German Intelligence Chief Defends his Efforts to Police the “Thought and Speech Patterns” of Citizens

The German Interior Ministry continues to defend its controversial and widely criticised plans to restrict the speech, travel and economic activity of political dissidents. The Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), our domestic intelligence service and political police, have sacrificed substantial popular regard in the face of this campaign. According to a poll published last month, a plurality of Germans believe that the BfV is being misused for political purposes. The sentiment is prominent across all parties, except of course for the Greens, who believe that all is well with the Federal Republic.

The creepy, dissolute and rodent-looking BfV chief, Thomas Haldenwang, has taken to the pages of the Frankfurter Allgemeine to defend the conduct of his office and his plans to shape the “thought and speech patterns” of ordinary people through official repression.

The thing about “freedom of expression,” Haldenwang explains, is that it “is not carte blanche for enemies of the constitution”.

Recently, public discourse has repeatedly featured headlines and articles calling the work of the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) into question. There is talk of an “opinion police,” a “language police” and even a “Government security service”. They say the BfV discredits political opinions “on command” as extremist as soon as they depart from the social and political mainstream, or when they embark upon criticism of Government action or the work of the democratic parties.

One thing should be unmistakably clear: freedom of opinion prevails in Germany – and that is a good thing! Freedom of opinion is a fundamental element of our constitution and one of the greatest assets of our liberal democratic order. As such, it is also protected by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution.

“Freedom of opinion,” Haldenwang explains, is what “distinguishes a democracy from an autocracy or a dictatorship.” In the Federal Republic even “offensive, absurd and radical opinions” are protected.

Well, kind of:

[E]ven freedom of expression has its limits. The outermost boundaries are set by criminal law, for example with regard to punishable propaganda offences or incitement to hatred. Even within the limits of criminal law, however, expressions of opinion, despite their legality, can become relevant for constitutional protection. [emphasis mine, here and below]

In theory, you can think and say whatever you want in Germany, so long as what you think and say does not violate the law. Within the range of legal expression, however, there is a grey area that Haldenwang and his minders in the Interior Ministry get to define. If you enter this danger zone, you may end up inviting the unwelcome attention of the political police even though you have not broken any laws.

Put less charitably, there is clearly illegal speech on the one hand, and on the other hand there is speech which is alas not yet illegal, but which existing authorities will use all the administrative tools at their disposal to dissuade you from. Such speech, we might say, is pre-illegal, and only reluctantly permitted because the hurdles to banning it are too substantial.

Specifically, you become susceptible to surveillance and harassment by the BfV whenever you express opinions that suggest you are interested in “eliminat[ing] the free democratic order” of the Federal Republic. Your mere freedom of expression is “not a licence to evade observation and evaluation” by the political police if there are “factual indications” that your thought is tending in unconstitutional directions.

Unsurprisingly, the scope of what is “unconstitutional” in thought and speech turns out very wide indeed:

For example, if elements of our free democratic basic order are attacked, e.g. if the human dignity of members of certain social groups or political actors is violated, if permissible criticism and democratic protest escalates and turns into aggressive, systematic delegitimisation of state conduct (including calls for violence), when legitimate criticism and opinions turn into extremist agitation intended to shake the foundations of our democratic order and thus prepare the ground for unpeaceful and violent activities – such statements can constitute evidence of endeavours directed against the free democratic order.

As I posted last month, the BfV has been targeting political dissidents it deems guilty of “delegitimising” the state since 2021 – a concept that takes aim at a wide range of expression and that reminds one of defunct DDR laws against “defaming the state”. Here, Haldenwang quietly expands this concept, explaining that you may become a case for the BfV if your “permissible criticism” crosses some invisible boundary to become the “delegitimisation of state conduct”. Comparing the Federal Republic to the DDR is an example of delegitimising the state; comparing the behaviour of the BfV to the behaviour of the Stasi is presumably an example of delegitimising state conduct. The goal here is to make it effectively impossible to criticise the German Government for its antidemocratic and unconstitutional policies without drawing the attention of the BfV, because attacking our nominally democratic leaders for antidemocratic behaviour is the very definition of “delegitimisation”.

Otherwise, to understand how ominous this is, you must remember that the present political establishment in general, and the BfV and Haldenwang more specifically, exercise a total sovereignty of interpretation over everything you say. It doesn’t matter whether you intend to violate “the human dignity of members of certain social groups” with your statements, or even if this is a remotely defensible interpretation of your words. It only matters if the constitutional protectors decide you are guilty of doing so. Thus if our constitutional protectors decide that your statements are “intended” to call into question “our democratic order” or “prepare the ground for unpeaceful and violent activities”, you’re on the radar of the BfV, regardless of what you said or how you meant it. This is a licence to go after anyone saying anything our political leaders don’t like.

Haldenwang believes that “in the post-War history of our country, democracy has rarely been in such danger as it is now”. This is because “the number of extremists and the potential for extremism have been on the rise for years”, because “digitalisation and virtualisation” are helping bad people “spread their ideologies”, and because “authoritarian states” are propagating “disinformation” which “often meets with approval and applause from domestic organisations and actors”.

What Haldenwang is really terrified about, of course, are the upcoming elections for the EU Parliament and for the state parliaments of Brandenburg, Thüringen and Saxony. That is why we have to read so much in the press every day about “Right-wing extremism”, why the police are going after 17-year-old girls who post AfD Smurf videos to TikTok and investigating inflatable snowmen for fascism and why leading Green politicians are having ordinary people prosecuted for political satire. In the Federal Republic there is nothing so threatening to democracy as free and open democratic elections.

This article originally appeared on Eugyppius’s Substack newsletter. You can subscribe here.

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27 Comments
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huxleypiggles
2 years ago

Coming soon to a Town Hall near you.

Mogwai
2 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Tenuous link, but who is this joker? Apparently the ”far-right are on the rise” and the UK government is in fact far-right. This guy has a bad case of oral flatulence and he needs it seeing to!

”Far-left Labour MP Clive @labourlewis
rounds on the “far-right”.

He calls the Tories far-right because of their rhetoric on immigration & then bangs on about tackling poverty, climate crisis, &to build more homes.

Many of our problems that you outline are migrant related.

Most people are not bothered being called far-right or an Islamophobe.”

https://twitter.com/DaveAtherton20/status/1775928993457344773

If you can’t see the comments, this is also him;

https://twitter.com/BasedMillwall/status/1775922498032259434

huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

Thanks Mogs 👍

wokeman
wokeman
2 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

A big red for me is when they try to make their twitter account become their brand, IE @labourlewis. Like we care who he is, it screams willy head.

RW
RW
2 years ago

in the post-War history of our country, democracy has rarely been in such danger as it is now

Can’t resist picking the obvious nit: This is a post-war country. It didn’t exist before 1949.

Apart from that, such a statement should immediately be deflated by asking the guy for specifics about the other times when democracy was equally endangered in our country:
When and why did this happen? And how is what happened then comparable to what’s happening today?

varmint
2 years ago
Reply to  RW

I was always a great admirer of West Germany. I worked there in the 80’s and was full of praise for the work ethic, the economic success after the war and having worked in places like Munchengladbach, Trier, Bad Kissingen, Heidelberg, Munich, etc etc, I was always so impressed with how clean and modern it was in Germany. ——-I am starting to worry about the way things are going and it seems to tie in with the Green Politics dominating the scene which I consider to be the hijacking of the environment for political purposes. There is very little difference between GREEN and RED.

RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  varmint

The thing I remember of 1980s West Germany was that one couldn’t drive more than 12 miles in any direction without encountering a large, foreign military base. But that was just for our protection against the evil people who’d never have entered Germany hadn’t our protectors who were allied with them generously supplied them with arms and other military material and generally helped them to subjugate all of eastern middle Europe as best as they could.

varmint
2 years ago
Reply to  RW

Your perception as a German will be different from mine.

RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  varmint

Certainly not. But my interpretation probably is.

In the 1980s, Germany was basically an armed camp as it was considered a frontier state, with the respective English, American and Russian armies still standing were there their advances had stopped in 1945. This situation only came to an end after Germany had been forcibly demilitarized¹ with the 4 + 2 treaty and the German goverment had been forced to renounce all claims to German territories eastwards of the Oder – Neiße line.

¹ For all practical purposes. The maximally allowed size of the German armed forces is about ⅕ of that of Greece, ensuring that basically nobody in Europe will ever even have to consider it.

pamela preedy
pamela preedy
2 years ago
Reply to  varmint

There is NO difference – that’s why Greens are called ‘Watermelons’ – green on the outside, red on the inside.

RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  pamela preedy

The original Green party (the German one) was actually founded by counter-culture activists as anti-system-party and these people were decidedly communists.

No-one important
2 years ago

“It is the absolute right of the State to supervise the formation of public opinion.”

Joseph Goebbels – Reich Minister of Propaganda

varmint
2 years ago

And we know how he ended up. Committing suicide with his wife and children. Those who impose latter day tyranny on us should learn from history or they will just repeat those mistakes, but it seems they never do learn.

No-one important
2 years ago
Reply to  varmint

“On the evening of 1 May, Goebbels arranged for an SS dentist, Helmut Kunz, to inject his six children with morphine so that when they were unconscious, an ampule of a cyanide compound could be then crushed in each of their mouths. According to Kunz’s later testimony, he gave the children morphine injections but Magda Goebbels and SS-Obersturmbannfuhrer Ludwig Stumpfegger, Hitler’s personal doctor, administered the cyanide.
At around 20:30, Goebbels and Magda left the bunker and walked up to the garden of the Chancellery, where they killed themselves”.

So the children were ‘suicided’ – the mark of a true zealot. Somehow I can’t see Cameron, Johnson, Gove, Gummer, Miliband, Starmer or even Rayner going to these lengths … but you never know.

varmint
2 years ago

Ofcourse this article is about Germans. But when you believe things that are not true, like the end of the world is coming because politicised science has brainwashed you then you liable to do all manner of stupid things.

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
2 years ago

“The thing about “freedom of expression,” Haldenwang explains, is that it “is not carte blanche for enemies of the constitution”…..Something Hitler could’ve thought of.

RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  Ron Smith

Hitler’s enemies thought that: If the Germans are free, they might again do Something Really Bad™. Hence, freedom is strictly limited in Germany.

pamela preedy
pamela preedy
2 years ago
Reply to  Ron Smith

‘Intelligence?’ Chief Halfawanger is as butt-ugly as Herr H, but in a different way.

Whereas ‘itler always looked as if he was terminally constipated (he probably was, given all the drugs pumped into him by his ‘doctor’) this latter-day German halfwit has the puddled face of a dissolute alcoholic comedian who slurs his quips.

But Wanger is as funny as that Gracy bloke – the American mass murderer who tried to disguise his wicked visage with heavy clown make-up.

Such a monster in the making needs slapping down ASAP for the sake of decent Germans who have surely suffered enough fools, Smirkel being a prime example.

stewart
2 years ago

The thing about “freedom of expression,” Haldenwang explains, is that it “is not carte blanche for enemies of the constitution”.

Obviously it IS catte blanche for arrogant, vague, meaningless statements.

Let me guess. This little dictator is the one who gets to decide who are the enemies of the constitution?

RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Yes.

He’s the head of the German inland secret service whose job is to spy on the population in order to detect, uncover and possibly prosecute “enemies of the constitution.” They’re somewhat infamous for heavily infiltrating all organisations considered to be politically somewhat undesirable¹ with secret agents provocateurs who try get the other members to commit crimes which can then be prosecuted and thus, generate the desired kind of headlines. The trials then usually collapse because evidence cannot be produced without unmasking the secret agents who were involved with them but that’s a secondary concern.

¹ Eg, volunteers caring for German war graves which are generally neglected (if not outright demolished) by the state.

wokeman
wokeman
2 years ago

Look how fat the guy is, the only good tail this guy ever got is if he paid for it. That I find explains an awful lot about certain men seeking power over others.

RTSC
RTSC
2 years ago

The people of Brandenburg, Saxony and Thuringia will recognise the Stasi-like tendencies of the BfV since they experienced the real thing for decades, post WW2.

Unfortunately, the British people don’t recognise that our own Government is going down the same route.

varmint
2 years ago
Reply to  RTSC

Notice that the “Hate Speech” nonsense is now taking place in Scotland via the SNP, a party that wants to leave the UK and run off to join the Germans in the EU.

varmint
2 years ago

Beware of those who say “I believe in Free Speech but………………..” There are no “buts”. ————Only breaking the law, causing public disorder and incitement to violence etc is not allowed.

No-one important
2 years ago
Reply to  varmint

Exactly so, Varmint. “I believe in Free Speech – except in the instances listed here below …”.

One believes in Free Speech or one does not. It is black and white – no grey areas.

Marque1
2 years ago

It seems that National Socialists will National Socialist.

RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  Marque1

This guy is part of the anglo-saxon-installed extended posterior supposed to fight supposed national socialists. Seems like you rescueing the planet from “national socialism” didn’t quite create the paradise of free people you claimed to be defending against it.