What ever happend to the swedish goverment

Since the new Swedish government came in position, I expected some new, intriguing ideas on how to reform the Swedish society, or at least, some ideas about the future. What have they done, as far as I know, absolutely nothing. No new ideas, no visions about the future, just some small differences from the former social democratic government. How about that?? I’m very disappointed and Mr Reinfeldt is non-existing… I haven’t got a clue what he want to do, and when… And in that department, he kinda’ reminds me about the Norwegian prime minister, Mr Stoltenberg…

New at work

I have begun at a new place, in Sweden this time, and will tell you more in a short while. So far, the days isn’t long enuff’ to take care of the family and beginning a new career and writing on my blog – but hopefully the time will come shortly! Enjoy spring so far.
Ooh, almost forgot, played golf with my friends last weekend, we won – and it was, again, a fantastic weekend at this place. I highly recommend it!

The massacre at Viginia Tech

Again, an epic killing spree has been committed again, this time in Blacksburg Virginia. A man who methodically shot and killed at least 30 people on the campus of Virginia Tech, and the whole world reel in the wake of the deadliest shooting in U.S. history.
So far, there are so many questions but very few answers. I hope that this terror act, ’cause that what it is, at least does something with the American gun laws. One of the candidates trying to get the nomination for republican party does the opposite, John McCain says: “I do believe in the constitutional right that everyone has, in the Second Amendment to the Constitution, to carry a weapon”. I cannot understand how a person could support this, when so many deaths has occurred in the last 10 or-so years, shooting people at random. Ban guns now!

Fly Nordic – how to handle customers – terrible!

“The objective for FlyNordic is to become the leading lowcost and low fare airline in Northern Europe” they say on their website! How do they handle their customers, well – this example show you how!
In February I was standing at Arlanda airport in Stockholm on my way to Oslo, when the flight was canceled due to technical difficulties they said. They could offer me a ticket for the next flight, but it was 8 hours later. I said I couldn’t do it, because I had meetings to attend to and had to go to Oslo as soon as possible. I jumped on a SAS-flight and landed ok.
When I later that day called back and told them that I wanted to have a refund for the extra SAS ticket I had to buy, they refused saying “that their policies didn’t include booking fees on other companies”.
I the filed a complaint to Allmänna Reklamationsnämnden (The National Board for Consumer Complaints) and in a decision I was told I had the right on my side, showing to a paragraph in the Montreal Convention, articel 19 and EU standards 2027/97.
What do you think have happened? Absolutely nothing!! They don’t answer my phone calls and they don’t reply my mails! Customer service… well, judge for yourself!

Oh, almost forgot, a month ago it happend again, cancelled the flight due to technical difficulties.. I’m starting to wonder about the security and what the heck is going on with FlyNordic – Finnair (as their owner) couldn’t be to happy!

Predictions on Major League Baseball

Since everybody is having a lot of ideas of who’s winning who, so here is my idea:

AL East:
Yankees,

AL Central:
Twins

AL West:
Athletics

AL Wild Card:
Tigers

NL East:
Mets

NL Central:
Brewers

NL West:
Dodgers

NL Wild Card:
Diamondbacks

AL Champion:
Twins over Athletics

NL Champion:
Dodgers over Diamondbacks

World Series:
Dodgers over Twins

AL MVP:
Alex Rodriguez, Yankees

AL Cy Young:
Rich Harden, A’s

NL MVP:
Miguel Cabrera, Marlins

NL Cy Young:
Ben Sheets, Brewers

INLAND IMPIRE

I know I know, capital letters is shouting – but Mr David Lynch insists to write the title that you. For the ones of you who doesn’t know – INLAND EMPIRE is the new film by my favourite director! And since the reviews is diverted, as always, I’m really looking forward to it. The italian trailer from the Venice Film Fesival is really cool, have a peak. Premiere here in Scandinavia during spring.
Oh, what’s it all about, well, hard to say – but it does seem to have some similarities with Hollywood, film productions, hallucinations and rabbits – classic Lynch in other words!
Looking forward to it!

A different kind of monopoly

Last week, Mullsjö Community in Sweden, wanna’ try the idea of outsourcing all public schools, from kindergarten to high schools, to a private company.
Of course, this demands a new way of looking at the law which in Sweden makes all communities to have a public school offer. The reason for doing this is regarding to the City Council Chairman Stefan Lindkvist, the lack of public funding. In another words, they wanna’ save money.
To me it’s a mystery that you even could go public with such a stupid idea – why change it from one monopoly to another? How you you be sure of the quality for the kids? At least, but certainly not last, why cutting down on our future? If we don’t give our kids the best opportunities, public or private, we should have the choice of both – what could we expect for the future?

The decline of Marit Bjørgen

Too me, watching her go in the first day of the World Skiing Championships in Sapporo, Japan was in a way a step forward. But, and it’s a big one, I kinda’ have the feeling that she, unfortunately, is done!
The worlds best male skier a couple of years ago, Per Olofsson of Sweden, there are too many similarities to just be a coincidence. Both highly respected for their enormous talent and professional attitude, and then, when trying to archive even more medals and success, everything stopped.
I don’t know how many press conferences I have seen the last couple of years of Ms Bjørgen, when the answer has been the same; “I don’t know whats wrong with the body, I feel fine”, and you can really see the pain and disappointment in her eyes. It’s an echo of Olofsson.

The reason; well I don’t know, but I assume too much hard training with no one telling her to do things differently.

Sad ending for a fantastic skier!

The best rock’n roll bands ever

I came across some good music recently and I thought, what the heck’, who are the best bands in rock’n roll history. I mean, when even thinking a diagnostic peril as “the 20 best rock bands ever,” one can either cower in anticipation of the monsoon of disagreement sure to come and load the package with every manner of weaselly equivocation, or one can swagger ahead blissfully secure in the universal righteousness of one’s judgment. Being Norwegian, I choose the latter…

Awright; here we go

  • 1. Motorhead
  • 2. the Clash
  • 3. Siouxsie and the Banshees
  • 4. Depeche Mode
  • 5. Kinks
  • 6. Ramones
  • 7. Iggy & The Stooges
  • 8. Sex Pistols
  • 9. Wilmer X
  • 10. Roxy Music
  • 11. Primus
  • 12. AC DC
  • 13. Sigur Rós
  • 14. Beatles
  • 15. Metallica
  • 16. Jesus And The Mary Chain
  • 17. Kraftwerk
  • 18. the Jam
  • 19. the Sonics
  • 20. Black Sabbath
  • Dixie Chicks slams the Grammies

    The best album of 2006, “Taking the Long Way” – with the brilliant lyrics in “Not ready to make nice” (Most country radio stations have shown little interest in playing the Chicks’ music since March 10, 2003, when Natalie Maines told an audience in London that she was ashamed that President Bush is from Texas) last night won five Grammies! Best album, best record and song of the year, both “Not ready to make nice”, best country album and vocal performance, what a great comeback!
    Brilliant music!
    Dixie Chicks

    Anna Nicole Smith

    I knew it — after having watched the marauding media pirates of cable news cruise the high-seas of Anna Nicole Smith’s death last night, I should have avoided this morning’s newspaper coverage. But, smack-dab on the front page of the San Francisco Chronicle was a tribute to Smith with this sub-head: “To many women her age, it’s like losing a girlfriend.” Huh? What?

    All too generously, I thought: “Perhaps I’m just totally out of touch with the psyche of your average woman in her thirties.” But, the entire piece quotes — count ’em — two women, neither of whom seem to have any feelings of sisterhood toward Smith. One of the women guiltily admits that she has a better recollection of when Smith wed 89-year-old oil tycoon Howard Marshall II than high school calculus. The other actually says, “I don’t even know that much about her.”

    Yet, curiously, author C.W. Nevius declares: “Text messages flew among the thirtysomethings, and girlfriends called each other to ask if they’d heard the news. While men tended to wonder what the surprise was — hadn’t she been on a one-way trip to oblivion for years? — women seemed to regard her as that tragic girlfriend they all knew.” He later projects, “When her 20-year-old son, Daniel, died unexpectedly in September, just three days after the birth of her daughter, women found it sad and tragic.” I apologize in advance for this obvious and unavoidable retort, but “sad and tragic” is attributing to the opposite gender a shared experience across an entire generation without any substantiation.

    With that out of the way, on to another surprise — this one fairly pleasant — in the reporting on Smith’s death. Preferable, at least, to an interview with a long-lost relative or kinda-sorta friend — Smith was compared in today’s Washington Post to the courtesans immortalized in the work of Caravaggio and Proust. As opposed to a slab of scandal served up raw, Philip Kennicott’s article swings toward the opposite pole of overcooked philosophizing. But, he makes an interesting argument: “poor Anna” was hated because she was “a living reminder of an economy of sexual exchange that we like to pretend doesn’t exist.”

    When that sexual economy is laid plain, making marriage appear — at varying levels — an institution of commerce and convenience, “intimacy is shadowed with doubt.” Smith tapped into male insecurity, Kennicott argues, by, it seemed to most, marrying for money (big, big money). “For centuries, there have been men who have wondered why women really love them,” he writes. “That the real sexual allure of men may not be their good looks, their masculinity or their charm, but rather their power and position, can make men wonder whether they are loved for themselves or for something external and unrelated.” That fear inspired innumerous Anna Nicole cracks on late-night talk shows, Kennicott says. “[T]hey were laughing at her, of course, but also at men who were foolish enough to marry women like her,” he writes.

    Kennicott mentions the idea of marriage as an institution addressing women’s need for safety and men’s for opportunity and hints that Smith faced scorn as a result of more than just male insecurity. He safely distances himself from this essentialist concept of male-female relations by terming it the thinking in “conservative quarters.” Using Newt Gingrich’s charming comparison of men to “little piglets,” he suggests that “the woman who is hard-nosed in her pursuit of the biggest little piglet she can find becomes an object of scorn.” The implication is that Smith was sneered at because she made both men and women aware of their underlying biological drive, which is at odds with their preferred vision of self.

    There’s extreme cultural anxiety over women who traffic in sex, period — whether they’re prostitutes, strippers, trophy wives or gold diggers. Part of that anxiety is driven by the ease with which intimacy and attraction can be feigned, sure. But there’s also an anxiety that stretches clear across the gender divide. What about women who choose against selling their sexual goods — whether for instant riches or a career? They might harbor a certain level of resentment or jealousy toward a woman who does. As much as some men may feel anxiety about their ability to attract women without the allures of money or power, women can also feel anxiety about their ability to achieve [fill in the blank] without employing their sexual wiles.

    File this under sad but true: it seems watching someone like Smith self-destruct on the public stage is akin to a shot of Novocain to the overly-anxious ego

    President Mbeki and the situation in South Africa

    So many years later, when ANC was voted in a a democratic election, there are so many things pointing the wrong way in South Africa. Since President Mbeki came to power, what have he done?
    Even in yesterdays public address to the nation, he refused to mention the most critical things – the relation with Zimbabwe, the AIDS problem, WTO-discussions, the lack of doing something with crime, the growing unemployment situation and so on.

    Much more needs to be done, there are about 11 million poor South Africans — about a quarter of the population — still depend on social grants, and 8 million people are without drinking water, after 13 years of multiparty democracy.

    South Africa has one of the worst violent crime rates in the world — 50 people a day are murdered. In response to that, it’s officially said said the government would try to boost cooperation between the police and the massive private security sector.

    The government wants to increase the number of police officers to 180,000 — up from 152,000 — within the next three years, he said.

    Mbeki — scheduled to stand down in 2009 — devoted just one paragraph of his 18-page speech to the burning issue of HIV/AIDS, saying the government would intensify the campaign against the pandemic and improve treatment, prevention and care.

    It doesn’t look to good – and I’m afraid that the struggle for democracy in Africa yet again will suffer a drawback, a new dictatorship will occur in five years is my prediction.

    Work at home or work at work, or…

    I visited a big conference today and there were all these presentations about the opportunities about working at home, all the possibilities we have about being mobile, recive the information any time, at any place and so forth.
    In my opinion it’s not a matter of efficiency, it’s all a matter of letting your work time take over your free time. So far, I haven’t noticed anybody talking about accessing information at any time, at any cost during your work hours. If I had an urgent need of reading a book which I read the night before, do I let this interrupt me at work? No, I certainly don’t. I have to wait. If I get a mail through my mobile phone when I’m reading my book a night, or when I’m done putting the kids to bed a night, do I read it and use time to read it? Yes, I do. Why, it’s it expectations or is it just me? I really don’t know, but I really would like someone to pick up the discussion, it’s not about ‘integrating time’, it’s working time taking over our spare time.

    About the stam cell proposal and cloning

    This discussion which kinda’ reach a peak last week in Norwegian media, and of course, thanks to the proposal from the government, does nothing else than demonstrates our irrational fear of the unknown, not the vagaries of science.

    To my big surprise, Høyre, as the leading opposition party are very reluctant in this matter and I feel their argumentation is very thin, and again, based on the fear of the unknown.
    Inge Lønning, representing Høyre, said the the new proposal is crossing the borders – the “violation of life” and rights for the unborn babies.

    Almost everyone who can would still choose to have children the old-fashioned way. At the moment, sperm banks offer far more in the way of eugenic possibilities — and, interestingly enough, few people with other options seek out the sperm of Nobel Prize winners or other supposedly genetically superior donors, available though it is. It seems that most of us would like to perpetuate in our children the characteristics of our families and the partners we love, not the absolute best genes we can find. Eugenics looks a lot more like an uphill battle than a slippery slope.

    Banning a practice is a last resort, not the first. Some people might feel abhorrence at the prospect of being cloned, but why does this give them the right to prevent those who seek the procedure? You or I might find plastic surgery unpalatable, but does that mean we should ban it? The human right to reproduce and form families transcends the right of society to regulate science. This is, of course, an opinion, but it is in the spirit of the conservatism that many cloning opponents purport to represent.

    History has shown that scientific advances often have unanticipated positive, as well as negative, outcomes. It is tough to predict just how a technology will eventually be used. No one expected the Internet, for instance, to become accessible to most households. No one expected laser eye surgery to become a mass-market outpatient procedure. Animal cloning is already being investigated for a fascinating new use: bringing endangered species back from the edge of extinction.

    Cloning would likely be the choice of just a tiny minority of individuals seeking to reproduce, but as long as it is a possibility, it is unlikely that a ban will keep some researchers from attempting it. To paraphrase the gun lobby bumper sticker, if cloning is outlawed, only outlaws will have clones. Currently, human reproduction cloning is prohibited only in Australia, Britain, Germany, Italy and Japan. But if the move to ban cloning worldwide gains momentum, as suggested by the United Nations’ 2001 non binding resolution, the research will move to less regulated, typically less advanced settings where the likelihood of medical misadventure is much greater. Only fringe groups with little to lose would pursue cloning, since no responsible scientist would risk his or her career to defy the ban. So we can assume that the work will be done by unqualified scientific dabblers, which is not what we want.

    Instead of banning cloning, we should be gathering the best scientific minds to decide how to properly regulate it. This would probably involve an emphasis on research to improve the survival rate of implanted cloned embryos in animals before attempting human pregnancies. We should also take a clearer look at the philosophical place clones would occupy in our society.

    Throughout the history of Western philosophy, human identity has been located in the possession of a unique consciousness and memory, not in unique physiognomy. Your clone would not have the same experiences as you, and so neither the same memories nor the same identity. This is not a question of nature versus nurture, but of epistemology. This is why we view identical twins as separate individuals. This is why doing plastic surgery on someone to make him identical to another person would still result in two different people. (Films have often been the place where these issues have been most imaginatively explored — think about “Blade Runner” and “Face Off.”)

    Somehow we have allowed our panic over cloning — or is it our fear of unconventional families and relationships created by “will”? — to obscure the fact that human cloning would also represent one of the most important moments in human history. The moment when the first human clone is born would be historically, and somewhat ominously for our clones, on a plane with the first encounters of Europeans with native Americans. And the judgment of history will be upon us for the way we treat them. If we are destined, as scientists say, to find clones in our midst, will the same fears and prejudices that cause us to reject the technology move us to reject the children who come of it? The real challenge posed by cloning may be to our most basic ability of all, the ability to accept and love others — and their otherness.