I felt the bomb very appropriate to this article.
What is the Stockholm syndrome you may ask? "Stockholm syndrome, psychological response wherein a captive begins to identify closely with his or her captors, as well as with their agenda and demands. The name of the syndrome is derived from a botched bank robbery in Stockholm, Sweden. In August 1973 four employees of Sveriges Kreditbank were held hostage in the bank's vault for six days." https://www.britannica.com/science/Stockholm-syndrome
Could you imagine 3 bombs - Yes 3 bombs being exploded in your country, yet no coverage via national media?
Instead they were discussing pronouns, and what a woman should be called, seriously, I am not making this up.
"One night last week, explosions took place in three different locations in and around Stockholm. There were no injuries this time, just the usual shattered windows, scattered debris and shocked people woken by the blast.
The police bomb squad was already on its way to the first explosion in the district of Vaxholm when it had to turn around and prioritise the detonation at a residential building in the more densely populated city centre. Residents whose doors had been deformed by the shock wave had to be rescued. The third target (seemingly unrelated) was a facility belonging to a Syriac Orthodox church, which had already been bombed twice in the past year.
‘Normalisation’ is a term that we have come to associate with domestic violence: the victim begins to think of abuse as a part of everyday life. Explosions have become so normalised in Sweden that SVT, Sweden’s equivalent of the BBC, did not even mention the three explosions in the country’s capital on its national news programme that evening. Instead, the main domestic story was the purported censorship of ‘big female bodies’ on Instagram. Apparently, we mustn’t be referred to as ‘women’ any more, but ‘female bodies’, lest anyone’s gender be assumed. The explosions were left to the local news.
To understand how Sweden arrived at this degree of normalisation, consider the statistics: between January and June this year, more than 100 explosions were reported in the country, up from about 70 in the same period last year. A total of more than 160 suspected attacks with explosives were reported last year. There are no comparable figures available for earlier years because it’s such a recent phenomenon. Until recently no one would have thought of adding a column on bombings to the national Swedish crime statistics.
Wilhelm Agrell, professor of intelligence analysis at Lund University, has warned that the situation has become so dire that the integrity of the Swedish state is in jeopardy. ‘The state’s monopoly on violence, the actual token of a sovereign government, has been hollowed out bit by bit and no longer exists,’ he wrote a few weeks ago. ‘The armed criminal violence is having effects that are increasingly similar to those of terrorism.’
A new report from the Swedish Defence University warns that clan structures in some immigrant areas are putting the Swedish justice system under ‘severe stress’. In these parallel societies, the Swedish state is weak, witness intimidation is systematic and ordinary citizens are pressured to submit to clan rule.
Sweden’s gangs, which mainly operate out of the country’s socioeconomically weak immigrant neighbourhoods, do not only use explosives to assert their dominance. Sweden had 45 fatal shootings in so-called criminal environments last year — a tenfold increase in one generation.
By contrast, Norway has fewer than three such shootings a year. According to the newspaper Dagens Nyheter, nine out of ten perpetrators of Sweden’s gang shootings are either first- or second-generation immigrants. The country has gone from having among the lowest rates of violent crime in western Europe to one of the highest. When it comes to bombings, no other developed country in the world which is not at war has experienced anything like Sweden’s epidemic.
At first, it was argued that these are just wars between gangs: awful, but avoidable if you just steer clear. But the bombings have now increased to such an extent that it’s impossible to ignore the collateral damage. The biggest blast so far, which took place in the university town of Linköping in June, demolished two residential buildings and damaged more than 250 apartments. A police spokesman called it a ‘miracle’ that no one was severely injured.
A bombing in the university town of Lund in September left a female student with severe facial injuries. She was passing by a shop on her way home after a night out when an explosive device detonated. Witnesses saw people jumping out of windows. Just weeks before, a young woman was murdered in an affluent neighbourhood in Malmö, in an attack which police believe was aimed at her boyfriend. Karolin Hakim, a doctor, was carrying her young child when she was gunned down. As she was lying on the ground, the shooter put a bullet in her head. Her baby is now in a government protection programme.
As inured as Sweden has become to gang violence, the country was shaken by this cold-blooded murder of a mother with a baby in her arms. Justice Minister Morgan Johansson declared on Twitter that the state would chase Ms Hakim’s killer ‘to the ends of the earth’. But gang violence has severely strained police resources. A month after the murder, more than a hundred witnesses are yet to be heard. So much for chasing anyone to the ends of the earth: there weren’t even enough police to knock on doors around Malmö.
Only days after the murder of Karolin Hakim, another young woman fell victim to the gang wars. Eighteen-year-old Ndella Jack was killed as someone fired an automatic weapon into her flat in western Stockholm, probably aiming for her husband, a well-known figure in Stockholm’s gang scene. Less than a week after the murder, associates of Ms Jack’s husband were lured to a middle-class suburb of Stockholm, where they had been promised information about her killer. Shots were fired, missing the targets and hitting instead a taxi driver and a resident in a nearby building. One victim, also a university student, lost his sight in an eye after it was hit by a bullet.
When to draw a line? The Swedish government — a coalition between Social Democrats and Greens with the support of the Left, Liberal and Centre parties — presented a long list of new policies this summer intended to curb gang violence. Its focus has clearly shifted to repressive measures, such as more effective laws to permit wire tappings, search warrants and CCTV surveillance. No one wants to be reminded of Sweden’s failed attempt at an ‘amnesty for explosives’ which was introduced at the end of last year, and which meant that those in possession of explosives could hand them in without facing prosecution. (Sweden’s police stations were plastered with posters warning citizens not to bring their explosives into just any police stations, only the designated ones.)
Three years ago, when the migration crisis was at its peak, Sweden started identity checks on the Oresund bridge with Denmark in the hope of stemming the influx of migrants. Now the Danes are starting to worry too. After two recent bombings in Copenhagen, both linked to gangs in the south of Sweden, the Danish government has declared that it will introduce checks at the border next month. Two Swedish nationals are being held in relation to a bombing outside the Danish tax agency.
It’s tough for everyone to come to terms with the new reality. Gang violence is intimately tied to the issue of immigration and failed integration, so those who highlight the problem have often been smeared as bigots. Only a few years ago Sweden’s leading daily, liberal Dagens Nyheter, came up with the phrase ‘safety deniers’, which it compared to looney climate deniers. The government has invested in a PR campaign for the ‘image of Sweden’ — but every grenade attack makes it trickier.
After a bombing in Malmö this summer which forced families with children to flee through their balconies, an eight-year-old girl was approached by the newspaper Sydsvenskan. ‘I don’t want it to be like this, I want it to be calm. I don’t want any bombs here,’ she said." https://www.spectator.co.uk/2019/10/bomb-attacks-are-now-a-normal-part-of-swedish-life/
Offering no opinion with regards to this, not my country and up to them if discussing what a woman is called is more important than bombs.
BUT do you see how slippery the liberal slope is yet?..............................
Self defeating at best!.
None is so blind as those who don't want to see. I just went over something similar on a couple other post in regards to Syria. They can look at it as warmongering or they can view it as a solution to all the hatred that has gone on for thousands of years over there. There's only one way to crave out a solution for the Kurds and all others not involved in terrorist activities seeking a homeland to settle in peacefully that they haven't been able to find forever. Those endeavors take resources, babysitters and a bit of tough love as Trump put it the other day. (the tough love part) There simply is no other answer, you can't teach those whose hearts are filled with hatred to love.
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This is a thing is it not, when they say the likes of Asad, Gadaffi, etc are dictators and inhumane, is there any consideration with regards to who and what they have to deal with, and suppress, when a religious fanatic values death by suicide bombing a honor, and the value of life is meaningless due to that.
As one of them said "we value death as much as you value life!".
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Sounds quite a bit like what Trump was addressing to the American people the other day when he told them something along the lines of "these are people whom you work alongside to help then to find they stabbed one of your son's or daughter's in the back" when addressing the outcry over Syria.
The shear brutality involved here is something that goes over many people's heads. Often over minute religious differences in doctrine. Something that use to escapes most as they are beyond the rationalization how some could behave in such a manner as it is normal for them to live in a larger extent in peace among each other without regard to beliefs held.
That all changed after Iraq by events that proceeded in the years afterward. Though it would be unfathomable to think that Bush wasn't aware of the many bees in that hornets nest everyday ordinary people weren't. Many were sold for eons (blinded by faith) this was simply based on the fact that the Muslim religion wasn't compatible with the Christian faith, thus most viewed is solely as religious prosecution of Christians. That ended up being the biggest understatement sold to mankind. This wasn't just an "us" against "them", this was them against each other, and in particular when they weren't focus on just us. To the extent it went on just blew people's minds for such a modern society.
For those who took the time to understand it better they were able to try and comprehend a broader perspective(s) on the issues involved.
These decisions made in unilateral force among nations may not have always been based on the profitability to be made by outside forces but the profitability that could be made by the inside forces and the cause and effects moving forth thereafter as it pertained to the safety and well being of society as a whole.
Once you can get to that point the term warmongering, though not totally taken out of the equation, it loses a lot of regard in that respect. In quite a few instances the word war can be dropped with mongering intent on meaning the overall well being of society.
In this new realm of reality unfortunately, though not surprising, rose the sympathetic effect. Whereas people in their good nature thought the answer lied with removing those in harms way with opening arms. They never stopped to think why it took a brutal dictator to keep them all in line and now they are finding out....albeit, the hard way.
This has led many to want to give the words brutal dictatorship a more enchanting undertone. A much more preferable, desirable affect than the one they currently find themselves in. That, mind you, would come as no surprise. Yet many does not equate to all therefore the quandary of it all still languish.
As such I think to mix up a bit of my own alphabet soup. It taste even better when a president thinks it taste pretty good also. When leader A says to leader B I've had enough of this bullshit, leader B knowing full well when leader A says he's tired of something he means it he then tells leader C sorry you couldn't keep leader D in line so see yeah, that's my kind of leader. Then when leader A checks leaders C & D I love it even more when leader B put leader A back into check. Everyone knowing their place and boundaries solves issues. It gets even better when leader B says to leader R you take that part and see what you can come of it and we'll take this part and see we can come of it and maybe...just maybe somewhere down the road this will work as so far nothing else has.
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Leaders are the problem, not the answer, they all answer to corporate profit desires. War is a racket and tax is theft, IMHO.
Oil whores the lot of them.
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Now they came out and said they got the other main ISIS leader makes me wonder if all hoopla in Syria with the Kurds wasn't somehow related to luring him out. Getting him on the run.
It is about the profits and who controls them....you can live under the rule of thumb of the likes of Russia, China or some of those mad ass hats in the Middle East but, as much as we may not like the way things are, they could be a whole lot worse.
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You never seen the photo of said supposed ISIS leader with the late Poli-tician Mccain? https://newspunch.com/john-mccain-caught-again-senator-photographed-with-isis-chief/
He was a paid puppet of the CIA as was Bin Laden, lies is all these people you vote for say!.
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Very slippery slope.
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Beyond a come back, what a shame for such a beautiful country.
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All of the power is with the criminals these days due to the amount of law Brough put to protect them. Unless you can prove it exactly in the right way they have a chance to get off. The resources aren't there to combat them and they aren't afraid of the law. Without consequences they will do what they want. It's the same here.
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Not sure where here is, though I can say the UK was heading the same way before I left many years ago.
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Ireland for me. Same problems in the UK as well.
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I am from Birmingham, seen it happening, watched the shit show first hand, so I moved to Thailand for a decade, then Spain, Spain is heading the same way, so tried Malta, same thing, and settled in Poland, disease free, no political correctness here, no self defeating nonsense, no pronouns, no made up genders, normality, mine at least restored, and better weather, and lower cost of living.
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