NOVOTEL HOTEL PRINCENALLE DIRECTLY OUTSIDE AMBULANCE TRIED TO RUN ME OVER ALL CLEANING STAFF WONDERING AROUND STATING BOTSHAFT.
An unofficial collaborator[1] or IM (German: [iˈʔɛm] (listen); both from German inoffizieller Mitarbeiter), or euphemistically informal collaborator (informeller Mitarbeiter), was an informant in the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) who delivered private information to the Ministry for State Security (MfS / Stasi). At the end of the East German government, there was a network of around 189,000 informants,[2] working at every level of society.
JEWISH HOLOCAUST NOW REFUGEE HOLOCAUST.
In written or oral statements collaborators committed themselves to working under cover with the MfS. They reported on all areas of society, infiltrated opposition groups and supplied even the most intimate information about their colleagues, friends or fellow pupils. They also played an active role in the State Security’s activities in the field of so-called “psychic demolition“.
The collaborators had many different motives, ranging from political conviction, a sense of duty or bloated self-importance – to a fear of reprisals. Some hoped for professional or material advantages. In the case of young collaborators it was often a longing for recognition or a sense of security that made them susceptible to recruitment by the MfS.
BEFORE THEY WERE DECLASSIFIED UNDER LEGISLATION in the early 2000s, the secret police files of Stasi informers (or Inoffizielle Mitarbeiter) employed by the domestic branch of the German secret police in the Ministry for State Security (Ministerium für Staatssicherheit) represented top-secret narratives that were never intended to become public documents. Once unmoored from these original contexts, the files have become a public good, used to tell stories about the communist past and individuals’ entanglement with authority. Security files are a rich archive about power and the secret life of power. Satellite surveillance targeted humans, along technology, to execute it, the Stasi archive is a powerful source of information about human lives— the secret lives of “enemies of the state” under surveillance as well as of those who performed the surveillance. To turn this information into stories, secret police files must first be made intelligible, and this involves acknowledging their narrative character. Germany faked human rights to brings humans to Germany to.
improve Germany reputation
kill for money
block internet
poison targets
use national and non national collaborators so racism cant be used.
money gained from using tactics from Hitler and Stasi Zersetzung no deportation as it costs money humans slaughtered to rebuild Germany.