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	<title>Too Far Afield &#187; Bundestag</title>
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		<title>Returned from oblivion (and a lot of politics)</title>
		<link>http://blog.nachtarbeiter.net/2009/05/27/returned-from-oblivion-and-a-lot-of-politics/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.nachtarbeiter.net/2009/05/27/returned-from-oblivion-and-a-lot-of-politics/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 May 2009 14:06:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Patrick</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bundestag]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[democracy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[life]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[milk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[supermarket]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Disclaimer: Skip this post, if you&#8217;re not interested in overly long and irrelevant personal and political posts. You&#8217;ve been warned. Back from another (mostly ambulant, but exhausting) CC15 cycle. Back to work. Back to real life ;). As usual, I&#8217;ll need a few days to clear up the backlog so bear with me please. First [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Disclaimer: Skip this post, if you&#8217;re not interested in overly long and irrelevant personal and political posts. You&#8217;ve been warned.</p>
<p>Back from another (mostly ambulant, but exhausting) <code>CC15</code> cycle.  Back to work. Back to real life ;). As usual, I&#8217;ll need a few days to clear up the backlog so bear with me please. First thing I did today was attending a public expert hearing of a parliament commission. The gatekeeper greeted me with friendly words: <cite>Watt ham&#8217; Sie denn jefrühstückt? Die Tür jeht uff, wenn ick dit saje un sons ja nich!</cite> (In English: <cite>What did <em>you</em> have for breakfast? The door will only open, when <em>I</em> say so!</cite>). I wont get into the details of this incident. Anyway, the correct answer would have been: Nothing. Just a few cups of coffee. Full <code>CC15</code> impact, actually. While I might still have been a bit dizzy and random, it was the first day for me in a while where I could do something useful again. However, her colleagues treated me better and eventually I became today&#8217;s <cite>guest #38</cite> of the Federal Parliament of Germany. I attended a few public hearings and commission meetings of our local Hamburg parliament. But this was nothing like it. At federal level, you have to go through a security check and trade your electronic passport for a parliament visitor pass. At our local city state parliament, you can walk in and out as you wish. And I remember times, when a commission meeting room was quite crowded, fellow interested citizens everywhere in the room &#8211; and even on the corridor in front of the meeting room. Although the outcome of a meeting might not always satisfy you and some processes could surely be improved upon, this feels very democratic. Not so at the federal level. Although a lot more people should be interested in the topics of those meetings (Hey, it&#8217;s federal policy after all, isn&#8217;t it?), there generally seem to be more delegates than interested fellow citizens at those meetings. While we talk of policy: After the meeting, I needed to buy a few things (mostly fair traded coffee and milk). Only to discover that the milk price decreased by 9 cent since my last visit to a supermarket a few weeks ago. And many products I used to buy were missing, due to the <cite lang="de">Netto-Umstellung</cite> (English: merger with another supermarket chain). E.g. there was no yoghurt and no corn flakes or muesli at all. Only butter milk. Lot&#8217;s of butter milk. Actually too much of it for my taste. I really liked the headline of <cite lang="de">Focus</cite>: <cite lang="de">Trotz Netto kaum Plus</cite>. Didn&#8217;t like the article that much, though ;). Also, for certain reasons  I&#8217;d rather not buy from <cite lang="de">Netto</cite>. And now <cite lang="de">Plus</cite> will be <cite lang="de">Netto</cite>. I guess I&#8217;ll need to find another supermarket soon. Life is so unfair&#8230; In many different ways. Doh!</p>
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