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Estrel Tower: Berlin’s tallest building is laughing at you

The new hotel in Neukölln is a reminder that Berlin could build new housing – but investors prefer useless towers


10/04/2024

The building frame is slowly rising above Neukölln, as ominous as Barad-dûr with the Eye of Sauron from the movies Lord of the Rings. When it’s completed next year, the Estrel Tower will be Berlin’s tallest building, with 45 stories. It’s already impossible to miss, looming over every street.

This tower is an expansion of the Estrel Hotel right across the street. Germany’s biggest hotel opened in 1995, and strangely, it’s in the middle of an industrial area next to the Neukölln Ship Canal. The convention center is squeezed between a scrap metal yard and a factory for store-brand Nutella imitators. This is one of Berlin’s poorest neighborhoods: the White Settlement, a housing project next to the Estrel, has been systematically run down by private investors.

Right next to the hotel, the inner-city Autobahn A100 is cutting a deep path through the city. I always wondered: Why would someone who could afford a fancy hotel want to look down at the highway and the nougat creme plant? I found an article from ten years ago in nd, and Berlin’s ultra-racist former district mayor Heinz Buschkowsky thought this was a feature: you can basically drive your car right into the lobby! Plenty of German philistines want to hold a convention in Berlin – but without encountering any scary Berliners. Here, they can go from the parking garage to their hotel room without setting foot outside.

As Berlin’s housing crisis reaches ever-new heights, with the average student paying €640 for a room, the city has essentially given up on building apartments. The biggest landlord, Vonovia, has declared they have stopped all construction – it’s just too expensive, they say. Yet everywhere we see cranes for hotels and offices. Couldn’t people live in the Estrel Tower?

This is what makes the project so odious: As young people move from one six-month sublet to another, the bourgeoisie is erecting a monument to their own colossal indifference. “We know you need housing”, they yell at us from their tower, “but we don’t care”. Instead of construction, capital is now flowing into speculation with existing buildings, driving up prices and rents even more.

This is the context in which René Benko’s realty empire has collapsed. The Austrian billionaire has properties throughout this city – most famously the luxury department store KaDeWe. Rather, Benko had properties, as his Signa Group has entered bankruptcy. This is great news for Berliners: Neukölln will at least be spared a different useless tower, the reboot of the Karstadt palace at Hermannplatz.

As journalists sift through the ruins, we are learning how Benko went from a high-school dropout to one of the world’s top realty speculators, even snatching up the Chrysler Building. Benko’s skill set consisted in gaining billionaires’ confidence, making corrupt deals with right-wing politicians, and falsifying financial records. In the last few years, he got at least €700 million from German taxpayers. This money was supposed to “save jobs” at department stores – but it only ended up propping up a house of cards. Perhaps the money could have been sent directly to the workers, rather than to their exploiters.

I’m sure there are realty developers who are not sociopathic gamblers, mafia dons, and corrupt operators – I’m just not sure who they are. As Donald Trump goes on trial in the United States, his defenders remind us that his financial tricks are “used by every real estate developer everywhere on earth”, and “this has never been prosecuted”, in the words of the Canadian investor Kevin O’Leary. And that’s true. Yet if any of us used similar tactics to get a bank loan, we could expect to be thrown in prison. We just accept a certain amount of criminal behavior from the real estate sector.

If we want speculators to solve Berlin’s housing crisis, we’ll only get more useless towers. The only way to provide housing is to put it under public, democratic control. In a sense, this is our fault. This city’s rulers are clearly not worried about barricades going up. In fact, they feel so confident that they put up the Estrel Tower to mock us.

This is a mirror of Nathaniel’s Red Flag column in Neues Deutschland. Reproduced with permission

We Accuse!

Statement by the Organisers of the Berlin Palestine Congress

Between the 12th and 14th of April, the Palestine 2024 Conference will take place in Berlin. A broad coalition of Palestinian, Jewish, German and international activists will join together with experts, lawyers, journalists and academics of different backgrounds and nationalities to publicly accuse the German government of aiding and abetting the genocide in Gaza.

Israel is destroying Gaza and its population. As has been broadly acknowledged, we are witnessing a textbook case of genocide. The Israeli colonial project of domination over Palestine has escalated towards the total destruction of native Palestinian life in Palestine. By February 2024, 1.9 million people had been displaced. More than 30,000 Palestinians have been killed by the Israeli military. Infrastructure, hospitals, universities, schools, mosques, churches, administrative buildings and apartment blocks have been reduced to rubble. Hundreds of thousands suffer from hunger and have no access to clean drinking water or medicine.

Many western governments, especially those of the United States, the United Kingdom and Germany, are fully complicit in this horrendous, brutal and savage onslaught. These governments are failing to meet their obligations to ensure that the Geneva Convention mandates are observed. But what is worse, they are actively providing arms and economic support, as well as political and diplomatic cover for Israel’s atrocities. The state of Israel is committing grave crimes against humanity. Germany is complicit in these crimes.

During the course of what the International Court of Justice sees as a plausible genocide in Palestine, the German government increased its arms deliveries to Israel tenfold in 2023. In January 2024, with starvation looming in Gaza, the German government declared that it would stop its financial support for humanitarian aid to the Palestinians. Germany declares injustice to be just. Germany supports a genocide.

At home, the German state is reproducing a regime of occupation and disenfranchisement that the Israeli state has practiced against Palestinians since 1948. This historical rupture requires resistance. German politicians are endeavouring to cynically reinterpret history and justify their support for genocide under the slogan of “never again”. If they succeed in doing this without resistance, the unthinkable will once again become feasible in Germany.

The deafening noise of the bombardments in Palestine is only surpassed by the droning silence of German society. The genocide in Gaza is a turning point in German history. The German government is shamelessly supporting a genocide in full view of the international public. Democratic rights have been undermined in order to silence protests calling for a ceasefire. Freedom of assembly, freedom of organisation, freedom of the press and academic freedom are being massively curtailed.

At the same time, German corporate media, absolutely subservient to the German state and its defence of Israeli genocide as “Raison d’Etat”, openly violate article 20 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. They continually dehumanise Palestinians and their supporters in order to facilitate genocide, and disseminate war propaganda and stir up racial and religious hatred. All this constitutes an unacceptable incitement to discrimination, hostility and violence against every voice calling for a ceasefire, an end to the genocide, and respect for Palestinian lives. German institutions and the majority of German media are, in this light, collaborating to punish those who dare to speak out against atrocities.

Within the last few days and weeks, we have seen in the German press preposterous and baseless accusations against the Palestine Conference and its organisers and participants. “Antisemites plan hate summit in Berlin” (newspaper B.Z.),”Congress of Terror Trivializers”, “Antisemites of the world want to gather in Berlin” (Tagesspiegel and Berliner Kurier), and “Party Youth Organisations Call for Resistance to ‘Palestine Congress’. The planned anti-Israel ‘Palestine Congress’ in Berlin has been met with fierce criticism” (Der Spiegel). These are just a few examples of defamatory and criminalising headlines showing how the Palestine Conference is currently being misrepresented and lambasted.

The smear campaign is also reflected in its political counterpart: The Berlin Senate is currently considering banning the event. This deliberate repression of political activity by state authorities represents a clear threat to free speech and democratic principles. If Berlin authorities continue to pursue the repression of this conference, they will be threatening civil liberties in their own country, attacking the international legal system, and supporting what in our view amounts to genocide against the Palestinian people.

Over the past few days, individuals and organisations active in solidarity with Palestine have been subjected to intolerable forms of harassment and repression. Houses of activists and headquarters of organisations have been raided, some activists have been arrested without charge and their personal belongings confiscated. The German bank account of Jüdische Stimme / Jewish Voice has been frozen by its bank, which has demanded a full list of members’ names and addresses, in an alarming echo of history.

At the same time that this repression targets Jewish individuals and organisations, the rhetoric used to criminalise and target Palestine solidarity activists accuses them of “antisemitism”. This is a vacuous and twisted use of the term, which completely empties the term of its historical meaning, prevents a real dialogue about antiracism and represents an insult to the memory of the millions of victims of antisemitism throughout history.

In fact, The Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism (signed by dozens of scholars and experts from prestigious institutions) states that “supporting the Palestinian demand for justice and the full grant of their political, national, civil and human rights, as encapsulated in international law” is not antisemitic. Nor is the following antisemitic: “criticizing or opposing Zionism as a form of nationalism… or to support arrangements that accord full equality to all inhabitants “between the river and the sea,” whether in two states, a binational state, unitary democratic state, federal state, or in whatever form”.

The international movement of solidarity with Palestine is overwhelmingly motivated by a sincere opposition to all forms of racism, including antisemitism. For this reason, hundreds of thousands of Jewish people around the world have taken to the streets in opposition to Israel’s barbaric assault on Gaza, and numerous Jewish speakers are scheduled to speak at this conference.

The atrocious and indiscriminate violence targeting the 2.3 million Palestinians in Gaza, with the financial and political support of the German state and German media, can and must be brought to an end. In the aftermath of this genocide, these actors will also have to be held accountable. “Never again” must be for all peoples.

News from Berlin and Germany, 10th April 2024

Weekly news round-up from Berlin and Germany

NEWS FROM BERLIN

Anmeldung available to all: meet the Berlin activists

Anmeldung für Alle is a new campaign, aiming to make registration easier for everyone. The Berliner interviewed two of its organisers, Marcela Camps and Jason Bustos, from Ciudad Migrante. The group’s website observes that “the vicious circle of registration means exclusion from basic rights and services essential for a decent life.” The campaign has three major demands: a solution for people who cannot find an apartment with Anmeldung, but who are still living and working in the city, the decriminalisation of solidarity Anmeldung, and a solution to the housing crisis. Source: the berliner

Activists at the Amazon Tower

Accused of poor working conditions, tax evasion, and gentrification, Amazon’s occupation as the main tenant of the EDGE East Tower has been controversial from the beginning, with many acts of protest happening at the spot. When asked about their negative public perception, the company spoke about their plans to make a floor in the building available free of charge to non-profit organisations and neighbourhood initiatives. For many activists, these plans are just “social washing.” The group Amazon ist kein guter Nachbar organised a protest against Amazon’s gentrification of Friedrichshain last Saturday. Source: the berliner

NEWS FROM GERMANY

The tip of the iceberg

There are around 1,500 fascists and “Reich citizens” with gun licences in Germany. This is shown by the Federal Government’s response to a parliamentary enquiry by the Die Linke group. According to the answer published on the Bundestag website at the end of this week, 1,051 “right-wing extremists” and around 400 “Reich citizens” who deny the existence of the Federal Republic of Germany hold at least one firearms licence. The statistics do not include armed AfD members unless they belong to the far-right party’s structures categorised by the domestic intelligence service as “confirmed right-wing extremist.” Source: jW

Traffic-light coalition agrees on payment card

The traffic-light coalition has settled its dispute over payment cards for refugees: the cards are now explicitly mentioned in the law as a form of receiving social benefits in future. “Payment cards were already possible before, but we have now created a common, legally secure framework,” explained Dagmar Schmidt (SPD). The card system will also be extended to asylum seekers who do not live in shared accommodation, who will be able to receive the card instead of cash benefits. However, many NGOs criticized the new law because, among other issues, there are still many places in Germany where card payments are not accepted. Source: taz

Meat consumption in the country fell to record low in 2023

It is a trend: in 2023, people in Germany ate 0.8 percent less meat than they did in 2022. The annual figures published by the Bundesinformationszentrum Landwirtschaft (BZL) reveal that meat consumption continues to decline in Germany, despite animal products still being a significant part of German cuisine. According to the German government, “Farming generates around 8% of Germany’s greenhouse gas emissions, primarily through animal husbandry and the use of fertilisers.” Last year, it was first and foremost cows that disappeared from dinner plates across Germany, with beef and veal consumption dropping by more than 5% to 8.9 kilograms per person. Source: iamexpat

University of Cologne disinvites Nancy Fraser

The University of Cologne has disinvited the US philosopher Nancy Fraser from the “Albertus Magnus” guest professorship.  Fraser, who works at the New School for Social Research in New York, was due to hold two public lectures and a seminar in Cologne from 15 to 17 May. The events have now been cancelled. The university justifies its decision by stating that the academic signed the open letter “Philosophy for Palestine” in November. In a statement on the website of the Critical Theory in Berlin association, the move by the University of Cologne is criticised by a number of philosophers and intellectuals. Source: faz

Germany’s Döner and Asia-Imbisse experience a boom while restaurants suffer

According to a study by Hase & Igel, an AI-supported data analysis company, more people in Germany are choosing to eat out at fast-food eateries rather than restaurants. This means that not only well-established international companies such as McDonald’s or Burger King have more customers, but also places where Döner and Asian food are served. On the other hand, “Italian, Spanish and Indian restaurants perceive more losses in the mid-double digit percentage range,” said Hase & Igel Managing Director Jan Schoenmakers. According to the study, food delivery apps are also seeing a decline in customers, after their rise during the pandemic. Source: iamexpat

Germany and Nicaragua at the International Court of Justice

Nicaragua is taking Germany to the International Court of Justice on suspicion of aiding and abetting genocide in Gaza. Pending a final decision by the court in the main proceedings, Nicaragua demands the imposition of immediate measures, including an immediate stop to arms deliveries. A judgement in this regard, which is binding under international law, is expected in around two weeks. After the Central American country’s lawyers presented their arguments in detail on Monday, Germany’s representatives intended to refute the charges “accusation by accusation in detail” on Tuesday morning, as the Federal Foreign Office claimed on X on Monday. Source: jW

Tuntenhaus bleibt!

Save Tuntenhaus! One of the last & oldest gay/queer housing projects 👠

WHO ARE WE?

For over 30 years, our Tuntenhaus has been a place of social cohesion and diversity: in this house, queer people from many parts of the world, who are often marginalised because of their gender identity or sexual orientation, could find a place to call home.

WHAT IS THE ISSUE?

In February, the Tuntenhaus building at Kastanienallee 86 was sold. This will ultimately lead to the displacement of the Tuntenhaus, due to expensive renovations and unaffordable rents. Our living space, a place of queer subculture with a 3-decade-long tradition, is in imminent danger.

WHY ARE WE IMPORTANT FOR BERLIN?

We are not only known in and outside of Berlin as a landmark of the gay and queer community. Our house project represents a side of Berlin that has become rare: a side of Berlin that has made subculture and collective living communities possible through affordable housing, thus creating a place of living and a safer space for queer and gay people. Through our affordable “kitchen for all“, our food distribution for disadvantaged people, and courtyard festivals, we contribute to the socio-cultural diversity and cohesion of our neighbourhood.

WHAT IS THE SOLUTION?

The district of Pankow is examining and using its right of first refusal: its legal right to intervene and prevent the sale of the house. This could allow the Tuntenhaus to be converted into a non-profit or non-profit-oriented living space, if the Senate approves the funding.

WHAT DO WE WANT?

We want the commitment of the Berlin Senate to support the conversion of the Tuntenhaus into a cooperative through the blocked budget funds and loans of March 7, 2024. It needs the acquisition support from a non-profit buyer (e.g. IBB loans) and funds for the overdue renovation.

HOW CAN YOU SUPPORT US?

Tell the Berlin Senate how important you find the Tuntenhaus and that they must release the funds! Donate to save the Tuntenhaus! Contact us if you can help! Make our voices heard!

Donate Money
IBAN: DE 62 2004 1144 0161 3280 05

IS IT URGENT?

Yes, we only have until early May to save the Tuntenhaus through the right of first refusal.

EVERY DAY COUNTS!

 

 

Marxism in the 21st century

Speech at the Cambridge Union, 29th February 2024


09/04/2024

We need a radical change. In the 20th century 86 million people died in wars. The 21st century began with the war on Iraq and today we are witnessing a genocide in Gaza. Climate change poses an existential threat to life on earth. Climate scientists now talk of the Great Acceleration, and Runaway Climate Change, the destructive impact of which can no longer be predicted. A report commissioned by the Pentagon in 2019, Implications of Climate Change for the US Army, found that the critical infrastructure in the US, including the power grid and the military itself, might not withstand climate events predicted not in 100 years, or 50 years but in 20 years’ time. This is the age of catastrophe, and catastrophe creates monsters.

Antonion Gramsci first gave a name to the age of monsters. He died in a fascist jail 1937, aged 46 having spent the previous decade in prison, so he knew what monsters looked like. In the 1930s, they looked like Stalin, Mussolini, Franco and Hitler. Today’s monsters are waiting in the wings, waiting for their chance to seize on the hopelessness, despair and anger born out of inequality, insecurity and injustice. If the centre cannot hold, people will look either to the right or the left. We have born witness to the Holocaust and so we know what threat the far right represents, but what alternative can Marxism offer?

Marx often wrote that capitalism was like a vampire, growing more powerful by sucking the blood from living labourers. Marx himself has also risen repeatedly from the dead, declared dead and buried then resurrected. Every time there is an economic crisis, as there was in 2008-9, every time there is a mass insurgency against the system, such as the Arab Spring of 2011, Marx is revived by perplexed commentator who wonder whether he was right all along.

In essence Marxism is based on making visible the two great divisions, two antagonisms, that shape society. Firstly, capitalists, those who own and control the means of making wealth, are locked into competition with each other. Competition creates technological innovation and creates new markets to make more profits. This process takes place with no concern for the negative consequences for human life, or that planet. Competition between corporations and nation states increasingly spills over into the drive towards imperialism and an era of endless war.

The second great division is that between the capitalist class and the working class. The capitalists are driven to intensify exploitation, and this pulls more workers, especially women, into the global workforce. Working-class people have no choice but to organise collectively to resist attacks on their living conditions. This means that ingrained prejudices can be dissolved by the need for unity and the lack of confidence we all experience can be overcome by the process of organising together and realising our own power.

Of course, the world is very different now to the world Marx inhabited. The names of the rich have changed, their corporations have new names, the commodities that drive the world market are different, but the fundamental processes of competition and exploitation remain the same. Capitalism holds out a promise of development and innovation and simultaneously subordinates the potential of more productive technology to intensifying exploitation and inequality. As Marx observed in 1856, ‘On the one hand, there have started into life industrial and scientific forces, which no epoch of the former human history had ever suspected. On the other hand, there exist symptoms of decay, far surpassing the horrors recorded of the latter times of the Roman Empire. In our days, everything seems pregnant with its contrary: Machinery, gifted with the wonderful power of shortening and fructifying human labour, we behold starving and overworking it; The newfangled sources of wealth, by some strange, weird spell, are turned into sources of want; The victories of art seem bought by the loss of character. At the same pace that mankind masters nature, man seems to become enslaved to other men or to his own infamy… All our invention and progress seem to result in endowing material forces with intellectual life, and in stultifying human life into a material force’. Marx’s description could apply perfectly to the uses and abuses of AI today.

The commodities which we produce take on a life of their own. Markets appear to be like the weather, their vacillations the product of unknowable forces rather than investors and speculators. The institutions which are supposed to regulate and support our ways of life are experienced as hostile bureaucracies far beyond human control. This leads to what has been called Capitalist Realism, the difficulty of envisaging an alternative way of organising society. This generates apathy and cynicism. It seems easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. But as the great Sc-Fi writer Ursula LaGuin commented, ‘We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by human beings’.

We can understand why people despair and turn to scapegoating, to building walls, to blaming people born somewhere else for failing health and welfare provision. But what we cannot forgive is the pound shop Enoch Powells who ‘say the unsayable’ on all the multiple media platforms they access to point their fingers at desperate people fleeing in small boats while welcoming those who come in luxury yachts. Politicians who refuse to pledge the money for new hospitals and schools wage a phony war on ‘woke’ to deflect attention from their own failings. Today, one half of Tory Party members believe Islam is a threat to the British way of life. But it was not Muslims who crashed the economy, it was not refugees who murderously mismanaged COVID, it was not trans people who passed a budget so disastrous we are still paying for it. They are not responsible for the fact that today some 4.2 million children, and 48 percent of children from Black and ethnic minority backgrounds live in poverty, according to the Child Poverty Action Group.

We need hope, a confidence that things can change. The heart of the Marxism is the idea that the self-emancipation of the working-class is the act of the working-class. Parliament presents a nauseating spectacle of scapegoating, of the lurch towards authoritarianism and surveillance and a desperate scramble to save lucrative careers and pensions. We’ve heard a lot about ‘mobs’ on London’s streets. There is a mob in Britain, a mob seeking to undermine parliament democracy, but it thrives within parliament, with the lobbyists, the corrupt MPs, the revolving door between parliament and corporations. Keir Starmer seeks to blackmail us into voting for him with threats of a Tory revival, but thousands of people want and demand something better.

Behind parliamentary pantomimes there is a deeper problem. The real power in society cannot be tamed or controlled by parliament. The power lies with the huge multinationals that can take their money in and out of countries and use this to bully elected governments to do their bidding. It also lies with the state which is far beyond democratic control and serves the interests of the rich and powerful.

People will say that the system has fundamentally changed since Marx’s day. The names of the capitalists and their companies have changed, but the dynamics of the system remain the same. The richest 10 percent own 78 percent of the world’s wealth and produce an astonishing 48 percent of carbon emissions. Expropriating their wealth would be an effective and instantaneous route to tackling climate change. The richest man in the world is Bernard Arnault who is worth $211 billion. He does not make kidney machines, or water purifiers or vaccines – he makes clothes and cosmetics. Elon Musk is worth $180 billion, Jeff Bezos is worth $114 billion, Larry Ellison, a software developer, is worth $107 billion and Warren Buffett, an investor who has never actually created anything, is worth $106 billion. Their fortunes were not made by hard work, or by making the world better for anyone, but by gambling and the ruthless exploitation of others’ creativity. We still make their wealth, whether in textile factories, call centres, Amazon redistribution centres, car plants or cobalt mines.

The global working class is the collective class, a class that shares common interests across industries, regions and countries. It is the class that transforms itself as it transforms society. The working-class has demonstrated its capacity to organise society in a different way, through democratic planning of production and reshaping resources to meet human needs. Imagine how we could use Amazon distribution networks to support health care provision.

We have always had to organise and fight for our freedoms. From the Tolpuddle Martyrs to the Chartists and Suffragettes, the basic rights we enjoy today were never granted by benevolent leaders; they were fought for by people prepared to break the law to win change. In 1916, the great Polish socialist Rosa Luxemburg said that society faced a choice between socialism or barbarism. Barbarism is here but so is hope – in the Black Lives Matter movement, in the mass movement in solidarity with Gaza and in global resistance to inequality, injustice and climate change.