00:00Welcome to Extra 3 Takeover. Here, we still make our own deepfakes. Wink,
00:11Wink. Since it's obvious our AI budget was exhausted, I might as well say it now. I am
00:15Not Christian Ehring, my name is Maram. I come from a faraway land called TikTok and
00:21I'm hosting the first episode of extra 3 Takeover. Our new format for everyone.
00:26Internet users, or as the politically correct term goes, digital natives. Extra 3 Takeover is about...
00:31It's always about a core issue that moves people in Germany. And that's why we're talking.
00:36Today's topic is the hot-button issue of corruption in hobbyhorsing. Oh wait, racism in hobbyhorsing. No,
00:44Simply put, it's racism. But racism is also bad for all of us. And by all of us, I mean the economy.
00:50Because... the fact is, Germany as a whole is not particularly popular with foreign skilled workers.
00:57Within the group of Western industrialized nations, the OECD, it is only ranked 15th.
01:0315th place? And the Brits are ahead of us? Hey, it rains even more there than here. They pour vinegar on their fries.
01:10And the mood rises and falls with the royal family.
01:17Well, to be fair, it was a strange bow. But there are better ways to do it.
01:23And yet the British are ahead of us? What's going on?
01:28One in four immigrants is considering leaving Germany again.
01:32Nearly two-thirds of migrants report experiencing discrimination.
01:37The political climate is off-putting.
01:40So racism is a turn-off and not an incentive to jet off to Germany?
01:44Who would have thought?
01:46Black people are particularly frequently affected by racism.
01:50But explaining the perspective? Difficult.
01:53That's why I'm saying what my old history teacher, Mr. Bismarck, would say.
01:57Let's just watch a movie.
02:04Wow. Have you ever thought about doing that professionally?
02:07Uh, obviously not.
02:08Yes, it's simply in our blood.
02:10Okay, now comes the anesthetic.
02:13Oh, you know, you don't need that anesthetic anyway.
02:17Genetically speaking, you tolerate the pain much better anyway.
02:21Huh?
02:21Oh, calm down, calm down, calm down.
02:23Müller, we're taking photos for the website.
02:25So ideally, diverse, POC, transgender, this, that.
02:28You're diverse, right?
02:29Yes, perfect.
02:30And now Fora is coming.
02:32Fora, Mother, get up and wait, please.
02:35Can we do the teeth?
02:37Yes.
02:38Does that look okay?
02:39I'm going to the office next door now.
02:40There's this guy in a wheelchair.
02:41No, no, don't clean anything.
02:43Here is a viewing appointment for an apartment.
02:46I am Mrs. Müller.
02:48Oh, yes.
02:50That's really unfortunate, the previous tenant.
02:54He now wants to stay after all, despite the termination notice.
02:57Hey, I'd love a splash of milk in your coffee.
03:03Hey, my beautiful girl, my African queen, my new being goddess, John LaPos.
03:10My third cousin's wife also comes from Africa.
03:13Do you know them?
03:16My apple was also a doctor twice over.
03:18Crazy, right?
03:18Come on, let's rap.
03:21Bad cat, bad cat.
03:23And tell me, did it have to be that Ariel is black?
03:28Oh, honey, I think it's really bad for your karma if you're always thinking about racism.
03:33We have Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, other Obamas, the children.
03:39Sorry, I'll have another Lumumba, please.
03:41A film by Sophia Aissi and Max Engel.
03:45And all of that was racism in different forms.
03:48Because racism can be raw violence, insults, open hostility, but also everyday situations that might seem insignificant to a white person can be racist.
04:00Racist behavior need not be intentional.
04:04Something like that can hurt the other person either way.
04:06So you get it?
04:08I know it's complicated.
04:10That's a lot of technical terms.
04:12Exclusion is also called othering, for example.
04:14When you pronounce the word in German, it sounds much nicer, like a suburb in Bavaria.
04:19Welcome to Othering.
04:21But now there are many uncertainties.
04:23May I ask where someone originally comes from?
04:26May I be impressed because someone speaks excellent German?
04:28May I rub myself all over with minced pork every morning before going to work with my migrant colleague?
04:34Complicated.
04:36Perhaps some people already switched off at that point because they found it too silly.
04:39God forbid a girl has a hobby.
04:42But this isn't about us versus them.
04:45Small versus large.
04:46Men against their egos.
04:48No, I don't want to show any together.
04:51And since we're already sitting here together, we might as well speak some uncomfortable truths out loud.
04:57Firstly, not every conversation between men about feelings needs its own podcast.
05:01Secondly, not everyone has ADHD.
05:03No, not even if you prefer to play solitaire during the lecture.
05:07And thirdly, we all think in a racist way.
05:09I as well.
05:10I knew that.
05:11I've always said that.
05:13I am also a victim.
05:15I have to say chocolate coconuts now.
05:16And I never get a better price from the killer.
05:19And he never calls me boss.
05:20Just because I sometimes mix up the employees.
05:23They all look pretty similar there.
05:26And also...
05:26Take it easy with the young wooden horses.
05:29I said we all think in a racist way.
05:32But not everyone is a victim of racism.
05:35It's time to ask the big question.
05:39Dear racism, where do you originally come from?
05:43We are born with brains, unfortunately.
05:47The difference between us and the others.
05:50This means that, on the one hand, we have people with whom we feel a sense of belonging.
05:55And on the other hand, there are people we exclude.
05:58And all these brain abilities that we have were already present in a pre-cultural context.
06:04So the brain instinctively wants to exclude groups?
06:08That's not nice at all.
06:10But it does make sense.
06:11If it were completely healthy, such a brain wouldn't eventually find Skibbidi-Toilet-Funny.
06:16What may have helped us in an evolutionary sense once no longer helps us in modern societies.
06:23Where we need to learn to cooperate with many different people of different identities.
06:29And that's something we essentially have to teach our brains these days.
06:32Do we have to fight against being exclusionary assholes?
06:37And then there are tax returns, sit-ups, gender reveal parties, and drinking three liters of water every day.
06:42What a stressful experience.
06:44We come with a maybe-asshole brain into a safe-asshole world.
06:48With lots and lots of drawers.
06:49I have that too.
06:51Let me name a few.
06:52All migrants love anime.
06:54Only Arab mothers love their sons more than Migra loves anime.
06:58Oh, and ARD, in case you don't know anime.
07:01It's like the Gummi Bears gang with weapons and trousers that are way too tight.
07:05What else?
07:06Oh, I see, Arabs and Turks have to put yogurt on everything.
07:10On spaghetti, on matcha latte, on the Labrador, and one more for the Germans.
07:16Germans only use salt and mayo for seasoning.
07:19And at the first sign of chili, the German Armed Forces are deployed.
07:22But is that racism?
07:25When does a stereotype become racism?
07:28The origins of racism can be traced back to the colonization of Africa and South America.
07:34Slavery reinforced the European powers' feeling of the moral and civilizational superiority of the white race.
07:41Okay, so when it comes to racism, it's not just a question of the category, but also which carpenter built the category.
07:49And above all, the entire shelf, the whole system.
07:53The global economic system of the modern era is based on slavery.
07:58This requires a justification that is compatible with the ideals of equality.
08:02In this way, dark-skinned people are summarily placed on the same level as farm animals.
08:08One could therefore say that racism consists of structures created over a long period of time, built by those in power.
08:15That's called the power to define the narrative. Sounds just like a truly proud European king.
08:20Your right to interpret.
08:22Historically, it is of course very difficult to say who has had the most influence on the world over the last few centuries.
08:28Hmm, I can't figure it out.
08:31Ah yes, that was us. Europe.
08:32That's where I was too. Slavery is of course older than European royal houses.
08:37Even though it's hard to imagine.
08:39But turning that into a global business system was a very fresh approach from Europe.
08:45All over the world.
08:47No wonder we all, you, Thomas, and I too, we can both experience racism.
08:52Uh, equality.
08:54Racism is so blatant that even those affected internalize certain stereotypes.
08:58Even in my cultural circle, some things are completely racist.
09:01You're saying that's a normal nose?
09:05That's how it looks to me.
09:06The nose shouldn't be too much of a nose.
09:10Preferably a bit snubby.
09:11Generally, I'd prefer less nose.
09:13Ideally, yes, very little.
09:15That's beautifully European.
09:17Do you see?
09:18I also have isms.
09:19Racism is ultimately about the question of where it actually comes from.
09:26And then the question to us is how one handles this nowadays.
09:29The German government does not want reparations for former colonies.
09:33Okay, yes, but we want to look ahead.
09:36Less past.
09:37Less important is where you originally come from.
09:40Otherwise, one would also have to talk about the origin of some works of art in museums.
09:45But we are interested in it.
09:46Especially when it comes to what's going so wrong.
09:49And unless you happen to have a family tree tracing back to the Middle Ages in Salzgitter,
09:53You can really make a lot of mistakes.
09:55Others felt less so.
09:55So, my best friend, Lisa, has now emigrated to Sweden with her husband.
10:04But I understand.
10:05The welfare state in Sweden is really great.
10:09She earns more money than here.
10:11She did everything right.
10:12I would do the same.
10:13I would emigrate too.
10:14Really.
10:16And she now has a little one, her son, Jürgen.
10:20So cute.
10:21And he's quite happy, too.
10:23They can't pronounce his name quite so well.
10:24And they call him something like Jorgenbert or something like that.
10:28But at least they're switching to a bilingual format now.
10:30German and Swedish.
10:32And speak several languages.
10:33That's quite an achievement.
10:35Lisa recently told me that she still sometimes gets homesick.
10:38And that's why he still cooks good German food at home.
10:41The girl never forgets her cultural roots.
10:45But the Swedish neighbors do complain from time to time,
10:49that the hand cheese smells too strong.
10:52Those cinnamon sacks have no clue.
10:53And Lisa has recently become a housewife, right?
10:57Yes, she has a lot of quality meat time, she always says.
11:00And is now doing a lot of gardening.
11:02She recently started growing her own marijuana.
11:04She thought that was legal in Sweden, like in her home country.
11:10But it isn't.
11:11No.
11:12The culture there is very conservative, I don't understand it.
11:15Okay.
11:17This is already crap, isn't it?
11:18She now has a criminal record and may be deported.
11:21Man, they're really strict with foreigners.
11:24Foreigner?
11:27Hopefully Lisa doesn't just season the hand cheese with salt.
11:31Otherwise, she will be poorly integrated immediately.
11:33If Lisa doesn't learn Swedish, she'll end up being to blame.
11:36that there are always screws missing from the shelves.
11:40But learning languages is really difficult.
11:42I'm checking you out, Lisa.
11:44Between you and me, I can't actually speak any German at all.
11:46I just read them off the page the whole time anyway.
11:48Maram organizes her notes and announces the next film by John Frickey.
11:51Oh, luckily we also have a film about it.
11:57Huh? Apples more expensive?
12:01Huh? Climate change?
12:06Huh? Danger of collapse?
12:09Why are you always so angry, Dad?
12:11Well, Clara, what do you think? Because of the foreigners, of course.
12:15Huh? I thought you were going to say inflation or climate change.
12:19or dilapidated German infrastructure.
12:22Nonsense. Besides, it also has to do with foreigners.
12:26It's hard to explain exactly, but you can feel it.
12:29The refugee problem is once again omnipresent.
12:32Hmm, maybe there are a particularly large number of asylum seekers right now.
12:36That's exactly how it is, Clara. Or at least, that's how it feels.
12:39Well, somehow this foreign infiltration is palpable.
12:43But I'm not entirely sure how I know that.
12:46I'm starting to notice it now too, somehow.
12:48Well, it's not without reason that many citizens feel almost obligated to...
12:53Voting for the AfD. Here, as especially in East Germany.
12:57But it says here that very few foreigners live there.
13:00And virtually no Muslims.
13:02Exactly, Clara. That just goes to show how effective the AfD's policies are.
13:07The foreigners have already left before the election results are announced.
13:10It seems to me that people are most opposed to refugees,
13:15who have the least to do with refugees.
13:17That's too complicated for me.
13:20It seems to me that refugees should not be carrying out terrorist attacks at city festivals.
13:25Deport them all, just to be on the safe side.
13:26One bratwurst, please.
13:27Okay, coming right up.
13:30These people have no business being here.
13:33But we have to take in people,
13:36who suffer from war, oppression, or hunger.
13:39Wait, hunger? But Clara, that's called an economic refugee.
13:44You still need to feel a little hungry.
13:46Hot, hot, hot, hot.
13:47Oh no, my sausage.
13:50I'll get you something quickly, Dad.
13:52Phew, just in time.
14:01And one more thing, Clara.
14:03These shisha bars are everywhere now.
14:05I will not accept all this horrific foreign influence.
14:10Oh, sorry, I thought I was on break.
14:16I hope my dad doesn't see this.
14:18Okay, let's summarize what migrants and foreigners can be responsible for.
14:22Rising doner kebab prices.
14:24German national team when Gündogan plays.
14:26Or even if he no longer plays.
14:28And Taylor Swift's latest album.
14:30What was that?
14:31But we are in Germany, a country known for innovation.
14:34That's why we have a solution for everything.
14:37For foreigners and guests, for weeds in the garden, for broken heating, depression.
14:42A solution.
14:44Work hard and long hours.
14:46Who benefits us as an immigration society in the sense that they work here?
14:50And we now need labor immigration.
14:53Anyone who wants to lend a hand here with us, and anyone who can lend a hand here with us,
14:57He is welcome here in Germany.
15:00Yes, we will need immigration in the future as well.
15:02We need them, and especially for our labor markets.
15:07Work, work, build a little house, as long as it's needed, I'll be beautiful.
15:11Those who work hard and earn money are truly accepted.
15:14Therefore, everyone needs to come up with something.
15:16How to rap or invest wisely.
15:19Or rap first and then invest wisely.
15:21But of course, I also used the geopolitical problems in this world to...
15:26in order to actually make a profit.
15:27So, I invested in Rheinmetall very, very early on.
15:29Old Bushido, why are you saying that too?
15:33Nobody asked you.
15:34You profit from humanitarian disasters,
15:36And you'll voluntarily blurt that out to the next camera?
15:39Wow.
15:40But of course, a trading app is just one of many solutions for men.
15:44Like sports betting, drug dealing, and boxing machines.
15:47Imagine, you simply make money off male ego.
15:50Genius.
15:51As a woman, you don't even get the chance to do something like that.
15:53You have other things on your list, too.
15:56Care work, PMS, breasts, so back pain because of breasts.
16:01And organize the gift for the mother-in-law.
16:04Here's a little tip.
16:06Rheinmetall shares.
16:08And then there's the Listen and Repeat function.
16:11Migrant Gender Pay Gap.
16:14Bloody Hell.
16:15Huh?
16:15Depending on their country of origin, they earn up to 50% less than their German colleagues.
16:22The higher the qualification, the greater the salary differences.
16:26So, double the momentum.
16:28Left hook woman and then also gum-gum salary-gattering foreigner.
16:32So you end up running around like in The Matrix.
16:35Oh, you're not a real German.
16:38How many children do you want, and most importantly, when?
16:41Are you even allowed to work? What does your husband say about it?
16:43But honestly, I'm actually completely equal.
16:48I receive hate from both white men and Muslim men.
16:52Really.
16:52Looking at my inbox, some people think I'm far too haram, while others think I don't drink enough.
16:58Some say yes to Sharia, others say no to Sharia.
17:02And then, as a woman, you also get great compliments.
17:05Hello.
17:07Beautiful woman.
17:09Beautiful woman.
17:10Arabic.
17:12Turkish.
17:13Curonian.
17:16No.
17:17Also German.
17:17Also good.
17:18Do you have Stepsham?
17:21Stepsham.
17:23Stepsham.
17:26Beautiful woman.
17:29Nice trousers.
17:30Actually, many isms have merged together.
17:33So one can say...
17:34It blends together like a four-cheese pizza into a wonderful Quattro Hermachi.
17:52Racism melts away with sexism-parmesan and dissolves with classism-gorgonzola.
17:58But if you are lactose intolerant or generally intolerant, you can't tolerate these complex flavors at all.
18:06Then you can always ask for their first name.
18:08Mohammed instead of Michael.
18:10These are the most common first names among recipients of citizen's income.
18:13Yes, Mohammed and Ahmed, but just as often Michael, Andreas and Thomas.
18:18I'm completely surprised.
18:20Common names are common.
18:22And Michael, Andreas, and Thomas may not experience racism, but they also experience classism.
18:27Everyone gets their "ism," but in the end, both are rubbish.
18:30These isms can not only be combined, but they can also be played off against each other.
18:36For example, in the case of sexism.
18:38Loud, toxic, aggressive.
18:42That's how Muslim men are.
18:44But is it really only a problem in southern Europe?
18:46That's why I'm meeting up with Bianca now.
18:50Bianca tells me that she was harassed by foreigners at Oktoberfest.
18:54Those Muslims behaved so badly.
19:01And these Muslims sang?
19:03Yes, and breathlessly at that.
19:05Breathless? From Ecofresh?
19:07No, no, no. By Helene Fischer.
19:09And what did these Muslims look like?
19:10Blue eyes and blond hair, and they had faces as red as Markus von Anhalt's.
19:16Blond and blue-eyed. That sounds like my financial advisor Frank, and he's German.
19:20They whistled at women, they threw garbage on the street, and they vomited all over everything.
19:28Such behavior is only known from foreigners.
19:34I'm meeting my next interview partner on a rainy day.
19:39Bernd, the press spokesman for the Bavarian police.
19:41He told me that during the Oktoberfest holidays the external control cells are overcrowded with people from southern countries.
19:47What makes you so sure they are Arabs and Turks?
19:49Have you ever seen a German who has drunk too much, then loudly addresses women or relieves himself in public?
19:59What did I experience there?
20:01I am currently researching the work of the renowned Oxford psychologist Dr. Hassan Ismail Rais Volkran zu Gutenberg.
20:07People only see what they are told on social media.
20:10I call this phenomenon the rose-tinted German glasses.
20:13The truth is, we have a general problem with men.
20:16What?
20:17Yes, that's how it is.
20:17I understand that toxic masculinity has nothing to do with origin.
20:22It's not everyone, but it's always a man.
20:25Wait a minute, I'm a man too.
20:27That's not the same thing.
20:28The same, Jenny. That means the same thing.
20:30Okay, so how do you say "mansplaining" in Turkish?
20:33Huh? We've been working together here for five years and you thought I was Turkish?
20:36A film by Abude and Ibo.
20:40But we want to remain positive.
20:42It's understandable that people want to blame someone when things don't go well.
20:47Or what? What is there to fear?
20:50For the year 2024, the specialist victim support centers
20:55einneu has recorded an alarming increase in right-wing, racist and anti-Semitic violence.
21:02With more than 20 percent.
21:04As in previous years, racism was the most frequent motive for the crime.
21:08Well, bloody hell. And then something like this happens.
21:12The number of right-wing extremist teenagers in Germany has doubled.
21:15The number of anti-Muslim incidents has reached a record high.
21:19Many right-wing murders go unreported.
21:21But now for the crucial question.
21:24What does all this have to do with corruption in hobbyhorsing?
21:28Everything. What isn't?
21:30Okay, we need to go back in there for a moment.
21:32Stick, uh, horse please.
21:33Hobbyhorsing is about jumping over relatively small hurdles.
21:39Like a fire wall, for example.
21:41Candidates have varying chances.
21:44Depending on what kind of wood they are carved from.
21:46They invent all sorts of races with very strange names,
21:49which leads to white women riding Arab horses.
21:52Which nobody really likes.
21:54Except for the women, maybe.
21:55Doesn't matter.
21:55And in the end, we often can't talk about the solutions.
21:59because everyone is uptight.
22:01So I'm definitely happy that we're all a little different.
22:04Imagine if we were all the same.
22:06For example, all hunters and foresters or something like that.
22:09In Bonn, people say that in the Sauerland region there are only hunters and foresters.
22:14And everyone seasons the rabbit with a maximum of just a pinch of salt.
22:17Surely nobody wants that.
22:20Storm of Love is coming up now.
22:21That was an extra 3 takeover.
22:23Without racism, I wouldn't have received this broadcast.
22:25In that sense, thank you.
22:28And always a hand's breadth of stick horse under your bottom.
22:30Next up is K-Pop Demon Hunters with Hugo Egan Balder.
22:34Episode 2 of Takeover is about drugs, by the way.
22:36Nice.
22:37Love each other.
22:38Goodbye with oil.
22:38Bye with her!
22:50Goodbye with oil.
22:50Subtitles by ZDF, 2020