[He/Him]

Software developer by day, insomniac by night. Send me pictures of baby bats to make my day.

  • 0 Posts
  • 114 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: March 20th, 2025

help-circle
  • Yeah. It’s the one thing I find the most exhausting about how democracy works. It requires an ongoing participation, and our society is sadly structured in a manner where that isn’t easily done for everyone, and as such not everyone gets proper representation.

    It’s further hampered by the fact that individuals and other institutions with financial means can employ people to do political work for them. This just isn’t feasible for individuals, many of us don’t have much money to spare, and we’re fully occupied between our professional, and our personal lives.

    So once participation in democracy starts slipping, when workers are unable to attend, our rights start getting eroded.

    This isn’t exactly helped by media, social and otherwise. We live in an attention economy where explosive headlines and bold attention-grabbing statements win out. We don’t get accurate representations of reality, and thus the decisions we make are based on whatever lies we’ve adopted to become our worldview.

    The only real solution I see to this is to empower people to have the ability to partake in unions and cultivate a political interest. Otherwise we’ll just be ruled by the oligarchs and we’ll return to a more or less feudal state of things.

    I’m trying really hard to engage politically in my area, but honestly the only party that seems to put themselves out there is the nazi party, so I’m hardly surprised that they’ve been garnering a lot of followers for the past decade.


  • I’d like to provide some further context. This wasn’t always the case here in Sweden, obviously.

    A big shift in our society happened because of the massacre in Ådalen.

    This was in the 1930s, during the great depression. People didn’t have jobs, particularly in Ådalen where the unemployment rate was around 85-90%. People were starving. So they worked together, they demonstrated, and the worker parties gained significant support.

    The powers that be didn’t like this, naturally. They tried to put a lid on the events, and called in the military. To cut a long story short, the military opened fire and several bystanders were killed. It led to nation-wide demonstrations, and the Social Democrats gained significant following, leading to them being the majority government for decades afterwards. We saw social and worker reforms, and is largely the reason Sweden is held in such high regard internationally.

    Things don’t really last however. Private interests are trying to dismantle the system we have here, because it gives workers too much bargaining power. IF Metall has been striking against Tesla for coming up on three years at this point. Tesla has their supporters, because obviously they do. People don’t get that the reason for the strike isn’t because Tesla’s workers necessarily have it bad, but because Tesla is trying to undermine the system we have here, and set a precedent for others to do the same.

    In e.g. the U.S., employers have significant power over workers. Some states have at-will employment, where either an employer or a worker can just walk out on the contract whenever. This is only ever to the worker’s benefit when the market is looking for workers; I can’t recall a time in my lifetime where this has been the case. They dangle people’s livelihoods and through things like healthcare, their very lives, to enslave workers.

    We are headed down the same path, with well over a decade of right-wing rhetoric, privatisation, and budgets eroding our systems.

    It’s election year this year, and I really wish people would remember where we were a hundred years ago.


  • Yes, this is public information. You can go to the Swedish tax agency and ask for an excerpt. There are also information brokers who make it their business to collate private information that’s available publicly and publish it for a fee.

    These companies have been a bit of a thorn in our side because that’s not exactly how the system was intended, and it’s made it a lot easier for e.g. stalkers to find information on you. Information like where you live, your income, your social ID number, birthdate, size of your home, if in a flat, which door is yours, sometimes even with direct instructions from the entrance. It’s bananas.

    Personally I think these laws need to be looked over. I don’t think having salaries available publicly is harmful, but I’ve personally had problems with a person being able to dig up my info and harassing me. All this was different in an age where you had to report to the tax agency and request an excerpt, contra now where you can just pay a small sum to an information broker and get all of it without the system knowing who requested it.




  • This is not AI bullshit?

    Per their own description

    MCP is an open protocol that enables AI models to securely interact with local and remote resources through standardized server implementations. This list focuses on production-ready and experimental MCP servers that extend AI capabilities through file access, database connections, API integrations, and other contextual services.

    It’s ironic that they’d complain that their PRs are just auto-generated slop when they’re collating tools for that exact purpose. They made that bed, so now they should lie in it.





  • Grew because the population became less homogenous.

    I’d argue that it’s more complicated than that. It’s a factor, but we don’t exactly have a great track record of treating non-Swedes that well. We were quite cosy with the German nazis prior to and during WWII, and were enthusiastic about racial biology. Note how poorly we’ve historically treated the native Sami population.

    We also still have a lot of systemic problems with e.g. “women’s professions” like nursing, cleaning, etc. not being valued fairly. Women’s health problems aren’t taken as seriously either.

    Further, the right-block are campaigning to restrict rights overall. It’s not just the nazis but the Christ-democrats as well. We’re talking restricted abortion rights, there’s arguments against LGBTQ+ people, and so on.

    The homogeneity was a helpful factor in establishing a more egalitarian system, but it’s not truly egalitarian, and there are still unequalities endemic in our society.

    I admit I have a bit of a knee-jerk reaction whenever Sweden or Scandinavia is mentioned, because we’re so often, unfairly, painted as some kind of nigh utopia, where people are equal, education and healthcare is easily accessed, etc. etc. but we have problems. I grew up in poverty, to an abusive single mother. I’ve seen some low points of Swedish society and I resent people glossing over their existence.


  • I don’t like the term succeed. It’s not a case of once you have it you have it. You have to keep working for it to keep it.

    As it stands, we’ve not had a majority-left government in ages, our welfare is being sold off to private interests, and the gaps between classes are widening. The younger generation in particular has been susceptible to the influence of American right-wing media and as such we’re seeing an increased amount of religious extremism and right wing thinking.

    Hell, the xenophobic lobbying has lead to the Nazi party having a majority seat in parliament.

    Understanding of intersectionality is a useful tool regardless of the size or homogeneity of the population.