@brandt_vol99947@GanzeGeschichte Österreich war Mitglied im Deutschen Bund. Die staatliche Einheit scheiterte an vielen dynastischen Interessen, nicht nur an denen von Preußen und Österreich. Die Idee von Ö. als einer nichtdeutschen Entität war vor 1866 unbekannt und wurde erst nach 1945 mehrheitsfähig.
@Martin_Debes@liberal_dvh@UlrichSiegmund Erschreckend, wieviele Drukos hier bestätigen, dass viele AfD-Anhänger genau eben nicht differenzieren, es offenkundig auch nicht wollen und sich trotzdem im exklusiven Besitz der Wahrheit wähnen.
@it_was_my_cat@TheKoopaGuy Not true for Addis Ababa. Yes, there is a long rainy season (that's why the Ethiopian highlands are green), but the sun shows up every day. Not dark and grey at all, definitely less cloudy than Nairobi.
@JoanaCotar@KemmerichThL Herr Kemmerich, Sie verbreiten falsche Fakten. Abgeschafft wir nicht der steuerfreie Verkauf des eigenen Hauses, sondern der steuerfreie Immobilienspekulationsgewinn.
@hdoikmo@newinattica True. But having the additional opportunity to use public transports adds much to your freedom of movement. Most Europeans have cars AND train (and bike) options, they can chose. Most Americans can't.
@TFSCollective@FunkySynapse@FreddyLA7 Landscape yes, villages and towns no. Wooden houses scattered everywhere are not German style. We have 95 percent stone houses and well-structured, walkable and organically grown settlements
@DanielHaseloff Eine Partei sieht also entartete Kunst am Werk und meint, Politiker sollten nur solche Kunst zulassen, die zur eigenen Gesellschaftspolitik passt. Beides hatten wir in Thüringen schon mal seit 1930.
@erik_griswold@Simply_Railway Train Warsaw-Berlin, some asian passengers took the train because their flight to Frankfurt was cancelled. They expected long ride and changing trains but were happy when they saw the "Frankfurt" stop after a few hours and went off the train. Happy for some minutes.
@AgileJebrim@akarlin You picked Germany's most expensive real estate spot, a tiny leisure island famous for its ridiculous price level. Every square meter like gold mine. Generall prices are very much lower.
@AgileJebrim@akarlin You get far better deals for 1.5 million dollars in such areas in Europe. Bigger lots, more distance to neighbours, more individuality, better massive buliding quality. Plus connection to public transport and less rules for lawns, fences etc.
@akarlin I repeat: it is all about size. No one needs five bathrooms in a house. For you, wealth is all about size of houses, cars, food. Europeans have other preferences and another concept of well-being. As have the rich new yorkers in manhattan.
@AgileJebrim@akarlin 2 The difference is that Europeans expect individuality in suburban or rural areas. US replaces individuality by size of houses and area. These giant suburbias are unattractive for Europeans. And a/c isnt important except maybe in the very south.We prefer natural airconditioning
@AgileJebrim@akarlin So you mean living in Manhattan generally means poverty? It is about urban vs. non-urban lifestyle, no matter how big the metropolitan area. Of course, you pay by less housing space for the urban vibe . Which is not a problem, but an asset for many ppl. 1/2
@AgileJebrim@akarlin As i said: It is all about size. The non-metropolitan US is king of size in everything. Well-off Europeans would dislike the uniformity of these huge residential areas and their strict rules and artificiality. neither urban nor rural. It is just big. Not the European wealth model