LEARNING TO COME TO TERMS WITH GERMANS IS QUITE CHALLENGING, PARTICULARLY, WHEN YOU ARE GERMAN AND LIVE IN GERMANY. LEARNING TO COME TO TERMS WITH A SPECIAL BREED OF GERMANS IS QUITE DISGUSTING, ESPECIALLY, WHEN YOU LIVE IN THE FEDERAL STATE OF HESSE. LEARNING TO COME TO TERMS WITH POLITICIANS AND STATE OFFICIALS, I. E. HESS’ ANG€L§ IS QUITE UNIQUE IN TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF INCOMPETENCE OF THE LOWEST DEGREE, COUPLED WITH MEGALOMANIA GENERATING A TOPSY TURVY OF BUDS AND BLOSSOMS SKY HIGH. THESE POOR UNDEAD, CULTURAL ENTITIES (SINGULAR & PLURAL) HAVE NO CONSCIOUSNESS OF WRONG DOING. THEIR HABIT OF CHARGING ONE WITH THE DELIVERY COST OF HUMAN RIGHTS DIAMETRICALLY OPPOSES THEIR INTELLECTUAL CAPACITY. OUR HESS’ ANG€L§‘ GREY MATTER CONSTITUTES A DEFICIENT PLAYDOUGH NECESSITATING OPTIMISATION PERMITTING SUSTAINABLE GROWTH BY MEANS OF ENLIGHTENMENT AND INTELLIGIBILITY. THIS SUBSCRIPTION IS A WELL-EDUCATED INVITATION ADDRESSING THESE POOR POOL MEMBERS OF OFFICIALDOM RENDERING SUPPORT AT EXPERIENCING THEIR RINKY-DINK MINDS.
Albright X. F. Actor Libros


„Offers one can’t refuse” highlights a profound issue in modern society: the concept of "civilisation." Germany, in particular, has a historical reputation for crafting discreet methods of social manipulation alongside systemic oppression. The workplace exemplifies this, representing a battleground where dictatorship confronts democracy. In this context, judicial figures, especially arbiters, risk compounding the existing fabrications surrounding cooperative fraud: “offers one can’t refuse.” Echoing John Maynard Keynes, who believed that “words ought to be a little wild,” critical voices face accusations of libel when they challenge the status quo. The perpetrators of this deception do not appear as tyrants; rather, they are followers of German Labour Law, evading the stark truth of its implications: “Do as ‘I’ say!”—where ‘I’ signifies “We.” Since 1949, Germany has sought to showcase its democratic achievements post-World War II, successfully masking long-standing societal issues with a veneer of political correctness. Despite this, Germany’s social strategies operate more subtly, focusing on enhancing educational structures that facilitate inverted totalitarianism, thus maintaining a façade of progress while underlying tensions persist.