German Supermarket Chain Takes Brave Stand Against the Colour Blue, in Latest Effort to Stamp out Fascism and Preserve Our Democracy

In Germany, all political parties have a colour. The Christian Democratic Union and the Christian Social Union are black, the Social Democratic Party is red, the liberal Free Democratic Party are yellow and the evil fascist Alternative für Deutschland are blue. This coming Sunday, Thüringen and Saxony will hold state elections, and the blue AfD is leading the polls in both states with about 30% support. This has a lot of people very, very upset. Most of them are merely upset with the AfD, but some psychologically unstable people have allowed their anger to embrace the colour blue more generally, because there can be no limits when it comes to resisting the evil antidemocratic forces of fascism.

Among the new sworn enemies of the blue band of the visible electromagnetic spectrum are the marketing team at Germany’s largest supermarket corporation, the Edeka Group. A few days ago, this supermarket chain, whose own logo strangely enough is primarily blue…

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…ran an ad in Die Zeit and the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung explaining “Why Blue is Note on Offer at Edeka”.

Bild

That wall of text in the middle reads as follows:

Yellow bananas, red tomatoes, green lettuce, purple grapes, orange carrots, pink dragon fruit… Edeka’s fruit and vegetable department is full of colourful diversity. Or is it?

If you look closely, there’s one colour you won’t see: blue. And that’s no coincidence. Because blue food is nature’s way of warning us: “Watch out! I could be harmful!”

Evolution has taught us that blue is not a good choice.

And speaking of choices: blue is not only the natural enemy of a healthy diversity of fruit and vegetables. In Germany, ‘the blues’ are also the biggest threat to our diverse society.

So let’s read the warning signs correctly ahead of the state elections in Saxony, Thüringen and Brandenburg in September – and ensure that we can live together in harmony. Because we love diversity.

For those wondering whether Edeka has decided to cease selling fascist blue fruits like blueberries, there is a helpful note down in the corner:

There we learn that, while “‘Blueberries’ or ‘Blue cabbage’” may have “‘blue’ in their names”, their “colour pigments” are not blue. This is “at least what Science tells us – and as we know you should always listen to Science more”. Nothing about this is remotely obnoxious; indeed, if current-year Germany needs anything, it is more blind platitudinous calls to Follow the Science – particularly when it comes to exonerating innocent fruits and vegetables from suspicion of blue fascism.

One could say many things about this brave anti-fascist stance against the colour blue.

Firstly, all the right people thought the ad was just wonderful. Katrin Göring-Eckardt, the odious Green politician we met in Wednesday’s post, calls the campaign an “Important message”. “Thank you, Edeka!” she exclaims, before proceeding to recommend that voters cast their ballot for the Greens instead, because they have a “natural colour in their name that offers protection against the blue-brown” fascists. The AfD, by contrast, is highly unnatural, its colour being associated only with evil anti-democratic things like the sky and the ocean and a wide variety of birds and so on.

Secondly, Edeka did not always Follow the Science in denying plainly blue blueberries their blueness. As German Twitter has discovered, as recently as last year it was running wise-brown-man ads like this one, declaring that “blueberries are only really sweet when they are blue”.

Thirdly, while Edeka tried to keep its anti-blue ad campaign confined to newspapers that AfD voters don’t read, it was so dumb that it blew up across the internet. This has left many Edeka franchisees in the east desperately distancing themselves from the campaign lest they piss off valued customers. Particularly in Sachsen-Anhalt, store owners are posting images of the ad crossed out with a massive (I guess socially democratic) red X

…and assuring their clientele that they “do not take any position on political issues” and explaining they “cannot understand why Edeka has expressed itself with such posts”.

Finally, of course, Edeka was not always so antifascist. In the years when it counted, it was in fact a staunch supporter of the National Socialist regime. Here, for example, is how Edeka recommended its affiliates arrange their display windows for the May 1st workers’ holiday in 1936:

“One Volk, one will, one celebration: on May 1st.” I distance myself here and everywhere from all National Socialist symbols, which I reproduce only to document historical allegiances and events.

Edeka’s current-year anti-fascism is of exactly the same flavour as its 1936 Nazism. It is a mere conformist, who will loudly support whatever the current thing happens to be. Perhaps it should shut up about politics for once and just sell the bloody groceries.

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

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Jack the dog
Jack the dog
1 year ago

Poor old Germans – they seem to getting it even worse than us.

Where will the madness end?

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  Jack the dog

Das Viertes Reich?

RW
RW
1 year ago

You’ve misspelled that. You meant to write Das freiheitlich-demokratische Paradies nach siegreich-angelsächsicher Prägung – The free and democratic paradise created in the ever victorious Anglo-Saxon image. These people are your creatures and you’re welcome to have them back.

iconoclast
1 year ago
Reply to  Jack the dog

Evolution has taught us that blue is not a good choice.

Blue sky, blue sea, bluebells, blue eyes.

All very dangerous.

Blue sky encourages people to leave their homes and go outside where they might die.

Blue sea encourages people to go swimming or sailing where they might die.

Bluebells encourage people to walk in the forests in springtime where the could be killed by a falling tree or wild animal.

Blue eyes are to die for.

So very sensible to ban blue.

Makes our world much safer.

iconoclast
1 year ago
Reply to  Jack the dog

Crushing Edeka Group’s stunningly stupid argument. Here the argument is destroyed. The argument is by analogy to blue food – that blue foods are nature’s way of telling us something might be harmful so avoid it – and so blue political parties are also nature’s way of telling us they are “the biggest threat to our diverse society.” As their food analogy is spectacularly wrong then their argument that ‘blue’ political parties are the “biggest threat” is spectacularly wrong too. Their main point is: blue is not only the natural enemy of a healthy diversity of fruit and vegetables. In Germany, ‘the blues’ are also the biggest threat to our diverse society. They claim: Yellow bananas, red tomatoes, green lettuce, purple grapes, orange carrots, pink dragon fruit… Edeka’s fruit and vegetable department is full of colourful diversity. Or is it?If you look closely, there’s one colour you won’t see: blue. And that’s no coincidence. Because blue food is nature’s way of warning us: “Watch out! I could be harmful!”Evolution has taught us that blue is not a good choice.And speaking of choices: blue is not only the natural enemy of a healthy diversity of fruit and vegetables. In Germany, ‘the… Read more »

iconoclast
1 year ago
Reply to  iconoclast

I of course ignore the point that the argument is stunningly stupid because comparing fruits and vegetables found in nature and political parties is like comparing apples to concrete.

No one eats political parties [at least so far as I know].

iconoclast
1 year ago
Reply to  iconoclast

Of course if one is concerned about political parties being a danger, one must look to many other factors none of which include their colour.

kev has a point here regarding the US Democrats.

Dinger64
1 year ago

From a biological standpoint I’ve learned their is no true blue plant or Berry! There are close variants of blue but not primary blue.
Apparently Hydrangeas are the closest to true blue (feel free to check, it’s been a few years since I heard this)
The obrina olivewing butterfly is apparently the only creature capable of producing true blue pigment!

This is ‘the science’ that Edeka are blatantly ignoring ps: try eating RED berries like Lords and ladies, Holly or Yew berries!

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  Dinger64

Ceanothus and gentians are pretty blue.

Heretic
Heretic
1 year ago
Reply to  Dinger64

comment image

Salvia patens (Blue Angel)

Heretic
Heretic
1 year ago
Reply to  Heretic

comment image?c=2

Californian bluebell (Phacelia campanularia)

Heretic
Heretic
1 year ago
Reply to  Heretic

True Blue flowers are quite hard to find, but here are some: Salvia patens (Blue Angel), California bluebells (Phacelia campanularia), Borage, Lithodora diffusa, blue delphiniums, Forget-me-nots, Speedwell, Green alkanet (Pentaglottis sempervirens), blue lobelia, Poor Man’s Weatherglass, Ceratostigma plumbaginoides, Blue Pimpernel.

Heretic
Heretic
1 year ago
Reply to  Dinger64

Indigo buntings and Mountain bluebirds in the US are beautiful bright blue, and no doubt many more in the tropics.

RTSC
RTSC
1 year ago

Just as well there’s Lidl ……

Gerry England
Gerry England
1 year ago
Reply to  RTSC

Aldi?

Cirdan
Cirdan
1 year ago
Reply to  RTSC

There is no business of any size in Germany that is not towing the line.

Heretic
Heretic
1 year ago
Reply to  Cirdan

The correct phrase is “toeing the line”, as in starting a foot race.

For a fist full of roubles

So blue sky thinking is out in all but the “non-extreme” parties of the non-right.

MajorMajor
MajorMajor
1 year ago

In some ways this must be counterproductive as it draws yet more attention to the AfD.

RW
RW
1 year ago
Reply to  MajorMajor

It’s preaching to the choir, obviously. Basically just a variant of Clinton’s basked of deplorables. It’s not meant to win sympathies or even convince one of those forever condemned creatures from the snake pit of evil¹, just to shore up the rows of one’s own supporters.

¹ The present German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, has, as product of a Christian education which went sour and a higher education which didn’t stick much, literally referred to AfD voters and supporters as fallen angels from hell in the past.

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
1 year ago
Reply to  RW

The now Polish PM once said there’s a special place in hell for those that pushed Brexit, not sure if those were his exact words but, would he extend that to Brexit voters I wonder.

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago

I note that Eugyppius has to be careful and add this disclaimer to reproducing an image from the past.

I distance myself here and everywhere from all National Socialist symbols, which I reproduce only to document historical allegiances and events.

RW
RW
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

That’s literally worded after the exemption clause from the ‘German¹’ law which is used to prosecute people for publically using such images. This will not necessarily save him in case some pissed off ‘democrat’ choses to go for his hide because – as German political cangaroo courts have long since established – it’s perception what counts and not intent. And with a text clearly overall sympathetic towards the AfD and – Horribile dictu! – a whole history of such texts, even the fascist intent is already abundantly clear and the author may well go to jail for this.

Such is the nature of freedom in the extremely liberal democracy of the Federal Republic of Germany.

¹ Not really. The base of this are edicts issued by the Allies in the 1940 which have been incorporated into the German constitution by reference as sacred utterances second only to the ten commandents. At least for half of the German ruling party which is nominally Christian. To the nominally Marxist half, they’re obviously the only sacred utterances which exist.

For a fist full of roubles

I presume the the date of May1st refers to Workers Day, that prime event in the calendar of the left wing. I am not sure that it squares entirely with the regime of the day being being accused of being ultra right, but why bother with little details like that when you have a large chunk of the electorate to villify.

RW
RW
1 year ago

I congratulate you to having noticed that your terminology makes no sense. It actually doesn’t.

RW
RW
1 year ago

So-called juridical persons, like the Edeka corporation, should be prohibited from both donating to political parties and politically-motivated advertising as they actually cannot do either. Some people make funding decisions on behalf of such corporations. And these people can abuse company funds, that is, shareholder money, to amplify their own political opinions covertly. This is a corruption of the democratic process which shouldn’t exist.

thechap
thechap
1 year ago
Reply to  RW

I’ve long believed that corporate donations to mainstream political parties should be illegal, as should donations from any individual who is connected with a corporation which may benefit from Government contracts. This includes Union donations.

I can’t think of a logical figure now, but, say one million people vote for a party, that party then gets all its campaign funding and day to day running costs from the state.

I dislike the idea that my taxes go to fund a political party whom I disagree with, but I dislike more the naked and intense corruption from corporate donations.

Mind, I dislike now that my taxes pay politicians’ wages anyway…

kev
kev
1 year ago

Blue is Fascist!

Terrible news for Kamala Harris and the US Democratic party!

Who knew?

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
1 year ago

IBM has a dark history too!