Fantastiskt bra nyheter!

Torsdag idag och imorgon firar vi TGIF 🙌🥳, och jag tänket smyga igång de positiva helgkänslorna med att dela med mig av nyheter som jag har väntat på. Även om jag förväntat mig likande resultat så har vi det nu mer eller mindre svart på vitt. Studien är inte Peer-reviewed  än, men jag finner det mycket osannolikt att det skulle visa sig att siffrorna inte stämmer. 🤞

I Oxford har man studerat på AstraZenecas vaccin förutom hur pass stor risk det är att man blir smittade av corona efter man är vaccinerad så har de har nu (vilket de var tvungna att vänta på tills man vaccinerad ute i det verkliga samhället och större grupper) undersökt hur stor sannolikhet det är att man efter vaccination sprider smittan till andra.

Och studien visar på att redan efter 1 injektion så minskar den risken med nästan 70% ‼️🥂🍾

Jag väntar spänt på vad siffrorna kommer att visa på efter dos 2, kommer det bli ett ännu bättre skydd? Och jag förväntar mig likande siffror från även de övriga vaccinen.

Förutom dessa goda siffror så säger studier att vaccinet skyddar efter 2 doser risken för att bli smittade med 82,4 % och efter redan efter 22 dagar efter den 1:a dosen så minskar risken att bli allvarligt sjuk och hamna på sjukhuset med 100%. 😊👌

Så, nu börjar iaf jag skönja slutet på den här pandemin och att det inte är alltför avlägset tills vi mer eller mindre kan återgå till det normala. Dvs, om den breda massa väljer att ta vaccinet…

Hur känner ni och vad tror ni?

Och hur mår ni idag? 😊☕️💚

Till alla er…

… som inte tror att det behövs en bred vaccinering över hela befolkningen.

… som envisas med att nyheterna om pandemin är en masshysteri.

…som rabblar på onödiga, icke relevanta siffror ang statistik om överdödlighet.

… som har fått för er att hålla ekonomin flytande idag inte kommer påverka kostnaderna för år framöver i trasiga människor, ekonomiska massiva summor i lika många år och fler, för att återställa all skada som skett pga folk blivit sjuka eller dött (inte för att man var tvungen att stanna hemma några månader.)

… som lyssnar selektivt på FHM när det passar er och som inte vill ta ett steg längre än rekommendationerna även om den handlingen är den mest förnuftiga. Tex som att isolera hela familjen om en är sjuk, trots att de gick mot tidigare rekommendationer.

… till alla er som tänker att ett liv i slutskedet inte är så mycket värt, för de skulle ju dö snart iaf.

Till alla er och alla andra. Titta på klippet. Det berättar om hur den nya medelåldern på de intagna med covid-19 är 59 år. Hur man ser fler och fler som läggs in är 40 till 50. Lyssna till mannen som berättar att före han hamnade på sjukhuset var han en av alla de som ignorerade uppmaningarna och inte trodde att pandemin var på riktigt. Lyssna på patologerna och deras frustration när de får höra från allmänheten att detta inte är på riktigt, inte är värre än en vanlig influensa och att ansiktena de ser när de öppnar säckarna ofta nog är på någon som var yngre än de själva.

Lyssna på intervjun från mannen som inte sett sin fru på över 2 veckor och det enda han nu önskade av livet var att få träffa henne igen. Det fick han inte ….

Var rädda om er därute. Och var rädda om varandra.

Sveriges corona-strategi

Det kommer att TGIF-inlägg också om en stund. 🥳

Triggervarning ‼️ (hehe, min första 😊)

Detta kommer bli ett långt inlägg och där jag dessutom helt i strid med vad jag får kommer att lägga upp hela artikeln. Men jag kommer att lägga en länk i slutet så om ni läser hela så kan ni väl vara snälla och klicka på länken så att de inte har förlorat några klick pga att jag lägger upp allt här. Tack!

Varför gör jag då det? Jo för att jag snubblade över en kort liten notis inne på SVT ang en artikeln av Andrew Ewing, som är professorn i biokemi vid Göteborgs universitet och ledamot i Kungliga vetenskapsakademien, skrev i Times. Och den är så bra och sammanfattar precis allt som jag har under månaderna som gått och den tes som jag annorstädes har drivit ett bra tag, att jag väljer att lägga upp den för er. Jag tror inte att han har missat en enda detalj eller fakta som jag själv skulle vilja lyfta och jag befarar att den inte kommer att nå ut till så många pga att det inte kommer lyftas vidare i svensk media.

Jag hoppas att ni kommer orka och vilja läsa artikeln.

The Swedish COVID-19 Response Is a Disaster. It Shouldn’t Be a Model for the Rest of the World

BY KELLY BJORKLUND AND ANDREW EWING OCTOBER 14, 2020 5:00 AM EDTKelly Bjorklund is a writer and human rights activist who has worked on public policy and advocacy with elected officials, civil society and media for two decades.Andrew Ewing is a professor of molecular biology and chemistry at the University of Gothenburg and a member of the Swedish Academy of Sciences.

The Swedish COVID-19 experiment of not implementing early and strong measures to safeguard the population has been hotly debated around the world, but at this point we can predict it is almost certain to result in a net failure in terms of death and suffering. As of Oct. 13, Sweden’s per capita death rate is 58.4 per 100,000 people, according to Johns Hopkins University data, 12th highest in the world (not including tiny Andorra and San Marino). But perhaps more striking are the findings of a study published Oct. 12 in the Journal of the American Medical Association, which pointed out that, of the countries the researchers investigated, Sweden and the U.S. essentially make up a category of two: they are the only countries with high overall mortality rates that have failed to rapidly reduce those numbers as the pandemic has progressed.

Sweden and the U.S. are unique in their failure to reduce coronavirus mortality rates as the pandemic progressed

Chart: Elijah Wolfson for TIME Source: JAMA Get the data Created with Datawrapper




Yet the architects of the Swedish plan are selling it as a success to the rest of the world. And officials in other countries, including at the top level of the U.S. government, are discussing the strategy as one to emulate—despite the reality that doing so will almost certainly increase the rates of death and misery.

Countries that locked down early and/or used extensive test and tracing—including Denmark, Finland, Norway, South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Vietnam and New Zealand—saved lives and limited damage to their economies. Countries that locked down late, came out of lock down too early, did not effectively test and quarantine, or only used a partial lockdown—including Brazil, Mexico, Netherlands, Peru, Spain, Sweden, the U.S. and the U.K.—have almost uniformly done worse in rates of infection and death.

How Sweden’s COVID-19 mortality rate compares to other large, wealthy countries

Chart: Elijah Wolfson for TIME Source: JHU CSSE, World Bank Get the data Created with Datawrapper




Despite this, Sweden’s Public Health Agency director Johan Carlson has claimed that “the Swedish situation remains favorable,” and that the country’s response has been “consistent and sustainable.” The data, however, show that the case rate in Sweden, as elsewhere in Europe, is currently increasing.

Average daily cases rose 173% nationwide from Sept. 2-8 to Sept. 30-Oct. 6 and in Stockholm that number increased 405% for the same period. Though some have argued that rising case numbers can be attributed to increased testing, a recent study of Stockholm’s wastewater published Oct. 5 by the Swedish Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) argues otherwise. An increased concentration of the virus in wastewater, the KTH researchers write, shows a rise of the virus in the population of the greater Stockholm area (where a large proportion of the country’s population live) in a way that is entirely independent of testing. Yet even with this rise in cases, the government is easing the few restrictions it had in place.


From early on, the Swedish government seemed to treat it as a foregone conclusion that many people would die. The country’s Prime Minister Stefan Löfven told the Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter on April 3, “We will have to count the dead in thousands. It is just as well that we prepare for it.” In July, as the death count reached 5,500, Löfven said that the “strategy is right, I am completely convinced of that.” In September, Dr. Anders Tegnell, the Public Health Agency epidemiologist in charge of the country’s COVID-19 response reiterated the party line that a growing death count did “not mean that the strategy itself has gone wrong.” There has been a lack of written communication between the Prime Minister and the Public Health Authority: when the authors requested all emails and documents between the Prime Minister’s office and the Public Health Authority for the period Jan. 1—Sept. 14, the Prime Minister’s Registrar replied on Sept. 17 that none existed.

Despite the Public Health Agency’s insistence to the contrary, the core of this strategy is widely understood to have been about building natural “herd immunity”—essentially, letting enough members of a population (the herd) get infected, recover, and then develop an immune system response to the virus that it would ultimately stop spreading. Both the agency and Prime Minister Löfven have characterized the approach as “common sense“ trust-based recommendations rather than strict measures, such as lockdowns, which they say are unsustainable over an extended period of time—and that herd immunity was just a desirable side effect. However, internal government communications suggest otherwise.

Emails obtained by one of the authors through Freedom of Information laws (called offentlighetsprincipen, or “Openness Principle,” in Swedish) between national and regional government agencies, including the Swedish Public Health Authority, as well as those obtained by other journalists, suggest that the goal was all along in fact to develop herd immunity. We have also received information through sources who made similar requests or who corresponded directly with government agencies that back up this conclusion. For the sake of transparency, we created a website where we’ve posted some of these documents.

One example showing clearly that government officials had been thinking about herd immunity from early on is a March 15 email sent from a retired doctor to Tegnell, the epidemiologist and architect of the Swedish plan, which he forwarded to his Finnish counterpart, Mika Salminen. In it, the retired doctor recommended allowing healthy people to be infected in controlled settings as a way to fight the epidemic. “One point would be to keep schools open to reach herd immunity faster,” Tegnell noted at the top of the forwarded email.

Salminen responded that the Finnish Health Agency had considered this but decided against it, because “over time, the children are still going to spread the infection to other age groups.” Furthermore, the Finnish model showed that closing schools would reduce “the attack rate of the disease on the elderly” by 10%. Tegnell responded: “10 percent might be worth it?”

The majority of the rest of Sweden’s policymakers seemed to have agreed: the country never closed daycare or schools for children under the age of 16, and school attendance is mandatory under Swedish law, with no option for distance learning or home schooling, even for family members in high risk groups. Policymakers essentially decided to use children and schools as participants in an experiment to see if herd immunity to a deadly disease could be reached. Multiple outbreaks at schools occurred in both the spring and autumn.

At this point, whether herd immunity was the “goal” or a “byproduct” of the Swedish plan is semantics, because it simply hasn’t worked. In April, the Public Health Agency predicted that 40% of the Stockholm population would have the disease and acquire protective antibodies by May. According to the agency’s own antibody studies published Sept. 3 for samples collected up until late June, the actual figure for random testing of antibodies is only 11.4% for Stockholm, 6.3% for Gothenburg and 7.1% across Sweden. As of mid-August, herd immunity was still “nowhere in sight,” according to a Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine study. That shouldn’t have been a surprise. After all, herd immunity to an infectious disease has never been achieved without a vaccine.


Löfven, his government, and the Public Health Agency all say that the high COVID-19 death rate in Sweden can be attributed to the fact that a large portion of these deaths occurred in nursing homes, due to shortcomings in elderly care.

However, the high infection rate across the country was the underlying factor that led to a high number of those becoming infected in care homes. Many sick elderly were not seen by a doctor because the country’s hospitals were implementing a triage system that, according to a study published July 1 in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, appeared to have factored in age and predicted prognosis. “This likely reduced [intensive care unit] load at the cost of more high-risk patients”—like elderly people with confirmed infection—dying outside the ICU.” Only 13% of the elderly residents who died with COVID-19 during the spring received hospital care, according to preliminary statistics from the National Board of Health and Welfare released Aug.

In one case which seems representative of how seniors were treated, patient Reza Sedghi was not seen by a doctor the day he died from COVID-19 at a care home in Stockholm. A nurse told Sedghi’s daughter Lili Perspolisi that her father was given a shot of morphine before he passed away, that no oxygen was administered and staff did not call an ambulance. “No one was there and he died alone,” Perspolisi says.

In order to be admitted for hospital care, patients needed to have breathing problems and even then, many were reportedly denied care. Regional healthcare managers in each of Sweden’s 21 regions, who are responsible for care at hospitals as well as implementing Public Health Agency guidelines, have claimed that no patients were denied care during the pandemic. But internal local government documents from April from some of Sweden’s regions—including those covering the biggest cities of Stockholm, Gothenburg and Malmö—also show directives for how some patients including those receiving home care, those living at nursing homes and assisted living facilities, and those with special needs could not receive oxygen or hospitalization in some situations. Dagens Nyheter published an investigationon Oct. 13 showing that patients in Stockholm were denied care as a result of these guidelines. Further, a September investigation by Sveriges Radio, Sweden’s national public broadcaster, found that more than 100 people reported to the Swedish Health and Care Inspectorate that their relatives with COVID-19 either did not receive oxygen or nutrient drops or that they were not allowed to come to hospital.

These issues do not only affect the elderly or those who had COVID-19. The National Board of Health and Welfare’s guidelines for intensive care in extraordinary circumstances throughout Sweden state that priority should be given to patients based on biological, not chronological, age. Sörmlands Media, in an investigation published May 13, cited a number of sources saying that, in many parts of the country, the health care system was already operating in a way such that people were being denied the type of inpatient care they would have received in normal times. Regional health agencies were using a Clinical Frailty Scale, an assessment tool designed to predict the need for care in a nursing home or hospital, and the life expectancy of older people by estimating their fragility, to determine whether someone should receive hospital care and was applied to decisions regarding all sorts of treatment, not only for COVID-19. These guidelines led to many people with health care needs unrelated to COVID-19 not getting the care they need, with some even dying as a result—collateral damage of Sweden’s COVID-19 strategy.

Dr. Michael Broomé, the chief physician at Stockholm’s Karolinska Hospital’s Intensive Care Unit, says his department’s patient load tripled during the spring. His staff, he says, “have often felt powerless and inadequate. We have lost several young, previously healthy, patients with particularly serious disease courses. We have also repeatedly been forced to say no to patients we would normally have accepted due to a lack of experienced staff, suitable facilities and equipment.”

In June, Dagens Nyheter reported a story of one case showing how disastrous such a scenario can be. Yanina Lucero had been ill for several weeks in March with severe breathing problems, fever and diarrhea, yet COVID-19 tests were not available at the time except for those returning from high risk areas who displayed symptoms, those admitted to the hospital, and those working in health care. Yanina was only 39 years old and had no underlying illnesses. Her husband Cristian brought her to an unnamed hospital in Stockholm, but were told it was full and sent home, where Lucero’s health deteriorated. After several days when she could barely walk, an ambulance arrived and Lucero was taken to Huddinge hospital, where she was sedated and put on a ventilator. She died on April 15 without receiving a COVID-19 test in hospital.


Sweden did try some things to protect citizens from the pandemic. On March 12 the government restricted public gatherings to 500 people and the next day the Public Health Agency issued a press release telling people with possible COVID-19 symptoms to stay home. On March 17, the Public Health Agency asked employers in the Stockholm area to let employees work from home if they could. The government further limited public gatherings to 50 people on March 29. Yet there were no recommendations on private events and the 50-person limit doesn’t apply to schools, libraries, corporate events, swimming pools, shopping malls or many other situations. Starting April 1, the government restricted visits to retirement homes (which reopened to visitors on Oct. 1 without masks recommended for visitors or staff). But all these recommendations came later than in the other Nordic countries. In the interim, institutions were forced to make their own decisions; some high schools and universities changed to on-line teaching and restaurants and bars went to table seating with distance, and some companies instituted rules about wearing masks on site and encouraging employees to work from home.

Meanwhile Sweden built neither the testing nor the contact-tracing capacity that other wealthy European countries did. Until the end of May (and again in August), Sweden tested 20% the number of people per capita compared with Denmark, and less than both Norway and Finland; Sweden has often had among the lowest test rates in Europe. Even with increased testing in the fall, Sweden still only tests only about one-fourth that of Denmark.

Sweden never quarantined those arriving from high-risk areas abroad nor did it close most businesses, including restaurants and bars. Family members of those who test positive for COVID-19 must attend school in person, unlike in many other countries where if one person in a household tests positive the entire family quarantines, usually for 14 days. Employees must also report to work as usual unless they also have symptoms of COVID-19, an agreement with their employer for a leave of absence or a doctor recommends that they isolate at home.

On Oct. 1, the Public Health Authority issued non-binding “rules of conduct” that open the possibility for doctors to be able to recommend that certain individuals stay home for seven days if a household member tests positive for COVID-19. But there are major holes in these rules: they do not apply to children (of all ages, from birth to age 16, the year one starts high school), people in the household who previously have a positive PCR or antibody test or, people with socially important professions, such as health care staff (under certain circumstances).

There is also no date for when the rule would go into effect. “It may not happen right away, Stockholm will start quickly but some regions may need more time to get it all in place,” Tegnell said at a Oct. 1 press conference. Meanwhile, according to current Public Health Agency guidelines issued May 15 and still in place, those who test positive for COVID-19 are expected to attend work and school with mild symptoms so long as they are seven days post-onset of symptoms and fever free for 48 hours.

People on a crowded beach in Lomma, Sweden on Aug. 16, 2020.
People on a crowded beach in Lomma, Sweden on Aug. 16, 2020.
 Johan Nilsson—TT/Sipa

Sweden actually recommends against masks everywhere except in places where health care workers are treating COVID-19 patients (some regions expand that to health care workers treating suspected patients as well). Autumn corona outbreaks in DalarnaJönköpingLuleåMalmö, Stockholm and Uppsalahospitals are affecting both hospital staff and patients. In an email on April 5, Tegnell wrote to Mike Catchpole, the chief scientist at the European Center for Disease Control and Prevention (ECDC): “We are quite worried about the statement ECDC has been preparing about masks.” Tegnell attached a document in which he expresses concern that ECDC recommending facemasks would “imply that the spread is airborne which would seriously harm further communication and trust among the population and health care workers” and concludes “we would like to warn against the publication of this advice.” Despite this, on April 8 ECDC recommended masks and on June 8 the World Health Organization updated its stance to recommend masks.

Sweden’s government officials stuck to their party line. Karin Tegmark Wisell of the Public Health Agency said at a press conference on July 14 that “we see around the world that masks are used in a way so that you rather increase the spread of infection.” Two weeks later, Lena Hallengren, the Minister of Health and Social Affairs, spoke about masks at a press conference on July 29 and said, “We don’t have that tradition or culture” and that the government “would not review the Public Health Agency’s decision not to recommend masks.”

All of this creates a situation which leaves teachers, bus drivers, medical workers and care home staff more exposed, without face masks at a time when the rest of the world is clearly endorsing widespread mask wearing.

On Aug. 13, Tegnell said that to recommend masks to the public “quite a lot of resources are required. There is quite a lot of money that would be spent if you are going to have masks.” Indeed, emails between Tegnell and colleagues at the Public Health Agency and Andreas Johansson of the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs show that the policy concerns of the health authority were influenced by financial interests, including the commercial concerns of Sweden’s airports.

Swedavia, the owner of the country’s largest airport, Stockholm Arlanda, told employees during the spring and early summer they could not wear masks or gloves to work. One employee told Upsala Nya Tidning newspaper on Aug. 24 “Many of us were sick during the beginning of the pandemic and two colleagues have died due to the virus. I would estimate that 60%-80% of the staff at the security checks have had the infection.”

“Our union representatives fought for us to have masks at work,” the employee said, “but the airport’s response was that we were an authority that would not spread fear, but we would show that the virus was not so dangerous.” Swedavia’s reply was that they had introduced the infection control measures recommended by the authorities. On July 1, the company changed its policy, recommending masks for everyone who comes to Arlanda—that, according to a Swedavia spokesperson, was not as a result of “an infection control measure advocated by Swedish authorities,” but rather, due to a joint European Union Aviation Safety Agency and ECDC recommendation for all of Europe.

As early as January, the Public Health Agency was warning the government about costs. In a Jan. 31 communique, Public Health Agency Director Johan Carlsson (appointed by Löfven) and General Counsel Bitte Bråstad wrote to the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs, cautioning the government about costs associated with classifying COVID-19 as a socially dangerous disease: “After a decision on quarantine, costs for it [include] compensation which according to the Act, must be paid to those who, due to the quarantine decision, must refrain from gainful employment. The uncertainty factors are many even when calculating these costs. Society can also suffer a loss of production due to being quarantined [and] prevented from performing gainful employment which they would otherwise have performed.” Sweden never implemented quarantine in society, not even for those returning from travel abroad or family members of those who test positive for COVID-19.

Not only did these lack of measures likely result in more infections and deaths, but it didn’t even help the economy: Sweden has fared worse economically than other Nordic countries throughout the pandemic.


The Swedish way has yielded little but death and misery. And, this situation has not been honestly portrayed to the Swedish people or to the rest of the world.

A Public Health Agency report published July 7 included data for teachers in primary schools working on-site as well as for secondary school teachers who switched to distance instruction online. In the report, they combined the two data sources and compared the result to the general population, stating that teachers were not at greater risk and implying that schools were safe. But in fact, the infection rate of those teaching in classrooms was 60% higher than those teaching online—completely undermining the conclusion of the report.

Refrigeration containers to be used on standby as makeshift morgues to store people who have died from COVID-19 set up behind Karolinska University Hospital in Huddinge, Sweden on March 26, 2020.
Refrigeration containers to be used on standby as makeshift morgues to store people who have died from COVID-19 set up behind Karolinska University Hospital in Huddinge, Sweden on March 26, 2020.
IBL/Shutterstock

The report also compares Sweden to Finland for March through the end of May and wrongly concludes that the ”closing of schools had no measurable effect on the number of cases of COVID-19 among children.” As testing among children in Sweden was almost non-existent at that time compared to Finland, these data were misrepresented; a better way to look at it would be to consider the fact that Sweden had seven times as many children per capita treated in the ICU during that time period.

When pressed about discrepancies in the report, Public Health Agency epidemiologist Jerker Jonsson replied on Aug. 21 via email: “The title is a bit misleading. It is not a direct comparison of the situation in Finland to the situation in Sweden. This is just a report and not a peer-reviewed scientific study. This was just a quick situation report and nothing more.” However the Public Health Agency and Minister of Education continue to reference this report as justification to keep schools open, and other countries cite it as an example.

This is not the only case where Swedish officials have misrepresented data in an effort to make the situation seem more under control than it really is. In April, a group of 22 scientists and physicians criticized Sweden’s government for the 105 deaths per day the country was seeing at the time, and Tegnell and the Public Health Agency responded by saying the true number was just 60 deaths per dayRevised government figures now show Tegnell was incorrect and the critics were right. The Public Health Agency says the discrepancy was due to a backlog in accounting for deaths, but they have backlogged deaths throughout the pandemic, making it difficult to track and gauge the actual death toll in real time.


Sweden never went into an official lockdown but an estimated 1.5 million have self-isolated, largely the elderly and those in risk groups. This was probably the largest factor in slowing the spread of the virus in the country in the summer. However, recent data suggest that cases are yet again spiking in the country, and there’s no indication that government policies will adapt.

Health care workersscientists and private citizens have all voiced concerns about the Swedish approach. But Sweden is a small country, proud of its humanitarian image—so much so that we cannot seem to understand when we have violated it. There is simply no way to justify the magnitude of lost lives, poorer health and putting risk groups into long-term isolation, especially not in an effort to reach an unachievable herd immunity. Countries need to take care before adopting the “Swedish way.” It could have tragic consequences for this pandemic or the next.

Här kommer länken och vill ni vara snäll och klicka på den tack! 😊👇

https://time.com/5899432/sweden-coronovirus-disaster/

And it’s….. Friday 🥳✨

Vet ni, vet ni, vet niiii vad…..?!? 😃

Jag berättade för någon dag sedan att jag tagit testet för antikroppar för covid-19, minns ni? Och jag testade postivt! 😭🙌🥳 Jag har alltså haft och genomgått covid-19. 🏆🎉

Jag måste dock erkänna att jag är oerhört förvånad för jag har varit så superförsiktig inte haft några direkt allvarliga symtom annat än en lätt irriterade hosta, ett par migränen och en dag med feber som inte var speciellt hög. Men det måste varit här och började ca här. Men hur jag blev smittad är en stor gåta för mig, och jag kommer väl aldrig få ett svar heller. 🤓

Jag är så glad! 😊 💓 Nu kommer det inte innebära några direkta förändringar i min vardag, utan jag kommer leva på ungefär som tidigare. Det jag överväger är om jag ska börja gå på gym samt kolla om jag kan hälsa på en som är i riskgrupp om vi håller bra med avstånd, men det är allt och samtidigt mycket nog.

Men lättnaden är enorm och när beskedet sjunkit in och jag vågar lita på det så kommer oron över mig själv och vad som skulle ske med min egen hälsa släppa något enormt och inte riktigt drabbas av samma panik om någon kommer för nära i affären eller på trottoaren. Jag tror t.o.m att stressen som påverkar sömn kommer att minska något radikalt. Men det kommer att ta någon dag innan det sjunker in och jag kan ställa om mig igen.

Hur är det för er andra som också vet på ett eller annat sätt att ni har varit smittade och blivit friska igen? Eller ni kanske inte var så stressade till att börja med? 💚

Vad har ni för er annars idag och vad ska ni hitta på i helgen? Har ni fortfarande sommar och hur mår ni? Berätta allt och skååål för TGIF!

à votre santé !🥂✨💞

Drunk Best Friends GIF by javadoodles

Wake up from woke

Jag är helt slut. Dränerad både mentalt och fysiskt och hur mycket jag än uppskattar värmen så kom den lite olämpligt just nu.

Jag hoppas att ni har något smultronställe där ni kan svalka er utan att folk kliver kors och tvärs över er.

Och jag hoppas att ni har bra med uppbackning så att ni inte känner att allt är upp till er själva för det är rätt träligt. När man dessutom känner att man måste be om det man behöver fastän det tar emot är också något knäckande. Framförallt som att det inte är första gången som ämnet lyfts…

Jag har inte haft tid att följa nyheterna men vad jag förstår så verkar det mesta handla om vansinnet i Beirut och stränderna som är överfulla. Det och att de svenska nyheterna kämpar med näbbar och klor för att rentvå den sk svenska pandemistrategin så till den milda grad att de skriver om vad de utländska nyheterna verkligen sade.

Zara Larsson har äntligen varit tvungen att ta till sig att eftersom och pga hon flertalet gånger utryckt sig politiskt och varit tydlig med sina åsikter så kunde hon inte längre gömma sig bakom en tom ursäkt att Huawei är ett privat kinesiskt bolag efter massiv kritik (som hon fick redan för 2 år sedan) och har långt om länge nu brutit samarbetet. Jag uppfattar det som skenheligt eftersom att kritiken inte är ny utan först nu när den blev för stor backade hon.

Ett företag som, för alla som följer nyheterna, är högst omdebatterat. Flertalet länder har redan bannlyst Huawei från att vara del i utbyggnaden av deras 5G-nät. Farhågan ligger i att diktaturen Kina via företages teknik ges möjligheten att stjäla värdefull information…

Kommer Zara Larsson, likt Alexander Bard, att sparkas för sina tweets där hon har uppmuntrat sina unga följare att använda kinakontrollerade TikTok bara för att Donald Trump ogillar det?...

..Samtidigt skrev hon i våras på Twitter att:

Beacuse Donald Trump hates TikTok I love it even more.””


Hon verkar också mer vara likt ett barn med att tänka i svart/vita-termer när hon uttalade sig om att ju mer Trump avskydde Tiktok ju mer älskade hon dem…

Skit samma att både Huawei och TikTok har varit föremål för massiv kritik från flera länders säkerhetstjänster under en längre tid. Har bara fel person sagt något så ska man ju tycka motsatsen, eller hur var det nu…???

Ironin passerade mig inte heller obemärkt förbi att YogaGril äntligen förstår hur det kan gå till när man blir deplattformerad, säg en fel sak och du ska bli cancellerad och tas ifrån dig din plattform och vad jag än tycker i övrigt om Bard så har han en stor poäng hur farligt hela woke-rörelsen är och hur viktigt det blir att fler orkar stå upp mot den.

Om inte annat för att Bloggbevakning ber om att helst folk med tolkningsföreträde bör uttala sig om solbränna och blackfishing. 👇

Någon av er som vet och vill ge en förklaring?
Helst från någon som har tolkningsföreträde i den här frågan, if you don’t mind?

Detta var aldrig vad tolkningsföreträde skulle vara. TF gäller enbart dig själv och dina egna känslor och din rätt till att ha dem. Att ingen kan säga till dig att det du känner är fel eller ta dina upplevelser ifrån dig. Inte att om en idivid tillhör en grupp så har man företräde samt rätten att föra talan för alla andra i samma grupp, särskilt som de inte har bett denne om att representera dem… ja inte alla iaf.

Detta har med tiden blivit så missanvänt och utnyttjat att det nu helt har skiftat betydelse till att betyda detta…”Tolkningsföreträde innebär att en person/grupp/ideologisk riktning har förtur på tolkningen av ett avtal eller dylikt.” Vansinne!

Det är lika ologiskt som att om du inte vet allt om kärnkraft och hur de påverkar allt och alla i ”din grupp” så får du inte ha några åsikter än mindre delta i en folkomröstning. Är det rätt tycker ni? Att jag inte skulle vara villig eller kunna ha någon nytta av era åsikter eller erfarenheter i frågan även om kunskapen till mängd är större hos mig än er… och hur det än är så påverkas precis allt i samhället precis alla invånare. Ingen är förskonad från att bli påverkad och då har man automatiskt också rätten till att få höras, tänker jag iaf.

Och det gemensamma nämnaren till Camilla Gervide, Zara Larsson och Yoga Girl är att de alla sysslar med jakten på like istället för att sträva efter vad som är rätt. De gör det ”rätta” som andra sagt till dem, inte vad de själva har funderat ut eller filosoferat sig fram. De tillhör alla woke. (Sedan kan vi ju argumentera och diskutera om de känner så i själ och hjärta eller för att de blivit tillsagda att tycka så, men hur det verkligen ligger till vet bara de själva).

By the late 2010s,  woke had been adopted as a more generic slang term broadly associated with left-wing politics, socially liberal causes, feminismLGBTactivism, and cultural issues (with the terms woke culture and woke politics also being used). It has been the subject of memes, ironic usage and criticism. Its widespread use since 2014 is a result of the Black Lives Matter movement.

Så ser jag på det. Hur ser ni på det?

Och det viktigaste, hur mår ni vad har ni gjort i helgen? 💚🌸