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Fight the virus – in Germany and Britain

Great Britain offers no model for fighting Corona, but the German government is not much better, We need a response based on solidarity.


18/01/2022

I’m Phil, the speaker of the LINKE working group Internationals, which tries to bring non-Germans into Berlin politics. And I’m a Weddinger. But I’m speaking today as a Briton.

Great Britain has become an example of how you do not fight Corona. At Christmas, I visited my family. When I came back, I had to go into quarantine – not because I had Covid, but because everyone who were on “den Insel” are (rightly) treated as if they are a potential danger.

The statistics don’t lie. In Great Britain, over 150,000 people have died from Corona. Last week there were over 70,000 new cases. If you want to deny Corona, you should speak to people from Great Britain. Everyone knows several people who have been infected. Many of us have lost friends and family members.

It is getting worse. This week we’ve heard that in the worst times, when Britons had to stay at home, when many lost their jobs, there were government parties in Downing Street every week, which violated Corona rules. This was a clear metaphor for what the British Conservative government think of us: we die, they party.

But is Germany so different? For nearly 2 years, when we have suffered, our government has spent more time looking after the German economy and local industry than after normal people. Parks had to close while everyone was forced to go to work in packed U-Bahns. The main priorities were those of German capitalism, and I don’t notice any serious change of direction from the new traffic light coalition.

This is the background that explains why so many people don’t want to be vaccinated, why they march alongside Nazis. They don’t trust our government – and I can fully understand this. If a government does not offer any hope, there will always be the danger that right wing forces try to profit from this.

This is why rallies like this are important. We must offer hope. We must show solidarity. Of course we want people to get vaccinated, but not because they will be punished if they don’t. We are for vaccination because our class should look after each other.

This means that you should go and get vaccinated, and you should bring friends and relatives with you. But if everyone wants to remains safe, we need a change in our politics. We need a politics which is focused on human rights, not on profits.

Corona cannot be stopped in Germany alone, but worldwide. This means that we must remember that in many countries, particularly in the Global South, many people do not have the choice of whether they get vaccinated. The Pharma industry is keeping the patents which are not made available to anyone else, as this won’t generate any profits. This is why we must increase the pressure. Vaccines must be made available to everyone, throughout the world, and they must be free.

Look after yourselves. Stay safe and healthy. But you should also fight for a society of solidarity.

Hoch die Internationale Solidarität,

This is a translation of a speech given at the rally against conspiracy theorists in Wedding on Monday, 17th January. The way things are looking, the conspiracy theorists will continue to demonstrate alongside Nazis every Monday. As long as this happens, counter-demonstrations will be organised. We will continue to report on this on theleftberlin.com and in our weekly Newsletter. If you are not already subscribed to the Newsletter, please send a mail to team@theleftberlin.com.

One Year In, What Kind of Deal Has Biden Left Us?

Joe Biden’s first year has thrown some crumbs to workers, but mainly helped the corporate status quo. It’s time to build mass organisation based on labour and a fight from below.


17/01/2022

US President Joe Biden marks his one-year anniversary in office on January 20th. He landed in the White House on the back of lofty comparisons to Franklin Delano Roosevelt, as Democrats eked out a win in a year they thought they’d take in a landslide. And Biden has been lowering the public’s expectations ever since.

The FDR analogy was preposterous from the jump. No doubt this messaging from elite Democrats aimed to evoke a time when the federal government intervened in a crisis – in this case the Great Depression – to pass sweeping social policy and make regular people’s lives more liveable. (Meanwhile, their behind-the-scenes machinations had just torpedoed Bernie Sanders, the one Democratic candidate who actually planned to enact such an ambitious agenda.) Certainly, today’s conditions have parallels to the Great Depression, although we face a particular set of interlocking crises now, from rampant inequality to ecological catastrophe to the global pandemic. 

But for the FDR comparisons to stand, Biden would have pass through Congress social programs on par with the New Deal, which created the US’s welfare state and first set of labor protections. Despite its severe limitations, the New Deal is arguably the most significant set of pro-working-class reforms in the country’s history.

But Congress isn’t in the business of passing ambitious social programs these days. We knew going into Biden’s presidency that this longtime champion of bipartisanship was unlikely to buck the donor class now, and do something for workers and the poor. Unsurprisingly, even Biden’s campaign promise for a watered-down alternative to universal healthcare, the public option, seemed to disappear after he took office.

That said, even dreaming smaller, Biden and his party had the last twelve months to pass something to raise the standard of living for American workers, and to merit the faintest of comparisons with FDR: a higher minimum wage; meaningful relief for workers and the unemployed hit by the pandemic in myriad ways; improved conditions for labor organizing. 

Of course, it would be misguided to think we can separate what we might call “economic issues” from equally pressuring crises like climate change, immigration, and the right-wing assault on democracy – all issues that affect workers and working-class power, and all fronts on which the Biden administration appears to have thrown up its hands. But in the spirit of the New Deal comparison, it’s worth asking a narrower question: how have Biden and the Democrats affected workers and the social safety net? A year in, let’s take a clear-eyed organizer’s look at what they’ve done, what they haven’t, and what we might still win. 

The American Rescue Plan: better than nothing

Biden signed into law a $1.9 trillion dollar pandemic relief package in March 2021. It amounted to a much-needed injection of emergency funding without shifting the balance of power.

The good: The bill included direct cash aid to workers, families, and the unemployed. State and local governments together got $350 billion. Individuals got one-time stimulus payments of $1,400 ($2,800 for married couples), and parents got $1,400 per child, within income limits. The bill temporarily extended the $300-a-week unemployment bonus to those out of work, and people on unemployment saw a raise in the number of weeks they could collect benefits, from 50 to 74. And it extended the existing 15% increase in SNAP benefits (i.e. food stamps). 

The package also raised the child tax credit from a monthly $167 to $300 per child under six and $250 for children aged six to seventeen. Democrats were quick to trumpet that they’d “cut child poverty in half,” but that claim depended on making the boosted child tax credit permanent, a task it appears they’ve now failed.

It’s worth mentioning the federal eviction moratorium, not actually part of this bill, which Biden and Congress passed and extended at various points to give temporary and desperately-needed relief to renters, only to be overturned by the Supreme Court in August 2021.

The bad: There were two glaring omissions from the American Rescue Plan that ensured it didn’t challenge the status quo. The first is its utter failure to take the steps needed to end the pandemic. Yes, it provided a massive influx of funding for vaccination, testing, and the Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA). However, the only way to get the pandemic truly under control is to vaccinate the global population, a goal at odds with pharmaceutical company profits. In allowing Pfizer and Moderna to keep their vaccine patents secret, Biden and Democrats cut off the possibility of making vaccines widely available in poorer countries. 

Since the bill’s passage, the coronavirus has continued to circulate and mutate into new variants, leaving people in the US (and the world) to a 2022 that looks awfully like 2020 and 2021, or worse. And the Biden administration and the CDC have continued to bungle the pandemic response, from massive testing shortages to guidance that infected people can return to work in a mere five days.

Secondly, the pandemic relief bill is where Biden showed he never intended to make good on his campaign promise of a $15 minimum wage. After a ruling from the unelected Senate parliamentarian that a minimum wage increase couldn’t pass through reconciliation – which they could have ignored – Democrats declared $15 an hour dead.

And, since this is Biden and the Democrats, the bill wouldn’t be complete without a corporate handout. Its solution to people losing their health insurance in droves as they lost their jobs was to funnel tens of billions of dollars to health insurance companies. The legislation created subsidies for people to get on expensive Affordable Care Act (ACA) plans and COBRA plans (which allow people to keep their employer-sponsored health insurance after they lose their jobs). With more people on these pricy plans, the health insurance industry stands to profit handsomely, leaving ACA recipients saddled with ten times the out-of-pocket costs of Medicaid recipients.

So what?: These pandemic benefits had a real impact on working people’s lives. However, since they were one-time or temporary, they qualify in this analysis as “the good” only in the limited sense that they exceeded rock-bottom expectations of the federal government, imposed by years of austerity starting with Clinton. Far from constituting any restructuring of the economy or the rules that govern it, the temporary redistribution of income to the bottom of the scale did nothing to alter the balance of power between capital and labor. 

We shouldn’t confuse Biden’s emergency relief for the launch of a new era of meaningful social spending in government. Many of the benefits Democrats passed were continuations from the Trump administration’s emergency measures. The stimulus payments and child tax credits were, of course, means-tested rather than universal. And the Biden campaign’s original promise was a $2,000 check, making one of Biden and Harris’ first acts in office an attempt to lower the public’s expectations and pretend they’d meant $1,400 all along.

Build Back What?

Biden’s other main attempt at signature legislation this year was just as notable for the political maneuvering that went into it as it was for its content. He had campaigned on a broad “Build Back Better agenda” that included both revitalizing the nation’s infrastructure and a set of social programs. Congressional leaders landed on a strategy of splitting the two projects into separate bills, knowing that the former – dubbed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act – would have a much better chance of passing through the Senate than the latter. 

The Senate is currently split 50-50, with Vice President Harris casting the tie-breaking vote. Most legislation must pass the Senate with 60 votes, but under a process called reconciliation, certain kinds of bills can pass with a simple majority. But the makeup of the Senate means that Democrats can’t afford a single no vote to pass a bill via reconciliation, and conservative Democrats Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema often prove obstacles to this perfect 50 votes. (Whether they are truly the only thing standing between Democrats and their purported agenda, or whether they give cover to a host of other corporate-captured senators, depends on whom you ask.) 

As the two-bill strategy solidified, despite pushback from progressives, the social programs were lumped into a reconciliation bill, eventually named the Build Back Better Act (BBB). Democratic leaders in Congress dealt the first fatal blow to their own public-facing agenda by scheduling a vote on the infrastructure bill before Build Back Better, despite resistance from the Squad and progressives, who knew this move would lose them any leverage to withhold votes. But the credulous Progressive Caucus leadership accepted a promise in writing that Congress would vote soon on BBB. The infrastructure bill passed in November at $1.2 trillion. In negotiations with Biden and Democrats, Manchin succeeded in whittling down BBB from $3.5 trillion to $1.7 trillion – and then, on December 19, Manchin appeared on Fox News and announced he would vote no on the bill. Barring a miracle, BBB is dead.

The good: Was there anything to celebrate in the infrastructure bill? It directed $550 billion to roads, passenger and freight rail, broadband access, updating the electric grid, water and wastewater systems (e.g. replacing lead pipes), and public transit. But this “good,” like the emergency pandemic aid, is an influx of cash without any real redistribution of power or changes to the structure of the economy. And, unlike the pandemic relief package that was better than nothing, some have argued the infrastructure bill was worse than nothing. Let’s take a look at why.

The bad: The first notable thing here is what the infrastructure bill did do. Biden, ever-bipartisan, spent precious time and political capital trying to get Republicans to vote for the infrastructure bill. Since Republicans balked at new taxes, the funding for the bill comes from a hodgepodge of sources, notably cannibalizing unused pandemic unemployment funding (while more than half of US states refused this extended funding, leaving the unemployed in a lurch). Other funding sources usher in privatization via public-private partnerships and “asset recycling,” in which the government sells off old infrastructure to private companies to pay for new infrastructure. Wall Street, understandably, is thrilled.

But the second notable thing is the content of what we lost. In giving up on Build Back Better, Biden and the Democrats doomed a laundry list of social programs that had made it into the bill:

  • an expansion of the child tax credit
  • paid family and medical leave (originally twelve weeks and cut down to four in the whittled-down version that Manchin rejected)
  • free preschool for three- and four-year-olds and lowered childcare costs
  • two years of free community college (also eliminated in the final version)
  • piecemeal but significant healthcare reforms like a cap on insulin expenses, expanding Medicaid to vision, hearing and dental, and allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices with manufacturers
  • A Civilian Climate Corps – a far cry from a Green New Deal, but a direct callback to FDR’s Civilian Conservation Corps, which would offer government jobs for environmental protection and conservation
  • Large-scale investment in producing and maintaining affordable housing

Any one of these things would have provided a material change in the daily lives of working people, taking them from the edge of precarity and freeing up their capacity to fight for themselves. The death of BBB dealt a devastating blow to any hopes of shifting the balance of power under Biden.

So what?: Biden and the Democrats’ were either unable, or refused, to pass these social programs, while they handed over our infrastructure to private corporations. Without massive pressure from below of the kind that led to the New Deal, the political calculus for them pointed squarely at governing in service of capital and the donor class. This doesn’t tell us much about them that we don’t already know, except perhaps to put the nail in the coffin of any hopes that Biden would usher in a new era of social democracy or achieve something remotely on par with FDR. 

Maybe the real interesting story for organizing here is Congressional progressives’ strategy, tactics, and ultimate failure in wielding real leverage by withholding votes. This wasn’t their only action this year that broke from the non-confrontational status quo; members of the Squad camped out overnight on the Capitol steps in July to agitate for extending the eviction moratorium. Additional ink has been spilled over the need for progressives to use their leverage, and this fight’s implications for how we pressure legislators from below. 

For now, it’s worth noting that members of the Squad are willing to withhold votes, and, if we can mobilize in large numbers, there might be opportunities in the next year to pressure or support them into acting even more confrontationally. (The revived Left has yet to succeed in such an undertaking even toward friendly representatives.) But the Squad stands at six members, and we shouldn’t assume that all Congressional “progressives” (a slippery term) share their politics and pressure points. We can’t count on Progressive Caucus leader Pramila Jayapal nor its other rank-and-file members – nor mainstream Democrats, it should be said – to use their power for working people after they caved on BBB, at least not without massive public pressure of the type the Left hasn’t pulled off in recent decades.

After BBB’s very public death knell, Democrats shifted quickly to voting rights, trying to pass two bills through Congress that would level the electoral playing field after increasingly blatant antidemocratic moves by Republicans. But as of today, they’ve openly given up on that, too.

What about unions?

The start of the Biden administration gave labor grounds for cautious optimism. In January, Biden fired Peter Robb, Trump’s anti-union head of the National Labor Relations Board, and in July the Senate confirmed the more pro-union Jennifer Abruzzo. 

Early in Biden’s term, hopes were high that Congress would pass the PRO Act, which would make sweeping changes to the country’s hostile organizing conditions and could start to reverse the long decline of US labor since the 1970s. But after the bill passed the House in March, its key provisions got lumped into the reconciliation bill. With the Senate’s razor-thin margin and Build Back Better all but dead, it’s hard to deny that labor’s hopes might be dashed on this one.

Biden’s public rhetoric on unions has been mixed. He supported the union drive of Amazon workers in Bessemer, Alabama, and more recently of striking Kellogg’s workers. But as the omicron variant has soared, Biden’s White House has weighed in against the Chicago Teachers’ Union demanding better safety protocols for themselves and their students, lending muscle to Mayor Lori Lightfoot in trying to force schools to stay open.

What does this mean for organizing conditions?

This is not an attempt to prescribe Left strategy for 2022 – others have done this more thoroughly. But many of the arguments for leftists to vote for Biden in the first place claimed that a Biden administration would allow for more fruitful organizing conditions than Trump would. After one year, what’s the lay of the land?

It’s easy to think we’re about where we were a year ago. With no minimum wage, no PRO Act, no free preschool or higher education – and, moreover, a pandemic that continues to kill people, strain hospitals, and interrupt daily life – conditions for working people haven’t undergone a seismic shift since January 2021. If anything, we face the compounded effects of multiple years of the pandemic on organizing. Practically speaking, organizers in labor, the Left, and movement formations lose a lot if the virus still rages. Who will persevere through another year of Zoom meetings? Organizing by definition turns on in-person contact and relationships. 

But where does a US left-leaning movement apply pressure to end the pandemic by vaccinating poorer countries? Who’s in this movement, and what institutions anchor it? The former question at least has an answer, even if it’s such a tall order as to seem out of reach: we’d have to force Congress to have pharmaceutical companies open up their vaccine patents. Any shift in the power relations between labor and capital requires a version of this same answer – mass organization.

But the latter question gives us answers we don’t like. The US Left, despite its resurgence since 2016, is nowhere near as large or as internally organized as it needs to be to exert the pressure to pull this off. There’s a huge gap between the challenges we face and what Left and labor institutions are equipped to do. Even if Biden’s first year had been a best-case scenario, it wouldn’t have solved the fundamental problem for the US Left – merging with the broad, multi-racial working class, which must include revitalizing organized labor to be militant and democratic. 

However, there’s a silver lining: since our long-term project of relinking the Left and labor into a fighting mass remains the same after a year of Biden has come and gone, we can continue to pursue it. And signs abound that organized labor is on the upswing, including enough high-profile strikes that mainstream outlets called 2021 “the year of the worker,” but also the lesser-known victories for union democracy at UAW and the Teamsters. A world with the PRO Act in place would have drastically eased the conditions for organizing new unions, but socialists still need to do the work of building relationships with organic labor leaders, and we can work towards that even if Biden furiously maintains the status quo. 

A one-year retrospective on the sitting US president helps us reflect on our current organizing moment, but the premise can be misleading: we must be careful not to fall into a top-down theory of change where we wait for individuals like Biden, or institutions like Congress, to give out victories for working people. If we’re going to win any moves toward a redistributive agenda, let alone the foundations of a fundamental shift in the economic order, the pressure has to come from below.

Joining the dots: pandemics and political economy

The Global South suffers disproportionately from Covid. We need Health Justice, argues Rehad Desai, director of the new film Time of Pandemics


15/01/2022

Most keen observers internationally believed that the first shock events that the planet would experience would result from the climate crisis. In fact, it was the flip side of that same coin, the ecological crisis, that created this shock Covid-19 is not a natural disaster. It originates from is driven by the incessant need for growth and the “compete or die” logic of capitalism.

The optimistic view that the virus will burn itself out by the end of next year clearly has no scientific basis. Vaccine inequity will make it likely that more deadly mutations of the virus will emerge in the global south, and with increasing ability to escape the efficacy of vaccines. Currently, 66 countries will fail to meet the stated target of vaccinating 40 percent of their populations; 44 of them are on the African continent.

Just as importantly, fragile public health systems in Africa have been further weakened by the pandemic. It is increasing the high burden of disease and in doing so deeply undermining our ability to minimise the mounting death toll. In South Africa this figure is now around 250,000, according to the most accurate measure – when the calculations of “excess deaths” by the South African Medical Research Council is combined with the official figure of 90,000.

Covid will continue to haunt us for years to come. The fourth wave, with its present epicentre in Europe, has higher levels of infection than previously seen, although significantly lower death rates and hospitalisation among the vaccinated. We will require more than the jab to contain this and the pandemics to come. That said, access to vaccines and new treatment remains of paramount concern.

Spread by capitalism

Those nations which have built the capacity to develop vaccines, medical treatment and equipment against chronic illness have over the past 50 years handed over intellectual property (IP) rights to medicines to companies that have become major international corporations. These big pharmaceutical companies have learnt that bumper profits can only be obtained from drugs for which lucrative markets exist for daily dosing. This inbuilt logic has acted as a brake on biomedical innovation for those diseases which are harder to monetise.

Vaccines by nature are usually a one-off dose. So big pharma has not shown any significant interest, unless of course the state has been willing to enter the picture with huge amounts of public finance to de-risk the operation, as with Covid-19. Thus, while innovation today is largely pioneered by universities and state-financed research institutions, the IP generated is being handed over to locally owned big pharma. This is at the direct expense of global public health security. Governments in rich nations increasingly see the role of the state to first and foremost nurture the competitive ability of their own industrial base.

These public-private partnerships have been buttressed by the IP regimes introduced by the World Trade Organisation in the mid 1990s. Its rationale is simple: commodify health; turn the delivery of public health into a business, and in doing so grant big pharma the right to determine who lives and who dies. The Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPs) agreement is a deeply flawed neoliberal instrument that has stifled innovation and inflicted harm of genocidal proportion on the world’s poor. Therefore, the call for a temporary TRIPS waiver on Covid vaccines and medicines by South Africa and India has gained significant momentum. We must use the moment and get behind the call for the TRIPS waiver. If we can win the battle around the waiver, our long war to obtain access to medicines will stand a greater chance of victory.

Covax: another failed PPP

Covax is another private-public partnership, established to ensure “fair and equal distribution of Covid-19 vaccines”. Its objective is for each country to be able to access 20 percent of its total needs from a common pool. High- and middle-income countries would pay top dollar for vaccine supply, so low-income countries could obtain their own supplies for free.

The project failed miserably. The involvement of Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson and Johnson was voluntary, as was the participation of countries. In fact, those companies sought out the highest bidders with the fiscal resilience to make pre-orders (advanced market commitments). Richer nations in the process bought half of projected global supply for 2021 before it was produced, often over-ordering. In short, hoarding left Covax starved of necessary supply. The vast majority of the world’s population were left to fend for themselves.

The initiative was championed by Bill Gates, the IP warrior from his days at Microsoft and now the single largest philanthropist in the health sector. And he insisted from the get-go that massive government investment in Covid vaccines could not undermine IP rights. Profits are estimated at $25 billion for Pfizer and not much less for Moderna and Johnson and Johnson. Meanwhile the “not-for-profit” AstraZeneca jab has arguably been deliberately sabotaged by the club of rich nations.

Like the COP process over the last decade, Covax was dominated by massive corporations and the club of rich nations, big pharma’s agenda and the agencies and governments who support them. A cameo role was reserved for the rest of the world. This ensured that there was no substantial progress towards bringing about the vaccine equity so critical to the suppression of the global pandemic.

With HIV it took eight years before we gained access to antiretroviral drugs that were readily available to wealthier nations. The consequence was the unnecessary loss of 10 million lives.

Most of the world’s peoples will not see their countries obtain sufficient vaccine supplies until late 2022 or early 2023 at best.

Ecological crisis threatens health

Like most other emerging diseases, Covid is a zoonotic virus – a disease transmitted from animals to humans. This itself is a direct result of the ecological crisis that has been maturing.

The most important vector of such viruses has been big agriculture, and in particular factory farming of animals. Despite years of alarm bells rung by many public health experts, public health care systems had a glaring lack of capacity, a consequence of decades of underinvestment. This has rendered most states unable to confront such outbreaks.

In the global south, spending on healthcare has been actively blocked by big financial institutions such as the IMF and World Bank, leaving continents like Africa largely defenceless in the face of pandemics.

Nothing less than a comprehensive and universal public healthcare system is required if we are to limit the death toll. HIV, TB, Ebola, HN51 and Covid have taught us this lesson the hard way. The threat of disease is now inescapable. Pandemics present and future, combined with rising temperatures, will intensify the public health crisis and foster deeply political struggles.

The socialist response

We have an obligation to present a clear vision of what is required to contain the Covid-19 pandemic. The absence of any alternatives to the mainstream Social Democratic and Communist parties and the wider trade union movement internationally is glaring. Progressive science with a small “s” now provides a framework for both climate and health crises. We cannot ignore science, particularly where scientists have collectively come to clear conclusions. But we also must critically engage it, interrogate its assumptions, because it does not operate within a societal vacuum.

Climate Justice puts the people most affected by the crisis at the centre of the solution. Health Justice must do the same. We need a planet that is fit to live on. Cataclysmic events have been unfolding around the world for the last few years. For us in Southern Africa, the destruction wrought on Mozambique’s second largest city, Beira, and the severe damage to 240,000 homes in the city and beyond stand out as a warning of what is to come.

Our guiding star is that nothing less than system change is required for long-term protection against the negative impacts of the climate and ecological crisis presently unfolding. We hold to a notion of deep and just transition to a society that is based on democratic planning. Guided by the science, we understand the priorities to reduce carbon emissions.

At the heart of solution is the radical shift away from the individual and the private to the collective. In doing so we can take society in a democratic and rationally planned direction.

This will require, among other things, the public ownership of energy, the massive expansion of public transport, water, housing and land as public goods, and the expansion and support of small-scale farming. In the context of the pandemic and rising temperatures, unfettered access to medicines and a single comprehensive and universal health care system. These are some of the critical shifts required. Others include an immediate end to deforestation, the wholesale scaling back of big agriculture, the ending of the factory farming of animals.

Breaking the power of big pharma patent monopolies on medicine would herald the first step in that direction.

Rehad Desai is a South African documentary filmmaker. His latest film has just been released, entitled Time of Pandemics and is freely available for organisations to utilise. A version of this article was first published in Amandla! Magazine in December 2021.

Best of recent German-language Cinema

Improve your language skills and learn more about Germany by watching the best recent German films.


12/01/2022

Are you struggling to learn German? Finding it hard to find the time between work and a little free time for yourself? I may have a solution for you. Watching films in German is a great way of improving your language skills while absorbing a bit of local culture. Even if you already speak good German, movies are an excellent way to engage with social and political themes being discussed in Germany today.

When I was first in Germany, I improved my German no end by watching subtitled films. It’s best to start with English subtitles so that you don’t get completely lost. When your German is a little better, watching German subtitles helps you understand how the sounds you hear match the words you see in the subtitles.

The question remains, what to watch? When I was compiling my list of the best films of 2021, I noticed that a lot of good German films have been released recently. Using this as a basis, here’s a summary of some of the best German-language films released in the 2020s. Covid has affected release dates a little, but there are all sorts of other ways to find them online.

 

1. Ein Bißchen bleiben wir noch

2020, Director: Arash T. Riahi

A remarkable Austrian film about the everyday life of a pair of Chechen refugees. After their mother is taken into a psychiatric hospital, Oskar and Lilli go on the run, but are eventually caught and fostered out (separately of course) to well-meaning liberal carers. Their new guardians have good intentions, even if they are insufferably smug, and the film treats them with critical understanding. But it never loses sight of the poor kids who are the real victims of the piece. A bleak film of misplaced hope which still has space to appreciate its few moments of joy.

2. Contra

2020, Director Sönke Wortmann

A film I put off going to see for a long time, because most German films about race end up being horribly patronising, and often quite Islamophobic. Be pleasantly surprised at this story of how a working class female Muslim law student deals with institutional sexism and racism. This is much more than just a “worthy” film though – it is intelligently written and shows a nuanced understanding of character and class. And it’s funny. The plot seems a little obvious at first, but then it takes the stereotypes you’d expect from this sort of film and turns them upside down.

3. Je suis Karl

2021, Director: Christian Schwochow

Another German film about race, and again one which subverts accepted wisdom. What happens when the victim of an apparent racist bomb attack enters the company of Neo-Nazi Identitarians? This is a film that treats the enemy seriously, and shows how they have moved on from just trying to recruit Sieg Heiling skinheads. Instead, they talk about saving the planet and women’s rights. They also profit from the Left’s inability to see any problems in the EU. Some people didn’t like it, as they felt that it helped legitimize the Nazis. I think that these critics are missing the point.

4. Kokon

2020, Director: Leonie Krippendorff

A touching tale of first love, where Nora’s “normal” teenage problems are intensified because the love of her life is (a) unpredictable and (b) a girl. There is a metaphor going on about Nora’s pet caterpillars emerging from their cocoon but the story of working-class multi-cultural life transcends the usual clichés. It’s a life-affirming film, but not short of deep heartache. In other words, it treats a gay romance exactly the same way good film treats heterosexual young love. Maybe it’s a shame that this is exceptional, but this is a rare gem.

5. Who’s Afraid of Alice Miller?

2020, Director: Daniel Howald

I had never heard of Alice Miller before I saw this film, but in her native Switzerland she was a famous psychologist and media personality. This is the pained story of her life, told by her son Martin, who had, let’s say, a difficult relationship with his mother. It’s a story which takes in the Holocaust, the Polish resistance, and Alice’s later public campaign against child abuse. We learn a lot about the often strained relationship between parents and their children, but we are left to make up our own minds about the individual cases that we view.

6. Not Just Your Picture

2021, Directors: Anne Paq and Dror Dayan

Ramsis and Layla Kilani are the children of a Palestinian man who was killed during the bombing of Gaza in 2014. The film shows their attempt to gain justice for their father Ibrahim. They demand that the German government at the very least acknowledges that a German citizen was brutally killed by the Israeli army. The film shows the personal development of the two siblings from tongue-tied kids to seasoned activists. This is, sadly, not an untypical story, but it is one which represents the experience of many German Palestinians.

7. Ivie wie Ivie

2021, Director: Sarah Blaßkiewitz

Another German film dealing with race, and again one which gets the balance right. This one is essentially about the different experiences of two Black women in cosmopolitan Berlin and Leipzig in the East. Although this sounds like the film could be worthy but dull, there is enough character development to avoid being too preachy. There are no spectacular events, no car chases, just people trying to get on with their lives, despite the pervasive institutional racism that they experience. On another level, it’s just another family drama, and none the worse for that.

8. Regeln am Band bei hoher Geschwindigkeit

2020, Director: Yulia Lokshina

When Yulia Lokshina started secretly filming workers in German slaughterhouses she could hardly anticipate that they would become the centre of a scandal about insanitary working conditions which helped cause the quick spread of the Covid virus. Tales of unsafe workplaces play alongside a school group rehearsing Brecht’s St Joan of the Stockyards. Meanwhile, Eastern European workers are played off against each other to the detriment of everyone’s health. The documentary has no obvious solution, but shows us a desperate situation which must be changed.

9. Wem gehört mein Dorf?

2021, Director: Christoph Eder

Gentrification was the big political question in Berlin in 2021, but this film shows the same subject in a quite different context. Göhren auf Rügen is an old tourist village on the banks of the Baltic in East Germany. After the wall came down, a generation left town. The people who stayed are now fighting rapacious property developers. For years, the parish council has consisted of the same old men who have nodded through the building of holiday homes, despite the threat to the environment. But one woman has had enough and is leading a fight to resist them.

10. Trans – I got Life

2021, Directors: Imogen Kimmel and Doris Metz

A simple documentary about seven Trans men and women and their lives as bus and lorry drivers, social media junky and army colonel. Although the film does not hide from the difficulties of living in a transphobic society, it is generally upbeat and shows people to a greater or lesser extent coping with the problems that are flung at them. In a sense it is saying that Trans people can be normal too – some are fun, others can be irritating, you know, just like “real” people. It is a shame that films still need to make this point, but if one has to, it’s great that it’s done as elegantly as this.

11. Klassenkampf

2021, Director: Sobo Swobodnik

On one level, a discussion of Didier Eribon’s book, ‘Return to Reims’. This is director Sobo Swobonik coming to terms with his working class upbringing in Swabia. He had since, reluctantly and distrustfully, entered the middle classes, and does not feel quite right either with his own family or with the environment In which he now lives. Klassenkampf tries to understand class today. While I’m not convinced by all the answers that it suggests, it is never less than provocative.

12. Zeit der Verleumder

2021, Directors: Dror Dayan and Susanne Witt-Stahl

In February 2018, there was a historic conference in Berlin to discuss why it is so difficult to talk about Palestine in Germany. This is a documentation of the conference, which took place while Jeremy Corbyn was still Labour leader. Important parallels are drawn with the defamation campaigns in other countries. The film, like the conference, underestimates the potential for solidarity in Germany, but it accurately documents the problems which we have to confront.

13. Berlin Alexanderplatz

2020, Director: Burhan Qurbani

A sumptuous film which almost justifies its running time of over 3 hours. Burhan Qurbani reimagines Alfred Döblin’s classic novel in modern Berlin. Hero Franz becomes the refugee Francis (later Frank as he “integrates” into German society). Berlin is shown in all its sordid detail, oozing corruption and racism beneath the glossy surface. It looks like a sleek music video, but a strong plot and a cast of great actors provide the film with some serious and astutely observed content.

14. Ich bin dein Mensch

2021, Director: Maria Schrader

What if science were able to produce a robot who was indistinguishable from a man, except that he understood what women really want? Ich bin dein Mensch thankfully does not get too drawn into the gimmick. Maren Eggert as Alma is not interested in a relationship, Dan Stephens as the humanoid Tom, is ever so slightly unreal, though you can’t put your finger on exactly why. There’s a little too much sentimentality by the end, but it’s still worth a watch.

15. Oeconomia

2020, Director: Carmen Losmann

Carmen Losmann organises a series of interviews with financial “experts”, pretends that she’s a thick little woman, then lets them destroy capitalism with their own words. There are a lot of shots of economic bigwigs with dropped jaws realising what they’ve just said. This is not a film that needs to offer any solutions to the devastation and inequality caused by capitalism. It simply shows things as they are. It’s now up to us to do something about it.

16. Aufschrei der Jugend

2020, Director: Kathrin Pitterling

A brutally honest documentation of Fridays for Future Berlin, who have now been demonstrating every week for well over two years, without creating any obvious response from the German government. We see the righteous anger of the demonstrators and the huge number of people they are able to mobilise. We also share their sense of impotence. Do they need to start burning cars to get a response? Again, the questions are asked but it’s up to us to answer.

17. Wilkommen in Siegheilkirchen

2022, Director: Marcus H. Rosenmüller and Santiago López

A film that’s not even out yet (its release was postponed because of Corona). It’s the story of Rotzbub, a kid in a provincial Austrian village. Rotzbub experiences first love, fights with the local Nazis and getting drunk with the local hippie – all the usual experiences of growing up. It’s a cartoon which lampoons hypocrisy and is most definitely on the side of the good guys. WARNING: the Austrian rural accent can be pretty impenetrable so this is not one for Deutscheinsteiger.

18. Und morgen die ganze Welt

2020, Director Julia von Heinz

A film which honestly discusses how we can best fight the rising tide of fascism. Und morgen die ganze Welt locates itself in the autonomous movement, which is not the most politically interesting area for me, but it is definitely attractive for many young people who are shocked by the normalisation of fascism and the AfD. There is a good discussion about whether political violence is necessary, but there’s always a slight feel of middle class kids slumming it.

19. Nebenan

2021, Director: Daniel Brühl

This is where director/star Daniel Brühl, the Wunderkind of German cinema, gets to poke fun at himself. He plays Daniel, a bigshot German actor who’s currently negotiating a part in a big Marvel-type franchise film. Daniel is a bit of an arsehole and has an embarrassing encounter in a local pub with a neighbour who knows a little too much about his personal life. It doesn’t fully work because it’s hard to envisage the real Daniel Brühl being such a dick. Nonetheless it’s a noble failure.

20. Herr Bachmann und seine Klasse

2021, Director: Maria Speth

An empathetic documentary of a school teacher and his multiracial class in Hessen. Herr Bachmann challenges his students, and tries to bring them out of themselves. He feels almost Saint-like, but he is doing what he can with the resources available to him. You leave the film being astounded at the contributions of individual teachers, but also at the inadequacies of the state education system. One warning: at 3½ hours, this is a bit of a bum-number.

New year, New Covid – in the UK

It’s time for government to put the health of the people first – ‘vaccinate, but let infection spread’ is not good enough.


11/01/2022

In early 2020 (how long ago that feels) we were told that lockdown would ‘send the coronavirus packing’. Exaggerated claims were also made on behalf of a ‘world beating’ test and trace system which similarly failed to live up to expectations. Next it was the turn of vaccination – the magic bullet that would put an end to the crisis once and for all. Except…. that in November a new variant, Omicron, appeared on the scene, swept the board and changed the landscape once again. As the new year began, there were 218,724 positive test results reported in the UK in one day.

Nonetheless, Health Secretary Sajid Javid, is proud that we have the least protective measures in place in Europe. He insists ‘we must give ourselves the best chance of living alongside the virus’. The prime minister’s message in the lead up to New Year was ‘celebrate New Year’s Eve but exercise caution and take tests’. Once again the public health message was unclear.  To this problem of ambiguity (what does ‘exercise caution’ mean?) was added a wide unavailability of lateral flow tests (LFTs) as well as a misrepresentation of what they can and cannot do.

Lateral flow tests

Shortage of LFTs was related both to advice to the public that they test frequently before social contact and to the increase in demand through rising case numbers. Hospital staff (who are asked to test twice weekly) were finding it difficult to find tests. As it turned out, Alliance Healthcare, the sole distributor of LFT to pharmacies closed for four days over Christmas just as it received a delivery of 2.5m devices.

The prime minister has previously wrongly stated that LFTs ‘identify people who are infectious … allowing those who are not infectious to continue as normal’. The reality is less clear cut. Studies show that even when the test is done by expert nurses, virus is detected only in 73% of cases, falling to 58% when performed by testing centre employees. It is likely that reliability is even lower in tests performed by members of the public. Preliminary testing in Liverpool of mostly asymptomatic people showed that LFTs only detected 50% of those with a positive PCR (the gold standard for testing), while 30% of those with high viral loads were missed. As the manufacturer Innova advises ‘Negative results do not rule out SARS-CoV-2 infection and should not be used as the sole basis for treatment or patient management decisions, including infection control decisions.’ This is endorsed by the World Health Organization that says negative antigen rapid diagnostic test results ‘should not remove a contact from quarantine requirements.’ Giving people the ‘all clear’ on the basis of a negative LFT is likely to have contributed to the spread of infection, adding to the damage already done by the private laboratory which issued 43,000 false negative tests.

The NHS is now on a ‘war footing’. However, as case numbers increase, plans have been announced not to introduce measures aimed at reducing spread of infection, but to build eight ‘Nightingale hubs’ – these latter to provide additional surge capacity for patients in unused space or car parks of hospitals. Like the original Nightingale Hospitals, it is unclear how these might be staffed. There can be no doubt, however, that the NHS is severely stretched with a reduced number of 90,000 adult acute beds running at 90% capacity and lack of social care already preventing many from being discharged from hospital.

Critical voices

Chris Whitty, Chief Medical Officer for England, said of Omicron: ‘This is a really serious threat at the moment. How big a threat?  There are several things we don’t know, but all the things that we do know, are bad….and the principle one being the speed at which this is moving, it is moving at an absolutely phenomenal pace.’ Case numbers were in fact doubling in little over two days. Even though there was some suggestion that the disease caused is not as severe as with the Delta variant, the very large numbers of cases risked affecting many areas of the economy and overwhelming the health service. The government, however, decided to continue with a ‘cross your fingers and hope for the best’ approach, relying wholly on booster vaccination as a way of dealing with this new threat.

Members of Independent SAGE, likened the government’s stance to playing Russian roulette. The Independent SAGE advised before Christmas that spread of infection must urgently be reduced by closing indoor hospitality and entertainment; no indoor gatherings held between households; all close contacts of new cases should isolate for 10 days and be given appropriate support (e.g. the two million people not entitled to sick pay). They argued that the overall focus should be on decreasing cases to as low a level as possible in order to prevent disruption to key services and prevent demands on an already stretched NHS outstripping available resources. Increased restrictions in other countries such as the Netherlands were effectively driving down cases. A precautionary approach was justified given the very rapid rise in cases coupled with uncertainty about the overall impact of Omicron. Their warning went unheeded but has proved prophetic.

Reducing viral transmission

A key focus should also be to make the environment safer through air filtration and effective ventilation. This should also be a priority not just in workplaces, but also for schools. The impact of covid-19 in terms of physical illness in children is often played down. But by the start of December, 37 children under 15 years of age had died from covid in the UK together with a further 41 15-19 y olds. Six thousand 6-17 y olds had been hospitalised and 77,000 infected children were reported to have prolonged symptoms of fatigue and cognitive dysfunction. Over 1 million children <16 y have been infected since last September. Current surveys indicate that almost 6% of under 12s are infected, and over 3% of primary school children as of the end of December.

There is an argument for vaccinating all 5-11 year olds to prevent spread of infection, and US experience indicates this is safe. Although this has not yet been approved by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation. Other needed interventions for schools include reintroduction of face masks (now grudgingly conceded for secondary school pupils); isolation of household contacts until a negative PCR test obtained; reinstatement of bubbles/cohorts; onsite testing – perhaps with saliva samples to monitor for outbreaks; staggering school start times.

It is disappointing that the government see little urgency in any of these measures. While 300,000 carbon dioxide monitors have been sent out to schools to help monitor air quality, distribution has been chaotic and numbers of devices amount to only two per school rather than one for every classroom. Staff also need guidance on how to best use them, since they only monitor air exchange and don’t provide clean air. Filtration units (with High Efficiency Particulate-Absorbing filters) are effective in reducing viral aerosols, but should be paid for by government rather than taken out of existing school budgets as required currently. It has been estimated that the cost for this would be half the money being spent on the recently commissioned Royal Yacht. Insisting on the right to clean air at work as a way of reducing the spread of infection must be a key demand for trade unions and health and safety workplace representatives to take up.

Consequences of current government strategy

Defenders of the current UK public health approach justify their support by pointing out that hospitals have not yet filled up with very sick patients (although of course, if that does happen it will be too late). Claiming not so many people become seriously ill as with the Delta variant is premature. In the US, the respected infectious disease authority Dr Anthony Fauci pointed out that while there is evidence Omicron might be associated with less severe disease, caution was still needed as such high transmission rates could still lead to unmanageable demand for health care.

We have still to find out what the effect of Christmas and New Year mixing will be, although meanwhile there are very real adverse consequences for many. Already in the UK by the end of December, numbers of hospital inpatients with covid had increased to nearly 10,000, up 38% from the previous week (but so far nowhere near as the peak of 34,000 patients one year ago). Numbers dying from covid-19 are currently averaging around 112/day (a staggering one every 13 minutes), somewhat down on figures for November with its peak of 1,176 deaths in one week.

Some seek to minimise the scale of the problem by pointing out that in around 20% of hospital patients with positive covid tests, this is an incidental finding and has not “caused the admission”. This is impossible to tell. Moreover, acquiring covid often makes an underlying chronic condition worse, for example in patients with diabetes or inflammatory bowel disease, and so may precipitate an admission – even if covid is not being the main reason for admission. These patients still add to the overall burden on the NHS and their number should not be disregarded.

Not everyone is vaccinated or can be easily protected

In addition to vulnerable patients (those with chronic medical conditions, including the immuno-suppressed), there are still large numbers of people unprotected. Around 5 million people eligible for vaccination have not been immunised with the unvaccinated accounting for around 60% of London ICU patients. Vaccine uptake is variable, higher in more affluent areas and only around 50% in some deprived areas. For children over 12 years, 90% have had at least one dose, 82% two doses and 56.5% two doses and booster. Immediately before Christmas, 1 in 25 people in England were infected (rising to 1 in 6 20 year olds in London). This emphasises the need for reducing viral spread rather than focusing entirely on the vaccination programme.

Wider impact of surge in cases

Staff absences through illness or need to isolate are badly affecting hospitals, community services and care homes. NHS staff absences totalled 24,632 in acute trusts because sick or quarantining at the end of December; this was double the figure from two weeks earlier. There was a total of 68,000 staff off sick from all causes (many through stress) on 26th December. The British Medical Association has called for cancellation of large social gatherings and limits on social mixing. It has also demanded that staff have access to protective face masks, since, astonishingly, this is still not routine.

The Government appears to base its decision making only on hospital statistics without giving due consideration to the impact on GP and community services and wider society, even though this is considerable. Multiple NHS trusts across England have now declared ‘critical incidents’ (i.e. concerns about no longer being able to offer safe care to patients) amid soaring staff absences, with health leaders saying many parts of the services are in a state of crisis. In Manchester alone, 17 hospitals have paused non-urgent surgery and appointments.

Covid is also having a major effect on other frontline services with 15% of London fire service staff off work on the 27th December. School leaders in England are warning of weeks of disruption owing to high levels of staff covid absences, which could lead to children being sent home to learn remotely. Dr Mary Bousted, the joint general secretary of the National Education Union, said it was ‘alarming’ that the education secretary, Nadhim Zahawi, was advocating the infection spreading strategy of combining classes to overcome staff shortages.

Rubbish bins across parts of England are overflowing with household detritus from the Christmas period where collections have been cut back because of staff sickness. Ambulance trusts have begun asking patients with heart attacks and strokes to get a lift to hospital with family or friends instead of waiting for an ambulance, because of high covid absences and ‘unprecedented’ surges in demand. UK train operators have cut hundreds of services due to staff sickness.

Conclusions

The current policy of relying solely on vaccine roll out while letting case numbers skyrocket is very high risk. Further chaos in education is likely to add to the already considerable impact of the pandemic on children. The NHS is buckling under the strain, and even if optimistic predictions of the impact of Omicron in terms of hospital admissions and death prove true, staff are suffering extreme stress trying to keep the system going. Meanwhile many patients with non-covid illness are getting sub-standard care and joining ever lengthening waiting lists.

One commentator with close links to many working in health care spoke in disbelief that: ‘Ministers telling us there is nothing in the data that indicates further measures are required is feckless, stupid, criminal, mendacious-blindness.

A clearly frustrated Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS confederation, made a heartfelt plea:

‘over the coming days, instead of making optimism and complacency a kind of political virility symbol let’s focus on facts, let’s wait for the data, let’s listen to those trying to cope on the frontline. Most of all, instead of turning the science and policy on COVID-19 into a new terrain for the culture wars, let’s try to get through these next few weeks together.’

Prime minister Johnson, (perhaps modelling himself more on Nero rather than Churchill) predicted that we will ‘ride out this Omicron wave’.

One important question is why the Westminster government is going down this dangerous road? This no doubt is partly due to the internal political differences within the Conservative party, with the Right-wing of the party now holding the prime minister hostage. In addition, we are not all equal in the face of covid, with those like our political class, least affected by social and economic inequalities being least at risk of death. Could it be that the elderly, the poor and the disabled are simply seen as expendable? It is also probable that with an eye to the next election, the government is desperate to protect an already damaged economy and hopes any success here will ultimately deflect from its appalling handling of the pandemic. If the hope is that by avoiding restrictions economic activity will continue unabated, outstripping our European rivals, the prime minister should be made aware that the evidence strongly suggests containing covid versus saving the economy is a false dichotomy. Optimism and complacency will not serve the public well and are likely to cost many more lives in the coming months.

A global ‘vaccine-plus’ response is needed

Coronavirus is a global pandemic and can only be approached on a global scale. Worldwide, only 8.4% of people in low income countries have had at least one dose of vaccine. Poor international planning, vaccine ‘dumping’ by the richer countries of out-dated stocks, in the face of the difficult logistics of keeping vaccine at low temperature during distribution has meant that supplies from COVAX to Nigeria had to be destroyed. The World Health Organization is aiming for 70% of the world’s population to be vaccinated by June 2022. This would need not just the waiver of intellectual property rights by the manufacturers (something blocked by the UK government) but also technology transfer and building expertise to enable local production. For this a global funding mechanism would need to be in place so that vaccine availability could be guaranteed when planning roll out. Without this, there seems every likelihood that further variants will arise and spread rapidly around the globe. Clearly provision of vaccine to lower and middle income countries should be a priority for rich countries, working together with the WHO. Until that happens, we should not be surprised by new variants and should agree in advance on how to respond and what the trigger would be.

It is time for a vaccine-plus approach to be adopted globally (including the UK), based not only on vaccine equity, but also prevention of viral transmission. Advocates suggest that this strategy will slow the emergence of new variants and ensure they exist on a low transmission background where they can be controlled by effective public health measures, while allowing everyone (including those clinically vulnerable) to go about their lives more freely.

John Puntis is the co-chair of Keep Our NHS Public