

Warum sind Deutsche immer verrückt, wenn sie sagen, dass Luxemburg in der Tat keine "Deutsch sprechen" Land?
Dies ist ein Screenshot, den ich aus Tausenden von Gesprächen mit Deutschen (oder einigen Neonazis sagen sollte), die immer noch glauben, dass jeder in Luxemburg nur Deutsch spricht, nur eine deutsche Kultur hat, deutsche Namen … er hat mir das sogar gesagt "Echte Luxembourger" sind in der Tat Aryan mit blonden Haaren und blauen Augen …
Gedanken zu solchen Bastarden?
https://www.reddit.com/gallery/1kuzodd
Von SpreadAgile
9 Kommentare
German superiority complex. I’ve met some in real life. They think it’s normal to say these things.
Why do you have thousands of conversations with neonazis in the first place?
Dat ass déi Däitsch Arroganz. E Vollek wat ze vill vu sech selwer hält awer bei sech am Land näischt op d’Rei bréngt. Hu laang genuch do gelieft, wees also vu wat ech schwätzen.
First message obviously comes from a neo-nazi, so why botter?
What the heck did I just read?
Who cares ?
https://preview.redd.it/wcxc6wh8uw2f1.jpeg?width=689&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=515819ef6e2aea43fa5eaa846163b27069516ffb
This is going to be a long one.
To preface this quite obviously Luxembourgish is not German, or Standard High German to precise.
Historically and linguistically Luxembourgish was considered a dialect on the german dialect continuum. It officially became a language in 1984. As much as this may offend some people it is a fact.
Since then the language obviously has evolved, as all languages do.
From a historical perspective, Luxembourgs membership in both the HRE and the subsequent german confederation show that it was considered a member of the broader „German realm“. And I deliberately put thisnin quotes as the emergence of a German national identity is quite a recent devellopment compared to other continental powers.
Back then when you asked someone where they were from they would probably have said, Prussia, Bavaria, Württemberg or what have you. Again people were, and in some cases still are more attached to their regional identity.
Similarly, Luxembourgers identified more more their region then the „german identity“. It obviously helped that they avoided annexation into neighbouring kingdoms through both the personal union with the netherlands, and the Luxembourg crisis of 1867 with the susbsequent treaty of london establishing the „perpetual neutrality“ of the country.
In modern times both countries have evolved independently, when it comes to linguistics, it would be wrong to dismiss both the linguistic and cultural ties to what is now germany.
This, I think is the reason for people acting this way, if you disagree, feel free to respond.
I mean, I do have blue eyes and blonde hair. Like real blonde, not this light brown people call blonde too.
Anyway, it’s complexes. Some Germans still try to downplay other countries as something lesser than them.
Either right wingers or ignorants. Well, first are also the second.
I just don’t answer anyone trying to start this conversation or stop if they bring it up.