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Volkswagen just announced it's closing three factories in Germany for the first time in its 87-year history (including two world wars), BASF—the world's largest chemical company—is permanently shuttering plants and moving production to China, and Siemens, Bosch, and ThyssenKrupp are cutting thousands of jobs as German industrial production has fallen 11.2% year-over-year with nine consecutive months of decline—this isn't recession, this is deindustrialization. The cause: German electricity costs €0.25/kWh versus €0.08 in the US and €0.10 in China after Germany's catastrophic decision to shut down nuclear power while becoming dependent on Russian gas that no longer flows, making energy-intensive industries (chemicals, steel, automotive) economically unviable and forcing them to relocate or die. Manufacturing capacity utilization has crashed to 78%, exports fell 8.3%, orders down 14.7%, business confidence at multi-decade lows, and projections show unemployment rising from 6.1% to 9%+ by 2027 as 8 million direct manufacturing jobs and 12 million indirect supply chain jobs disappear—Germany's middle class is being hollowed out exactly like America's Rust Belt and Britain's industrial collapse. Yet there's a conspiracy of silence: German media follows government line, European media won't discuss it because Germany's collapse threatens the entire EU project, politicians can't admit their green energy transition as implemented was economically catastrophic, and corporations announce "restructuring" not "collapse"—but reality doesn't care about narrative management as factories close regardless. Germany represents 25% of eurozone GDP, finances European trade surpluses, funds EU institutions, and backs the euro's credibility—when Germany collapses, Europe collapses with it, and the economic engine that held the continent together for 30 years is breaking down while almost nobody talks about it.