is profiting off this risk.”

The last ingredient in your takeaway is not just someone rushing through the rain. It’s a system in which other people’s safety is routinely traded for speed and convenience.

So what can we do?

The point of all this isn’t to say “never order food again” and cut people off from one of the few income sources available to them. But if you care about what’s in your food, it’s time to care about the labour architecture that gets it to the door. There are a few concrete things we can all do to help:

1. Back the riders’ petition and follow LWC.

Lieferando’s Works Council is working on a petition demanding that the company halt outsourcing plans, protect existing jobs, and commit to direct employment with full social insurance contributions and enforceable labour rights.

Add your name to their contact form here to get the petition emailed directly to you once it’s ready. For more information on the Lieferando workers fight, please follow and contact the group through here.

2. Practice everyday solidarity.

If you order, tip generously and in cash. It’s one of the few ways to get money directly to riders without a cut being taken on the way.

3. Support the broader fight against subcontracting with UAS.

United Against Subcontracting is a collective of workers organizing to improve the conditions for precarious workers in Berlin and across Germany. Follow them here. 

Survival as a business model

It’s common to call standing shoulder to shoulder on a crowded platform, or waiting for a rush-hour train to a secure job, the “rat race.” If that is our benchmark for stress, what do we call the race delivery workers are expected to run?

This isn’t about people who arrive in Germany being naïve or unaware, as part of the press would have you believe. It’s not a story about poor personal choices. It’s about a system that concentrates the risks at the bottom, strips away stability, and then treats the outcome as personal responsibility. Please sign the petition, tip well, and enjoy your meal!

The article was modified on March 11 to update the status of the LWC petition.

School Strike: 5th March 2026

Report and photo gallery


06/03/2026

On Thursday 5th March, 50,000 school children throughout Germany skipped school to demonstrate against conscription. This is the second school strike against Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s gradual introduction of compulsory military service. During Merz’s recent White House visit he promised to support Donald Trump’s wars and made it clear what increased German militarism really means.

Following a law passed last year, all Germans are now sent an “invitation” to join the army on their 18th birthday. It is widely believed that this is being used as a stepping stone towards full conscription. The German military is already sending soldiers into schools to spread propaganda for joining the army.

Young Germans, however, are resisting – speaking on the Left Berlin radio show, school pupil Carla said: “people my age – students, young people, children, feel that this decision has been made above their heads. We haven’t had the chance to vote yet … People are just frustrated because a decision which forms our future has been made completely without us.”

In Berlin, between 6,000 and 10,000 demonstrated. A group of parents carried a banner from Eltern gegen Wehrpflicht (parents against conscription) and some teachers wore jackets from the GEW (Education and Science Workers’) union. Clara, a teacher, told The Left Berlin that she was demonstrating “because the government is spending billions on more weapons at the same time they are cutting education. This means that we are unable to serve our students, and then they are sent to the military to shoot at other people. I am proud that my union is supporting the strikes.”

The bulk of the demonstrators were young, often very young. Many wore keffiyahs and Palestinian flags were dotted throughout the demo – a sign that even in Germany, movements are mobilising and standing up for Gaza. After police banned the chant “Merz, leck mein Eier” (Merz, lick my balls), chants against the police followed. Other home-made placards attacked both Merz’s support for Trump’s wars and the fascist AfD. While some called for peace, others said: “No war but class war.”

Iranian demonstrator Chapoole was worried about Merz’s support for the bombing of her country, saying: “There’s nothing more colonizer-like than to force your own version of a ‘dream-like country to escape to’ on 90 million people by supporting bombing them and destroying the infrastructure they stayed behind to build despite all odds, while you and your family line escaped.”

Ferat Koçak, a Linke MP who was at the demo, said: “It was a very powerful school strike and many young people who were not all politicised came together and actively confronted conscription, against war crimes worldwide and against wars worldwide. When the police ban a chant which uses teenage slang, this is the authoritarian politics which we know and is part of the move to the right in society.”

The next school strike will be on the 8th of May – the 81st anniversary since the liberation of Europe from Nazi fascism. Nessa, from the No to Military Conscription alliance and one of the organisers of the strikes, stated: “We want to connect it to anti-fascism and the rise of right-wing extremism. We want to remind everybody how you can fight back. Everything is connected”.

Nessa hopes that on the 8th of May, parallel school strikes will be taking place in other countries. This is hopefully the start of a new international movement which fights both conscription and militarism in general.

All photos: Guy Smallman www.guysmallman.com