The German capacity to impose order
rivals that of the Borg. Many people don't notice it
because it's such a quietly pervasive part of German society. Spend
enough time with Germans or in Germany, though, and you'll start to see it
too.
There are little habits like the German
love for office supplies. Go to a classroom and nearly everyone has a
“Mäppchen“, which
is a little pocket that holds their traditional pencils, mechanical
pencils, ball-point pens, felt-tip pens, markers, ruler(s) and
highlighters. All usually in assorted colors.
Then there are some
very well hidden things, like the German legal system. This one took
me a long time to notice. I was sitting in a seminar and all of the
students seemed to be quoting legal statutes in their presentations,
and I thought “Why the hell is there a law for the establishment of
recreational small gardens or the amount of fertilizer you can apply
to a potato field?” But when I was making my presentation on patent
law in the US, all of the laws I found were vaguely worded, and I
ended up referencing dozens of court cases in my presentation to get
the point across. Then it dawned on me; Germany's legal system isn't
based on laws open to interpretation or hair-splitting court cases
like the US. They have a statutory legal system, and they codify
everything beforehand; there is no uncertainty. The US inherited a
common law legal system from Britain, so we have dozens of court
cases to determine exactly how a law applies in this and that
situation. Also the German legal system doesn't use wishy-washy,
imprecise juries. There is just a judge, and if need be, two lay
judges, but the lay judges are most certainly not your peers like the
jury would be in the US. This bit would be a bonus for me if I
immigrated, since I've already been called for jury duty twice in the
US!
But my favorite
daily example of German order, and, incidentally the topic of this
post, is the German apprenticeship system (Ausbildungssystem). The
German lower schooling system is a riddle wrapped in a mystery broken
into a jigsaw puzzle and cloaked in a conundrum, so I won't even
attempt to explain that in this post, but at the end of it all the
students have to choose a career, and heaven knows they can't just
get a job. They have to first go through one of Germany's 344 governmentally approved Ausbildungen (translated). When I first heard
about this system, I though it was fantastic, and admittedly I still
kind of do, but for different reasons.
The
Ausbildungssystem assures you as the consumer that not just anyone is
building your roads, painting your walls, or wiring your house. And
in the US we still have apprenticeships for professions like plumber,
electrician, barber, carpenter and so forth. It's a good system. I
don't want some guy whose “got a thing for electronics” wiring my
house, I want a professional. But Germany takes it to a whole new
level. If you looked through the list of approved apprenticeships,
some of them make perfect sense. They provide the German work force
with people trained to do very technical and specific jobs that any
industrialized society needs. Some of the jobs though, just seem like
the sort of joke a lawyer would hide in a contract to see if anyone
actually reads the fine print. There is the Biology Model Maker (this link is in German), the
Screed Layer (what the hell is screed?!), the Precision Optician (who
is different from the regular Optician...somehow), the Surface Coater, and the list goes on.
The point is, it
gets far too specific for my tastes, and some of the jobs seem like
they hardly need training. For instance the Ausbilding to become a
waiter takes three years! At Red Robin I got a week of training and
was thrown to the sharks. My first table was a birthday party of
handicapped tweens. I made two of them cry and one boy dislocated
another girl's wrist. It was a blood bath. More training would have
been nice, but three years is still ridiculous. On the upside, I
think the Germans who go through the apprenticeships have more pride
in their careers and tend to keep them longer, whereas many Americans
take a job and then switch when it no longer suits them.
Now, you might say
that this is just an example of out of control bureaucracy; just
because the apprenticeships exist doesn't mean the Germans actually
hire the people. I beg to differ. Another note on German culture is
that Do-It-Yourself does not exist here, not to the extent it does in
the US. When I was in language school in Radolfzell, my host mom's
son had his birthday party at our house, and they didn't grill or
potluck; their hired a butcher. I've been volunteering at a library
in town. They had to move buildings and instead of taking things
apart themselves, they hired a carpenter. A motion-controlled light
needed to be installed, they hired an electrician. My bathroom
ceiling molded over, they hired a painter and a sheetrocker.
It's not that the
Germans are lazy or incapable, not at all. It's just that the Germans
want things done right, and they value dependability. I guarantee, if
that motion-controlled light stops working, the electrician will be
there to fix it the next day. And the carpenter that was hired for
the move was, incidentally, the one who built all of the fixtures in
the first place 10 years ago. For me, the sense of fulfillment and
triumph I get when I build a futon or a desk is worth it, but for a
German it's better to know that that futon or desk is built properly, and that there is someone whose reputation you can depend on standing behind the desk.
I don't think I'll
ever be able to understand totally the German need for Ordnung, but
I'm getting closer. Though I still wonder what three years of
training would be like to become a waiter.
I used to play bass in a hardcore band called Red Robin Blood Bath.
ReplyDeleteHaha, This and our interview together may be sign from the universe that we're twins....just saying.
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