Filter
Exclude
Time range
-
Near
ぬまっち retweeted
🚨AMAZING! Swedish Beatrice Timgren TEARS into Ursula's EU Migration Pact. "My daughter will NOT grow up in a Europe that is shaped by Islamic values." Sweden has had the Worst Migration in Europe! 🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪
19
295
1,338
11,618
🌈doctor captain c(ass)idy 🫡 retweeted
we talk about eddie bangers of all time but i don't see anyone talking about how "i could help you with the swedish half" is definitely top three
7
86
792
Motivationnya itu lebih ke jawab soal dari web Swedish Institute nya ya guys. Tiap tahun juga katanya beda2 pertanyaannya. Terus dokumen juga bisa berubah ya tergantung kampus tujuan kalian. Kaya misal, arsitektur tuh ada yg minta portofolio sama motivation buat kampusnya, dll
1
1. Swedish Institute Ini beasiswa dari pemerintah Swedia. Sekali daftar, bakal dipertimbangkan buat 2 beasiswa: SISGP dan PWS. Bedanya apa? SISGP: bisa buat semua gender, bisa hampir semua rumpun PWS: Khusus perempuan, khusus jurusan STEM Lanjut di tweet selanjutnya
1
1
fartsniffer retweeted
swedish genes in jeans
34
76
4,246
53,985
SlayersMight retweeted
Long live the Swedish King and Queen 🇸🇪
17
80
1,163
23,574
Tracy Moore retweeted
And so it begins. Swedish media is now calling for a ban on X. All because they are losing control of the narrative. This is where their lies are exposed.
487
8,522
50,167
374,337
Montana Adams retweeted
Swedish man: "My son has been robbed three times. Twice by Somalis, once by Arabs. He is 19 years old and marked for life. He doesn't dare go out alone. Sweden had to lower the criminal lavalder to 13 years due to migrant violence and organized crime. Norway needs to follow suit. We need to close the borders from these countries that are so overrepresented on all the wrong statistics. We need to do this before it is too late.
17
244
980
10,129
Munteanu Daniel retweeted
❗️The Swedish Air Force twice, within a few minutes of each other, scrambled JAS 39 Gripen fighters to intercept Russian Su-24 and Su-34 combat aircraft in the southern and northern parts of the Baltic Sea.
4
38
281
7,675
Replying to @JOBhakdi
You’re fucking Swedish. Sit the fuck down
ARB retweeted
The Swedish government told her she owed 102% of her income in taxes. She was 68 years old, a children's book author, and held no political power. Yet, by writing a simple fairy tale, she helped topple a government that had ruled for 44 years. Stockholm, 1976. Astrid Lindgren opened her mail to find a tax assessment that defied logic. As Sweden’s most beloved author and the creator of Pippi Longstocking, her books had taught generations of children about courage, independence, and standing up to bullies. Now, she had to face a broken system of her own. She read the document carefully, did the math, and realized the truth: due to a quirk in the law that combined regular income tax with self-employment fees, her marginal tax rate had hit 102%. It was not a typo, nor was it a rounding error. One hundred and two percent. If she paid what they demanded on her extra earnings, she would owe more than she actually made. She would literally go into debt for the privilege of working. At 68 years old, she could have hired expensive accountants to quietly find loopholes and protect her wealth. She could have done what many powerful people do when systems overreach—safeguard her own position and leave everyone else to figure it out alone. Instead, she picked up her pen. In March 1976, she published a satirical fairy tale in Expressen, a major Stockholm newspaper. It was called "Pomperipossa in Monismania" (Pomperipossa in Money-mania). It told the story of a successful author who loved her country and worked hard, only to discover a tax system designed to punish honesty and success. The story was witty, precise, and impossible to misread. Pomperipossa was Astrid; Monismania was Sweden. The ruling Social Democratic Party—which had governed Sweden for over forty consecutive years—was furious. Prime Minister Olof Palme went on the defensive, dismissively claiming in public that Lindgren was a wonderful storyteller but a terrible mathematician. Astrid didn't back down. She stood by her numbers, and soon enough, the Ministry of Finance was forced to admit that her math was completely correct. She began appearing on television and speaking out publicly, pointing out—with the calm, steady patience of someone used to explaining things to people who aren't listening—that a tax system taking more than 100% of a person's earnings wasn't progressive. It was absurd. That September, Sweden held its national elections. For the first time in forty-four years, the Social Democratic Party lost power. While political analysts pointed to several contributing factors, like economic stagnation and inflation, everyone acknowledged that Astrid Lindgren’s tax revolt had fundamentally shifted the national conversation. She had made it safe to question a system that once seemed untouchable, giving a voice to frustrations millions of people felt but hadn't known how to articulate. The new coalition government reformed the tax code, cutting the most extreme rates, and Astrid quietly went back to writing children's books. But she never stopped paying attention. In the 1980s, when Sweden debated a new animal protection bill, she noticed loopholes that would still allow for cruel factory farming practices. She wrote articles, lobbied politicians, and testified before Parliament well into her eighties. In 1988, Sweden passed some of the strongest animal welfare laws in the world. It was widely nicknamed "Lex Lindgren" (Lindgren's Law) because everyone knew she was the driving force behind it. Astrid Lindgren passed away in January 2002 at the age of ninety-four. Sweden honored her with a state funeral attended by the Royal Family and the prime minister, while thousands lined the streets of Stockholm. But her true legacy lives on far outside of official ceremonies. Every child in Sweden still reads her books, every debate about fair taxation still references Pomperipossa, and animal welfare advocates across Europe still look to Lex Lindgren as proof of what is possible. She never ran for office, nor did she ever build a formal political movement. She had no credentials in economics or public policy—just an extraordinary gift for storytelling. But she had spent decades writing about Pippi Longstocking, a girl who refused to follow rules that didn't make sense, stood up to bullies, and never shrank herself to make others comfortable. Astrid Lindgren simply chose to live her life exactly like the hero she created. When authorities insisted that nonsense made sense, she refused to pretend along with them. And because she spoke up, the world listened.
2
21
465
I’ve now visited a Swedish candy store in LA and Newport Beach that have the exact same model of self-serve Swedish candy staffed entirely by high school girls
8
Replying to @PaulGoldEagle
The Swedish looking blokes? Nice
1