this post was submitted on 07 Mar 2026
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The German government officially does. I'm pretty sure they have a pretty realistic picture of what they're really dealing with, even though they won't say that out loud. And yes, of course there's plenty of things wrong with US democracy (and German democracy for that matter) but you should always make clear what you're talking about specifically.
It’s not my post, but the US is broadly considered a democracy by today’s standards when it absolutely shouldn’t be. Not even only governments, the amount of Schadenfreude I hear about Americans who are “getting what they voted for” is wild.
I only mentioned felony disenfranchisement, because it’s simple and I didn’t want to write a book, but there are a lot of ways in which the system disenfranchises poor, non white, queer, urban, and disabled voters.
German democracy isn’t perfect, but I got a special letter for service and medical industry employees about how to vote because I work at a Sonntagsbäckerei and they wanted to make sure it wouldn’t pass me by. It’s a college town with a teaching hospital, so medical and service industry employees are probably 25% of the town, so I guess it makes sense.
Then, my bakery closed early on Election Day! That’s obviously a private company, but it’s a huge contrast to the restaurant I used to work at in the US, where my old boss didn’t let me switch shifts for Election Day to coordinate with my university schedule because it was only a local election, and I was “too young to care about the school board.” Also a private company, but I complained and tried to raise a fuss, but got nowhere. If I made a credible accusation of voter suppression in Germany, every experience I’ve had here suggests they’d at least investigate it.
Thank you for your service.
I get paid 1,75x the rate and a much better percentage of people tip and/or are super nice on Sundays (a bunch of regulars also pay in bills and 1/2€ coins everywhere all week, then pay on Sundays by dumping out their change purses and leaving the rest as a tip. Unless they’ve gotten annoyed at pushback in the past, I always check that they’re sure after I count it, because it’s often a lot of money), so it’s almost worth it, lol. I used to like it a lot, because I’m accustomed to working Sundays and holidays in the US service industry and people were much more appreciative. Now that I’m teaching German M-F, I cherish having a Ruhetag a lot more.
Luckily, I’ve got the whole weekend off right now after working 9-21:30 yesterday and my husband is going shopping after his shift at a grocery store, so I’m going to relax today and draft a test for the first time tomorrow :)