The Transformation of the Villa Adlon Owner into a Geneticist of the New Right Movement
In a rare interview, Mathilda Huss, a trailblazer of the shift to the right in Germany and co-owner of the historic Adlon estate, has broken her silence about a controversial meeting that took place at her estate and the subsequent Correctiv scandal.
The meeting, which took place at the Landhaus Adlon, was supposedly a gathering to discuss financing alternative media projects and finding sponsors for them. However, it was the subject of a report by investigative journalism platform Correctiv, which painted a different picture.
According to the report, the meeting was attended by identitarian activist Martin Sellner and dentist Gernot Mörig, who allegedly presented a "Master Plan for Remigration." The report also claimed that AfD politician Maximilian Krah was present, although he was not mentioned in the Correctiv report.
However, Huss denies these allegations, stating that she participated in the meeting but didn't invite the guests or know the guest list. She also acknowledges Jean Peters, performance artist and journalist at Correctiv, as one of the hotel guests who was lurking around the rooms but wasn't an invited participant.
Huss further states that she sent Peters away several times during the meeting. Correctiv has since admitted through a lawyer that a "deliberate approach" was only discernible in Sellner and Mörig.
Huss is disappointed with Krah, not just about the end of their affair, but also about a missed opportunity. She reveals that Krah's new idea for the AfD is to abandon the concept of "Remigration" and instead propose separate worlds based on origin, side by side but not together, with no state control.
Huss, who considers Germany to be over-foreignized and believes in returns of migrants from Germany and strict border closures, finds the surveillance and restricted internet access in China horrifying. She believes in the concept of "Subsidiarity," where people from different cultures should live in self-governed units, in communities.
The estate was back in the media spotlight a year and a half ago, at the center of the Correctiv Scandal. The outcry from the scandal was significant, with Nancy Faeser, then Interior Minister, speaking of a new Wannsee Conference.
Huss, who considers herself a mix genetically with influences from North and South Germany, wants to talk about the meeting, the Correctiv article that damaged the reputation of her house, and the threats to her family. She also mentions her friendship with Hans-Georg Maaßen, the former head of the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution.
Huss's core sentence is: "We make politics based on a completely false image of humans." She also speaks of grand weddings that used to take place at the estate, and mentions singers and models who came for a weekend. However, she laughs bitterly and states that there are fewer such weddings these days.
In her 1200-page manuscript, Huss plans to publish only 200 pages, detailing her political ideas, which are based on findings in genetics. She mentions scientists like William Happer, Richard Lindzen, and Emil Kirkegaard as those she exchanges views with on controversial topics.
Wilhelm Wilderink, Huss's former partner, is annoyed by the reporting and accuses Correctiv of sensationalizing an event that was "constitutional." He and Huss still live together in a villa next door, ten years after their separation.
- Mathilda Huss, a key figure in the shift to the right in Germany, has revealed her political ideas in a 1200-page manuscript, drawing inspiration from scientists like William Happer, Richard Lindzen, and Emil Kirkegaard.
- Despite her controversial past and the Correctiv scandal, Huss's historic Adlon estate has been a venue for grand weddings, hosting singers, models, and other high-profile guests for weekend events.
- Huss finds the surveillance and restricted internet access in China horrifying and advocates for the concept of "Subsidiarity," where people from different cultures should live in self-governed units, in communities.
- In the realm of finance, Huss notes that the meeting at the Landhaus Adlon was initially intended to discuss financing alternative media projects and finding sponsors for them.
- The field of science and medical-conditions may have influenced Huss's political opinions, as she bases her ideas on findings in genetics.
- The world of entertainment and general news was rocked by the Correctiv Scandal, which centered on a meeting at the Adlon estate and the subsequent controversies surrounding identitarian activist Martin Sellner, dentist Gernot Mörig, and AfD politician Maximilian Krah.