Scandinavian observations and perspectives

It seems some balance was needed, here we go...

Source :

Following the Koran in Sweden, they want to publicly burn a scroll of the Torah.

07:14 27.01.2023 Telegram review
61920_1674796450_2035.jpg



In Sweden, they got a taste of the destruction of sacred scriptures: following the Koran, which Danish extremist Rasmus Paludan burned in front of the Turkish embassy in Stockholm, demonstrators filed a request to the country's authorities for the public burning of a Torah scroll in protest against Israeli policies.

It is not yet known what officials said to the protesters, but in Israel they believe that permission can be given, as the protesters appeal to the law on freedom of expression.

“I think it's a shocking thing, there's a difference between freedom of speech and burning the Torah. We don't need clearer reminders of the well-known proverb that "where books are burned, people will also be burned there," Swedish newspaper Världen Idag quoted Israel's envoy to the UN Gilad Erdan as saying.

It is noteworthy that after the action to burn the Koran, the Israelis remained silent.

The Torah scroll is the main sacred object in Judaism and is intended for public reading in the synagogue.
 
What's beneath all this ?

The whole thing of burning holy books in Stockholm, seems to be funky, opening a lot of questions regarding the official narrative. I can't fully penetrate the hidden motives behind all this fuzz. To begin with, I wonder why a Danish extremist has the leading roll in all of this - and why does a Danish citizen have to come to Stockholm of all places, in order to get a permission to burn books ? Doesn't this all sound weird ? Why didn't he burn it in Denmark ? Why does he have to burn holy books in the first place ?

When i first heard about the burning of the Koran, i was wondering if this somehow has something to do with that some forcesin Sweden (who do not wish Sweden to be totally 100% under the claws of the US/UK/NATO umbrella in order still maintain still some leeway for sovereign actions). Did they create a situation, a pasty, in order to keep the Status Quo in the NATO question, without anyone attached to it loosing face ? E.g. Erdogan in Turkey, while Sweden which may not go officially into NATO after all (despite its deeply submersion into NATO). So, Sweden would still keep its "neutral status" officially, without loosing face. After the application to enter NATO, it couldn't possibly retract the application without loosing face... While Erdogan can continue to play Big Boss at home, in order to keep his power in Turkey.

Why do Swedish authorities give "permission" to burn holy books in the first place ? That alone seem highly odd to me, in today's Swedish Wokistan anno 2023. Then of course, that the Israelis are quiet about burning the Torah, also seems weird; it sounds just like another strategic "slip", deliberately made, in a far greater chess play, where little "slips" can be overlooked.
 
The terrorist bombing of Nord Stream has poisoned the Baltic Sea

SwebbTV.se wrote following article based on Sweden's Radio Ekot's short article:


kust-678x381.jpg
The gas leak in the Baltic Sea photographed by Swedish Coast Guard aircraft on September 27. The leak was over 950 metres in diameter. In total, four different leaks were found. Photo Credit: Swedish Coast Guard

The terrorist bombing of Nord Stream has poisoned the Baltic Sea

28 February, 2023

Large quantities of toxic substances have been spread in the Baltic Sea after the terrorist attack that destroyed Nord Stream 1 and 2 last September, reports Swedish Radio Ekot.

The terrorist bombing of Nord Stream, which according to legendary journalist Seymour Hersh was carried out by NATO countries the US and Norway, has not only destroyed Europe's energy supply. The historic act of terror has also caused large quantities of toxic substances to be released into the Baltic Sea.

This is according to a new research report.

The attack caused 250,000 tonnes of bottom sediment, long stored at the bottom of the sea, to swirl up and release harmful toxins such as lead and hormone-disrupting TBT.

Scientists have found significantly elevated levels of the toxins. The contamination continued for a month after the terrorist attack. The powerful jets of gas produced after the gas pipelines were bombed caused "widespread toxic contamination", SR reports. What the long-term effects of the poisoning will be remains to be seen.

- It is a deeply serious report that worries us. It means that a critically endangered sea area has been made even worse," Maria Reumert Gjerding, chairman of the Danish Society for Nature Conservation, told Danish Radio.

Reumert Gjerding fears that the Baltic Sea will soon be a dead sea.

It was recently revealed that NATO countries the US and Norway bombed Europe's energy supply by blowing up the Nord Stream 1 and 2 gas pipelines. The remotely detonated explosive devices were placed on the gas pipelines during a NATO exercise in the Baltic Sea last June, according to investigative journalist Seymour Hersh.

The mainstream media has largely hushed up the revelation.

After the attack on Nord Stream, the gas leaks were filmed and photographed by the Swedish Coast Guard. There were several of them. One of the leaks was as much as 950 metres in diameter. The leak was enormous.

Side note: The Baltic Sea is quietly considered to be - i say it ironically here - a "Dioxin heaven"; pregnant women are definitely not recommended to eat fish from the Baltic Sea. My question about that part i often wondered about is - do we truly know where the fish that is sold en masse, have been captured from... Fancy writings doesn't mean, the origin of the fish is from where they say it is; e.g. not from the Baltic Sea :rolleyes:

Every year Swede's eat large quantities of "Sill" [herring] around the time of Midsummers Eve and Christmas... On top - the oxygen levels in the Baltic sea are 0 in many large areas of the Baltic Sea bottom - for decades
 
Sweden's economy weakened more than expected



Sweden's GDP falls sharply in the fourth quarter of last year.

This is a broad-based downturn that is being felt in many parts of the economy, according to SCB. On Tuesday, SCB released the final GDP figures for Sweden. GDP fell by 0.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2022 compared to the same period last year.

Among other things, exports fell by 1.0 percent and imports decreased by 1.1 percent. Output in the business sector fell by 1.3 per cent, SCB writes.

Household consumption decreased by 0.2 per cent, while households' real disposable income fell by 2.7 per cent.

- GDP fell in the fourth quarter. The contraction is felt in many parts of the economy with broad-based declines in business investment and household consumption, says Jessica Engdahl, section chief at National Accounts, a statement.

According to Ekot, it was expected that GDP would fall by 0.6 percent in the fourth quarter compared to the previous quarter. But the figure that SCB now presents is "significantly worse".

Yesterday, Expressen reported that food prices in the world have fallen for ten months in a row. [Where the f did they come up with that info from ?!] Despite this, food prices in Sweden have increased by 20% - partly due to the weak krona. Against the euro, the krona has fallen eight percent in a year. Much of the food is imported, and a weak krona makes it more expensive to import. But the weak krona does not explain everything.

Here the translated from BS mainstream evening "newspaper" Expression, mainly focusing on the high food prices that have hit Sweden.

Food prices are rising faster in Sweden than in both its Nordic neighbours and the eurozone.
According to experts, there is an important explanation.
Text TT

Global fertiliser and grain prices have plummeted since the peak last year and gas and diesel prices have also fallen.

In other words, the stage is set for lower food prices. World food prices have also fallen for ten consecutive months, according to the UN food price index. But this is not reflected on the store shelves in Sweden. In January, food prices rose by almost 20% compared to the same month last year, according to the latest inflation statistics from Statistics Sweden (SCB).

Better prices abroad

Sweden stands out compared to neighbouring countries. In Norway, food prices rose by 12% in January and in Finland and Denmark by around 15%, according to the respective statistical authorities.

Even in the eurozone, food prices are not rising as much as in Sweden. Food inflation in the currency union stood at 14% in January (including alcohol and tobacco).

According to experts, there is a major reason why Sweden's food prices are rising more.

- The weak Swedish krona. It gives an extra push to food prices here at home compared to other countries, says Torbjörn Isaksson, chief analyst at Nordea. Much of the food in Sweden is imported and a weak krona means that imported products become more expensive. This is particularly evident when it comes to fruit and vegetables, for example.

But also the price of domestically produced food rises with a weak krona, according to Torbjörn Isaksson.

- Even if things are produced and sold in Sweden, a Swedish producer always has the opportunity to sell abroad if the price there is better. That's why a weak krona also affects Swedish-produced food, he says.

Erik Glans, an economist at the National Institute of Economic Research, also sees the krona as "probably the most important" explanation for the price differences, although he adds that it is complex.

"The Swedish krona weakened against the euro by more than eight percent from January 2022 to January 2023. Since many food products are traded internationally, one can expect a larger price increase the more the exchange rate weakens," he writes in an email to TT. But that doesn't quite explain everything.

More rigid in Norway

The Swedish Competition Authority has previously pointed out that the Swedish grocery trade is concentrated in a few players, which increases the risk of weaker competition. Then it becomes easier to raise the price.
According to Torbjörn Isaksson, it is difficult to say whether companies have raised prices more than necessary. In a report last autumn, the Economic Institute concluded that this was not the case.

- But I would still assess that there was a domestic price impact on inflation earlier in 2022, because demand was so strong and profitability in the business sector during the first part of 2022 was unusually good. That suggests that cost increases were successfully parried," he says.

Like the Swedish krona, the Norwegian krone is also weak, but food prices have not taken off as much in Norway. According to Torbjörn Isaksson, Norway is a country that is difficult to compare with, as the Norwegian food market is more regulated and "rigid".
- For example, they adjust prices less frequently, so the comparison is not straightforward. However, it is more relevant to compare with Denmark and Finland. And the Swedish krona has lost a lot against both the euro and the Danish krone," he says.

More expensive in the UK and Germany

Sweden, however, is not the worst offender. Another European country where food prices are rocketing by roughly the same amount is Germany.
Marcus Widén, an economist at SEB with a special interest in inflation, does not think that too much should be made of a single month, however.
- January, in particular, can be a time when many companies look at their books and review their pricing, he says.

He also thinks that Sweden does not stand out very much from a European perspective, and points out that it may be worth looking at how inflation has been over a longer period of time.

In a compilation he made of how much food prices have risen on average over the period July 2021 to January 2023, Sweden comes in behind both Germany and the UK.

- Sweden is high, but not the highest. In this context, a few percentage points here and there is not much to talk about either. But it's easy to blame a lot on the exchange rate," says Marcus Widén.

HOW MUCH FOOD PRICES HAVE RISEN IN THE WORLD

How much food prices have increased on average July 2021 - January 2023 in a selection of European countries

Germany 23 %
United Kingdom 22%
Netherlands 21%
Sweden 21 %
Spain 20 %
Finland 19 %
Italy 17 %
Denmark 16 %
France 16 %
Norway 9 %

Source: Marcus Widén, SEB (bank)

Well, and what about salary raises... ?

Oh, that doesn't look so good. At the subway we heard numbers about that the union demands +4.4% salary raise... so you can imagine that it will stay somewhere half of it... like +2.2 or +2.5% (which is kind almost the same like... uhm... the past decade). It is my guess, since the rather weak Swedish unions, mainly talk boldly and loudly into their bubble - but not really fighting. They usually end up with getting half of the demand at best. With the hefty price increases, high energy prices and inflation... it will be a drop in an ocean this year.

Rents on apartments
have gone up with largely 10% in 2023 in Sweden - but the spread varies. Here, in our apartment in the southern suburbs we got away with +4.7% higher rent (which isn't that bad really) - but clearly a lot more compared when comparing with the past decade (usually +0.9 to +1.5% annually)

Photo Trivia
Analog Photography material in times the digital age, no competition in Sweden, and overall extreme film price increases for film material in the past 7 years (before Corona), plus the fact that on the global scene, there is only one color film maker left really - Kodak - which even makes film for Fuji... and now inflation on top of everything... makes buying film in a Swedish store (if you find one) a grotesque expensive experience. A single roll of color slide film can easily cost 35 € - and the development isn't even included. One single roll of 35 mm film... Tough times to be an classic, analog photographer.

You have to sort out with lesser film, for example (noisy / grainy) Black & White films from Hungarian company Foma - the cost is a LOT less, especially when you "load the film yourself" from 30.5 ft rolls into single cassettes (= 19 rolls of 35mm film = 3 € per film) - it is still affordable and possible to continue the classic art of Photography.

Not everything traditional is lost yet :cheer:
 
A host of governments in the western alliance were in on the Nordstream sabotage. The Danish government has said next to nothing, the papers have chosen not to comment on recent discussions in the international arena, efforts are mobilized to support the war effort, defame dissidents, though here and there some think about it. This was uploaded to a FB page on March 2:

334149566_178479401571145_5403486147716434472_n.jpg


See also:
The Wiki about Mermaids in general,
The fairy tale, The Little Mermaid by Hans Christian Andersen
The Little Mermaid (statue)
In Russian, a mermaid is called "русалка" which transliterates as "rusalka". Maybe there is some affinity right there.
 
Finland approved into NATO
all 30 member states aligned

2WRKAVLK7JN3REWPLLDMOHS2BI.jpg



Hungary parliament backs Finland's NATO accession, Swedish bid pending​

Reuters - By Krisztina Than

BUDAPEST, March 27 (Reuters) - Hungary's parliament approved a bill on Monday to allow Finland to join NATO once its application has been ratified by all 30 members of the alliance, ending months of foot-dragging by the ruling Fidesz party on the matter.

Finland and Sweden asked to join the trans-Atlantic military alliance last year in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. But the process has been held up by Turkey and Hungary.

Although Finland's bid has now been approved, the Swedish bill is still stranded in the Hungarian parliament.
The bill on Finland's NATO accession was passed with 182 in favour and six votes against, after Fidesz said last week it would back the motion.
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said last week that Turkey's parliament would also start ratifying Finland's accession. But it also held off approving Sweden's bid.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg has said he had urged Turkey and Hungary to ratify both applications.
A vote on Sweden's bid has not yet been scheduled in Budapest.

Prime Minister Viktor Orban's chief political aide said on Twitter on Sunday the government backed Sweden's NATO membership and "now it's up to the parliament to make a decision."

"Some MPs are concerned due to Swedish government officials making a habit of constantly questioning the state of Hungarian democracy, thereby insulting our voters, MPs & the country as a whole," Balazs Orban, who is not related to the prime minister, tweeted.

Fidesz lawmakers usually act in line the policies of Orban's government as he has tightened his grip on the party.

Hungary is currently in talks with the European Commission which has held up disbursement of vital EU funds to the country due to corruption and concerns over the government's erosion of democratic rights. Orban denies the accusations.

Telegram-channel "Übersicht Ukraine" [Overview Ukraine] wrote:


Hungary agrees to Finland's NATO membership, Sweden stays out.

🔻The parallels to the Second World War are becoming more and more obvious. Sweden is allowed to play "neutral" again and Finland to the front.

On Monday, the Hungarian parliament passed a bill endorsing Finland's entry into NATO, a few days after Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said his country would do the same.

But Sweden was left out by both countries, even though the two Scandinavian countries had previously promised to join together.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has urged that both applications be ratified by Turkey and Hungary, which seems increasingly unlikely given the heated dispute between Stockholm and Ankara over the Kurdish issue and the burning of the Koran by a far-right activist.

🔻As for Finland's new Hungarian permit, Reuters notes:

🗣"Although Finland's application has now been approved, the Swedish bill is still stranded in Hungary's parliament. The bill on Finland's NATO accession passed with 182 votes in favour and six against, after Fidesz said last week it would support the motion."

🔻A vote in parliament on the Swedish motion has not yet been scheduled and is unlikely to take place given recent statements from Prime Minister Orban's office:

Prime Minister Viktor Orban's top political adviser said on Twitter on Sunday that the government supports Swedish NATO membership and "now parliament has to make a decision".

🗣"Some MPs are worried because Swedish government officials have a habit of constantly questioning the state of Hungarian democracy, insulting our voters, MPs and the whole country," tweeted Balazs Orban, who is not related to the prime minister.

Orban has been accused of delaying the vote on NATO accession as a bargaining chip against the EU's long-standing criticism of Hungary's alleged "democratic backsliding".

Orban has addressed this in recent months, asserting that "we have already confirmed to both Finland and Sweden that Hungary supports their NATO applications".

🗣"The Swedes and the Finns have not lost a single minute of membership because of Hungary, and Hungary will certainly give them the support they need to join," he stressed to EU ministers late last year.
 
Was the minesweeper KNM "Otra" used for training by the Nord Stream saboteurs?

independent journalist Alf R. Jacobsen in norway has investigated the possibilities of Norway's contribution to the bombing of NS.

Here is an extract from an article that appeared on document.no's website.

"The political order (from Biden) was shortly afterwards translated into a military directive which stated that the main purpose of the spring and summer exercise program should be "cooperation between ordinary operations and special operations, and especially mine clearance and the use of unmanned underwater robots".

..... It was all a facade to hide the real purpose: the sabotage of Nord Stream 1 and 2. The pattern was followed when the USS "Kearsage" and the US contingent of ships, US Marines, minesweepers and submarines began training off the coast of North Carolina in March , continued during exercise Northern Viking 22 off Iceland at the beginning of April and the bilateral exercise between the USA and Norway in Troms in the middle of the month - before the course was set for the Baltic Sea in May, where Baltops 22 was to be the highlight with Bornholm and the two Russian- the German pipelines as the main target.

...Help was provided from the tiny group of indoctrinated officers and politicians who agreed in March and until it crashed into the Baltic Sea on September 26, 2022.

Of the two minesweepers of the Alta class, KNM "Rauma" was in the workshop for much of 2022. The only relevant candidate that Hersh's sources may have in mind is KNM "Otra" - and a closer study of the sources shows a very interesting picture

. It could of course be a coincidence, but precisely in the days 30 May to 3 June, just before Baltops 22 started, KNM "Otra" carried out a series of trips in the area between the landing terminals Kollsnes and Sture in Øygarden and the refinery at Mongstad.

Despite insufficient and partly missing AIS data, which is also not to be trusted, the vessel appears to have moved in the area around the large pipelines (38 inches) called Vestprosess, which carry condensate from Kollsnes and Drive to Mongstad. It is of course impossible for outsiders to prove, but it is quite obvious that KNM "Otra" during this period would have had many opportunities to send out American minesweepers with motorized sleds for transporting equipment and testing, for example, the attachment arrangement of the charges to gas pipes of this type.
However, Seymour Hersh's sources say that an additional decompression chamber was flown in - precisely to accommodate this problem. Again, we may be faced with an absolute coincidence, but the circumstances would have it that a Norwegian cargo plane of the C-130 type flew over the Atlantic on approximately 25 May. It first landed in Jacksonville, Florida, but then continued to an airport near the oil city of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, which is as far from Panama City as Jacksonville.

......This could mean that the mine divers with all their breathing tanks and decompression chambers flew to Oslo with the Air Force's cargo plane, which landed at Gardermoen on 27 May - more than enough time to catch KNM "Otra's" departure from Haakonsvern on 31. May 2022. Or it could be that the oil companies in Louisiana had a chamber in stock that suited the purpose.

All apparent coincidences have an explanation. It is now up to the Norwegian Navy and the intelligence service to document that KNM "Otra" did not provide the US with help for the special operation in the Baltic Sea in the period from March to June 2022."

 
Wind's turning in Finland, (following NATO accession...?) , opening a seemingly political instability era... time will tell.
Exit Sanna Marin.

From HelsinkiTimes :

"

Finland will take a step right – coming weeks will show just how big

Finland
03 April 2023

PETTERI ORPO, the chairperson of the National Coalition, will take first stab at forming a new ruling coalition after leading his party to a narrow win in the parliamentary elections, with a 20.8-per-cent share of the popular vote.
Orpo is fundamentally faced with the question, how far right to take Finland?
The Finns Party and the Social Democrats are the primary options – mutually exclusive ones –
as the centre-right party begins to search for partners to form a ruling majority, the former having won 20.1 per cent and the latter 19.9 per cent of the vote.
With the National Coalition and Finns Party together set to hold 94 of the 200 seats in the Finnish Parliament, the Centre could provide the coalition a clear majority with its 23 seats, as long as it received at least some concessions to justify joining the ruling coalition after losing eight seats with a vote share of 11.3 per cent.

The coalition could be further bolstered by the Christian Democratic Party.
The key, though, would be whether the two largest coalition partners can find common ground on climate, immigration and the EU.
The Finns Party campaigned on a programme that included drastically limiting immigration from outside the 27-country bloc and postponing the carbon-neutrality goal of Finland. Chairperson Riikka Purra also confirmed during election debates that the party’s long-term strategic goal remains to leave the EU, adding that the party is not doing anything to promote the goal in the current environment.

The National Coalition has contrastively called for increasing work-based immigration, including by scrapping the labour availability consideration that enables employers to hire from non-EU and non-EEA countries only if they can demonstrate they cannot find labour in Finland. Chairperson Orpo has also declared that the party is not prepared to compromise on the national climate goals.
The National Coalition and the Social Democrats together are set to hold 91 seats, meaning their partnership would require support likely from both the Greens (13 seats) and Swedish People’s Party (9).
With Maria Ohisalo, the chairperson of the Greens, stating two weeks ago that the party has no business joining a ruling coalition unless its support improves from the 8.3 per cent it was in the final pre-election poll commissioned by Helsingin Sanomat, the party may be unwilling to join the coalition after winning only 7.0 per cent of the actual vote – even if it means keeping out the Finns Party.

The two main partners, meanwhile, would have their work cut out for them to particularly integrate their economic policies: While the National Coalition campaigned largely on the need to balance public finances after years of what it called reckless borrowing, the Social Democrats has consistently expressed its opposition to significant spending cuts, suggesting that the debt problem can be tackled with measures that raise the employment rate.

Outgoing Prime Minister Sanna Marin (SDP) also floated the possibility of a single-party minority government, but it has been dismissed as unlikely given that it would require a major change in the political culture – namely, a re-think of the government programme and the creation of a continuous parliamentary negotiation process.

The coalition formation talks tend to take at least a couple of weeks."
 
A host of governments in the western alliance were in on the Nordstream sabotage. The Danish government has said next to nothing, the papers have chosen not to comment on recent discussions in the international arena, efforts are mobilized to support the war effort, defame dissidents, though here and there some think about it. This was uploaded to a FB page on March 2:

334149566_178479401571145_5403486147716434472_n.jpg
I can't see the picture any longer, here is another:
1682171213332.jpeg
In the meantime, there was this article on SOTT.net
'Sophisticated naval forces' bombed Nord Stream - Danish navy veteran though the Danish Government have been silent when it comes to commenting about what happened. They argue that they need investigations, and sure enough that is needed too, but they will not allow Russia to participate. Russia is to trust that in Denmark all is proper and there is Rule of Law. The Wiki has:

The rule of law is the political philosophy that all citizens and institutions within a country, state, or community are accountable to the same laws, including lawmakers and leaders.[2] The rule of law is defined in the Encyclopedia Britannica as "the mechanism, process, institution, practice, or norm that supports the equality of all citizens before the law, secures a nonarbitrary form of government, and more generally prevents the arbitrary use of power."[3] The term rule of law is closely related to constitutionalism as well as Rechtsstaat and refers to a political situation, not to any specific legal rule.[4][5][6]

Use of the phrase can be traced to 16th-century Britain. In the following century, the Scottish theologian Samuel Rutherford employed it in arguing against the divine right of kings.[7] John Locke wrote that freedom in society means being subject only to laws made by a legislature that apply to everyone, with a person being otherwise free from both governmental and private restrictions upon liberty. "The rule of law" was further popularized in the 19th century by British jurist A. V. Dicey. However, the principle, if not the phrase itself, was recognized by ancient thinkers. Aristotle wrote: "It is more proper that law should govern than any one of the citizens: upon the same principle, if it is advantageous to place the supreme power in some particular persons, they should be appointed to be only guardians, and the servants of the laws."[8]

The rule of law implies that every person is subject to the law, including persons who are lawmakers, law enforcement officials, and judges.[9] In this sense, it stands in contrast to tyranny or oligarchy, where the rulers are held above the law.
Someone compiled a list of modern cases of corruption. I translated using a machine and found two serious errors, and there could be more, but overall the idea is that all is not perfect. As for the money, one Euro is about 7.5 DKK

The myth of corruption-free Denmark (2023)
16 April 2023 André Rossmann Denmark's challenges, corruption

In the national self-perception, the Danes are the least corrupt people in the world. This confirms Denmark's fine ranking in Transparency International's corruption index. The Danes therefore agree with themselves and the outside world that they are too clean for something as dirty and banana-state-like as corruption. However, the story of a corruption-free Denmark is nothing more than a myth.

The standards are sliding at the top
There is a norm slide and moral decay underway at the top of Danish society. This applies to the changing governments, the Parliament and the central administration, which are thoroughly corrupted by abuse of office, abuse of power, greed, cronyism and abdication of responsibility. The shift in norms shows, among other things, knowing that professionalism has been replaced by political cunning, that decisions are made without legal authority, that text messages are deleted in the Prime Minister's Office to destroy evidence, that the villains investigate themselves and that no one is held accountable for even the worst failures. It would hardly have happened in the classic central administration characterized from top to bottom by professionalism, thoroughness and orderliness. And once the norms progress at the top, they propagate down through the political system to regions, municipalities and citizens.

Corrupt parliamentary politicians
The list of corrupt parliamentary politicians is long. We all remember the former Conservative Minister of Economy and Business Bendt Bendtsen, whose hunting and golf trips were paid for by Danfoss and Danisco. And Ritt Bjerregaard's apartment in Christianshavn. And Troels Lund Poulsen (possibly future Venstre chairman), who as tax minister received a Rolex watch from an oil sheik. And Research Minister Esben Lunde Larsen's attempt to use his parliamentary mandate to promote a wind turbine case in which he himself and his family had financial interests. And Climate and Energy Minister Martin Lidegaard, who went ahead with a law on solar cells, even though the ministry knew that there was a loophole in the law. And Social Affairs Minister Annette Vilhelmsen, who has granted 1 million DKK to Lisbeth Zornig and her project 'Voices on the edge'. And Danish EU politicians who raise their allowances for meetings they have not attended. And Denmark's former prime minister, Lars Løkke Rasmussen, who as chairman of the climate organization GGGI has flown first class nine times, had CGGI pay his daughter's plane ticket for 27,000 DKK and let Venstre finance its suits. And Henrik Sass Larsen, who has announced that he is on sick leave, but has kept his favorable earnings as state auditor. He received a good 30,000 kroner a month on top of the parliamentary salary, so his income rounded to 1 million kroner. DKK per year. The list of corrupt politicians is long. Their behavior would have been called 'corruption' if it had taken place in a country other than Denmark.

Disguised party donations
There is nothing odious about party support, but voters must have the opportunity to follow who donates larger amounts to the parties. However, not in Denmark. The rules on party support are widely circumvented in Denmark, i.a. by dividing donations into smaller portions to keep donors anonymous. The hidden money flows in Danish politics mean that an unhealthy financial dependence arises between the parties and the rich donors, who gain more influence simply because they have more money than others.

The disguised party donations in Denmark have on several occasions led Greco, which is the Council of Europe's intergovernmental cooperation to combat corruption, to criticize Denmark for a lack of measures to prevent corruption among politicians. Greco demands i.a. a system which makes it easier to see which financial interests the elected politicians have. In addition, the body is calling for a set of ethical rules for members of parliament. But every time Greco's criticism is met with a wall of silence from the parliament politicians. It is especially the Left and the Social Democrats who stand together to defend the current rules, which give the opportunity to circumvent the law and receive party support anonymously.

Purchase of exclusive access to top politicians
The parliamentary parties' business clubs, which raise donations for election campaigns and campaigns, are surrounded by suspicion and accusations of nepotism, cheating and cronyism. The clubs function by the fact that private individuals, companies and interest organizations sign up and are invited to meetings with top politicians and ministers at intervals. For that, they pay around DKK 20,000 a year, because that is the amount limit for anonymous contributions to parties. In return for the payment, the anonymous members get exclusive access to top politicians. It goes without saying that donations lead to the politicians being brought into some kind of dependency relationship. In addition, the ministers, in violation of the law, use their officials to prepare presentations for the meetings, which raises doubts about what is fundraising and party work, and what is taxpayer-paid ministerial service.

Conflicts of interest when politicians change jobs
Denmark is one of the few European countries that does not have rules on conflicts of interest when changing jobs between politics and business. When politicians jump from one side of the table to the other, there is a risk of misuse of confidential information, of discrimination and of corruption. Furthermore, a conflict of interest can arise when the top politician still carries out his duties for the national government, while he is in a job search process with a new employer on the way. Denmark is such a small country that the door does not have to swing in and out very many times before a closed space emerges, where the same people within a limited number of years fill very different roles in the political system, and thus have the opportunity to opaquely exchanging confidential knowledge and friend favors.

Misuse of public funds by politicians
When a majority in the Folketing in 2016 granted the politicians in Christiansborg a salary increase of 40 per cent, it was on the grounds that there was greater work pressure and media pressure on politicians, and that this increased the need for professionals who could help the politicians deal with the pressure and with controlling the government and developing policy. However, it appeared from Venstre's accounts that the party had not used the increased grant to resist increased media pressure or prepare new policy. Venstre has spent DKK 8,127,538 on 'printed matter, ads, etc.', i.e. a pure campaign business which does not contribute to better decisions, but just provides more marketing, advertising and competition for voters.

Corruption in the Prime Minister's Office
Corruption is not only bribery, fraud, fraud or nepotism, but to a great extent also abuse of office – abuse of entrusted power, public office or public funds. A clear example of abuse of office in the Prime Minister's Office was Mette Frederiksen's and her head of department Barbara Bertelsen's targeted and deliberate deletion of text messages, which has meant that the commission that was supposed to investigate the progress of the mink case came to lack evidence that could potentially be decisive. Barbara Bertelsen has also used her position and power to receive special treatment from the Copenhagen Police. It happened when she, as a private person, reported a case of street disorder near her home in Copenhagen. Barbara Bertelsen's report was processed in just 29 days, while similar cases had an average processing time of around 300 days.

Corruption in the Ministry of Defence
Abuse of office, abuse of power, fraud, bribery and nepotism are systemic in the Ministry of Defence. No less than five top managers have been involved in serious personal matters. The former army chief Hans-Christian Mathiesen was charged with dereliction of duty and abuse of office in order to promote his girlfriend's career in the army. Chief of Defense Bjørn Bisserup paved the way for a number of employees, including the Chief of Defense's own son, to start at the Army's Officers' School sooner than otherwise planned. In 2016, Head of Department in the Ministry of Defense Thomas Ahrenkiel was involved in awarding a one-off remuneration and allowance to the ministry's then head of press, with whom he then had a relationship and is now married. Laila Reenberg, director of the Ministry of Defence's Personnel Agency, 'forgot' to notify her superior when her own spouse was awarded an attractive command position in the Norwegian Navy. And the director of finance in Værnsfælles Forsvarskommando, Anja Erichsens, helped award large one-off payments to her boyfriend, who is a lieutenant colonel and battalion commander in the Army. The auditor corps has handed over the case to the police.

At a consultation in the Danish Parliament's Defense Committee, the former Minister of Defense Trine Bramsen (S) said that the senior management of the Defense and the Ministry of Defense would avoid the consequences of turning a blind eye to fraud, abuse of power and nepotism, as it was a hopeless case. 'The problem is that we then have the next bosses. Does it make it better? I sort of doubt that', said Bramsen.

Corruption in the Ministry of Culture
Denmark already has a tech ambassador in Silicon Valley, but according to Minister of Culture Ane Halsboe-Jørgensen (S) it was very important that she was the one who handed over a letter to representatives of Facebook, Instagram and YouTube - and that's why she had to fly to California in business class to convey an official request from the Danish government for greater openness. EkstraBladet described the trip after the newspaper had found out that between two official visits – first to Silicon Valley and then to the Oscars – the minister had been on a road trip with his special adviser. Exhibits showed that the ministry (ie the taxpayers) had paid for petrol, luxury hotel accommodation, parking and restaurant bills.

The Norwegian Art Fund's committee members decide which artists and art projects should be part of the annual half a billion kroner, and which should not. According to Politiken, the members, who themselves work in the cultural industry, have at least 25 times applied for and received support for their own projects and institutions.

The Film Institute, which belongs to the Ministry of Culture, aims to promote film art, film culture and cinema culture in Denmark. It is therefore contrary to the Film Act that several board members of the Danish Film Institute (DFI), which distributes millions of kroner each year to Danish film and TV productions, also sit on the boards of companies that have received support from DFI in particular . According to the Film Act, members of DFI's board of directors may not be representatives of, employed by or financially interested in companies for the production, rental or screening of films or hold positions of trust in the film industry. The chairman of the board of DFI, Anders Kronborg, played dumb and said that 'it was not something he had thought of'.

Corruption in the Ministry of Education and Research
Since the Innovation Fund is a state fund under the Ministry of Education and Research, it must act according to the rules of the game for legality and propriety that apply to state institutions. Carlsberg's powerful chairman of the board and former deputy chairman of the Innovation Fund, Flemming Besenbacher, has taken a big view of this, as he has been involved in illegally distributing millions of tax kroner for research and securing millions of dollars in support for projects where the participants are researchers or institutions for which he had a personal belong to. Put in plain Danish, he has used his position as chairman of the board to promote his own interests. The barrister believed that there could be a question of liability.

In the Ministry of Fisheries, there have been major problems in complying with completely elementary rules, including the requirement for objective allocation of fishing quotas. The government and the fisheries authorities have secretly given some of the country's largest mussel fishermen unique access to fish tons of blue mussels in the Great Belt, which smacks of corruption. The case of cheating with fishing quotas was raised after the National Audit Office in 2017 expressed criticism of the then Ministry of Fisheries for a lack of control over the quota rules. This then led to the then Environment and Fisheries Minister Esben Lunde Larsen (V) losing the fisheries area from his portfolio.

According to Michael Gøtze, professor of administrative law at the University of Copenhagen, the course of the case testified to a particularly problematic culture at the fisheries authorities. 'It seems that there are problems with fundamental legal requirements such as e.g. objective allocation of fishing quotas, fairness and professionalism in the way applications are handled. One gets the impression that it has run relatively informally, and that the administrative apparatus surrounding the trial scheme in question has been close to the minimum and with a correspondingly limited focus on equality before the law. We are not talking about problems with individual slip-ups, but about problems with the culture itself', said Michael Gøtze.

Corruption in the Ministry of Food
Deliberate misuse of public funds is corruption. The Danish Agency for Agriculture and the Ministry of Food have been guilty of this, as they have been aware for 16 years that agricultural subsidies were paid that should not have been paid. The Danish Agency for Agriculture has not had control over whether farmers have made an artificial division of their holdings in order to circumvent a ceiling on how much subsidy and support could be paid out. The Danish Agency for Agriculture pays out around DKK 7 billion. DKK per year in subsidies and support for agriculture. The majority of the money comes directly from the EU, and with it comes a set of rules for control, which the Danish Agency for Agriculture is obliged to follow. Since 2005, the Danish Agency for Agriculture has been aware that money may have been paid out to agriculture that circumvented the rules. Even so, control has not been strengthened.

Corruption in the National Police
When performance contracts were introduced in the police in 2007, this meant that instead of chasing criminals, they now had to chase results and target figures for the National Police's statistics. From a report 'Hoaxes or facts', which the Police Association and the National Police have prepared on the basis of interviews with approx. 120 officers from 12 stations, it appeared that '45 men were summoned in one case and had to stop everyone on the way to print enough cases. Another time, officers had to create 291 cases on a person who had made 291 fake tickets, so that in the statistics it became 291 solved cases. A third episode is about a man sending 400 apparently less loving text messages to his ex-girlfriend. It was entered into the statistics as 400 conditions. And then the police had suddenly reached their targets'.

A former head of department in the National Police has been dismissed twice in two years. The first time because she was a fixed-term employee, which allows public managers to receive severance pay even if they stay in the position. She received the second golden handshake in connection with her resignation after it had emerged that she had entered into illegal contracts with consultants for approx. 43.3 million DKK Approx. 1 million DKK she has received within 2 years of resigning, and she is not alone. 42 chiefs in the police have received just over DKK 10.1 million. DKK in i.a. resignations – even if they have not stopped working. Furthermore, the National Police has admitted that it has been found that only a good 38 per cent. of 240 concluded contracts with private suppliers comply with the tender rules. In the National Police's Group Service, department head Bettina Jensen has secured consulting assignments for two of her friends for more than DKK 20 million. DKK in just three years. The tasks were – contrary to the law – never put out to tender, and the friends' fees were paid without contracts and without prior budget approval.

Bonuses and performance pay
As we know, power corrupts, which is clearly evident within the powerful state aristocracy of the public sector. In DR's documentary series 'The Expensive Directors', taxpayers were able to get a rare insight into a corrupt culture at the top of the public administration, where the DJØF elite of politicians and civil servants hand out privileges and bonuses to each other in pure pampering. Unjustified severance pay for municipal directors who do not resign from their positions, golden handshakes in the million range and explosive salary increases are the order of the day.

The Danish state is founded on the principle that civil servants must never have personal, financial interests in the performance of their office or in the administration of laws and regulations. A principle which must ensure that civil servants only look after the state's interests and not their own. That principle has been broken with the introduction of performance pay and bonus schemes. They are deeply problematic because they inevitably create a more or less corrupt culture among public leaders.

Until recently, the powerful heads of department at Slotsholmen could be awarded an annual bonus on the basis of their 'effort, results and qualifications'. But the payment was more or less automatic. Berlingske has reviewed all overviews of the heads of department's salaries from 2012 to 2021. The review shows that they almost always received a bonus. The bonuses did not reflect the individual performance of the individual head of department, but were a ritual exercise and an increase in the basic salary. The head of department in the Prime Minister's Office, Barbara Bertelsen, was given e.g. DKK 125,000 in one-off remuneration for her work in 2020, just a few months after all mink in Denmark were euthanized and that she had advised on the deletion of text messages, which, as is well known, later developed into a case of rubbish for the Prime Minister. In 2022, the bonuses were made permanent by making them a fixed part of the salary.

Many public managers receive the same bonus every year. They are obviously capable of delivering the same extraordinary performances year after year. A study of the salary conditions for 124 managers in the public agencies carried out by researchers from Aarhus University shows that there is no connection between the large bonuses and the extent to which the top managers have achieved the goals that were set at the start of the year. In the state, it is considered an achievement in itself to look after one's work. Public managers also receive bonuses when they do not deliver results. In 2016, three directors in Banedanmark were paid bonuses of DKK 100,000-125,000, even though they had not reached the targets set in connection with the bonus agreement.

An investigation carried out in 2019 showed that the state had never previously had an overview of the widespread practice of performance-based pay. This despite the fact that the scheme was introduced in 1988. At no time has the civil service examined the scope of performance pay or compliance with the rules. No politicians or public leaders have evidently found it necessary to supervise the use of taxpayers' money. And it's not because it's just small change. In 2016 alone, the state used DKK 663 million. DKK on bonuses for public managers. No one has ensured that this money was used responsibly and according to the applicable rules.

Corruption in the regions and municipalities
The number of public scandals reveals deep rot and corrupt management culture in Denmark, which otherwise prides itself on being the world's least corrupt country. A large number of public authorities were thus entangled in the largest bribery case in Danish history, the Atea case. 55 people have been charged in the extensive bribery case, including either current or former employees of, among others, The Municipality of Copenhagen, the Post Office, the Armed Forces, DSB, 3A-it, the National Police, Region Zealand, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Attorney General, DONG, the Defense Intelligence Service and the Correctional Service. From their jobs in ministries, agencies and other public authorities, they have received gifts in the form of mobile phones, tablets and other electronic equipment, visits to gourmet restaurants, luxury trips to Dubai, hotel stays, etc.

At a large conference on public procurement, which the IKA Association of public purchasers held in 2017, a number of private companies have lured the approx. 500 buyers from the state, regions and municipalities with prizes such as hotel stays and gift baskets. Since public servants are not allowed to receive gifts from private suppliers, the bribery has been camouflaged as a competition and raffle.

The members of the Capital Region's so-called diabetes committee have for several years received fees and shares from various pharmaceutical companies, primarily Novo Nordisk. It is obvious that when the doctors have ties to the pharmaceutical industry, their recommendations can be neither objective nor neutral.

In 2014, the abuse of research funds by prominent senior doctors at Rigshospitalet and other hospitals in the Capital Region was uncovered. The irregularities ranged from extravagant spending at restaurants and hotels to the purchase of art, furniture, wine and expensive designer glasses, annual salmon fishing trips in the Norwegians, payment of private debts and fees for spouses and children. 76 researchers were included in the study, which was carried out by the executive committee in the Capital Region. The cases have led to a number of police reports, charges and dismissals.


Nepotistic hiring has taken place in around 50 daycare centers in the Municipality of Copenhagen. The former Lord Mayor Frank Jensen and his top officials have tried to push Internal Audit, which has unearthed a number of inflammatory cases in the municipality.

At the end of September 2014, 42 politicians, managers and administrative consultants from the school area in Horsens Municipality went on a study trip to Canada. Later, 60 deputy inspectors and supervisors followed. The price was approx. DKK 24,000 per participants corresponding to almost 2.5 million DKK. The Parliament has carried out a survey which shows that 29 municipalities have had delegations in Canada. A total of 725 local politicians, officials and school staff have been on a trip to Canada at a total cost of DKK 11.5 million. DKK In the 1990s the trip went to New Zealand and Finland, in the 00s to Asia and Singapore. Education professor Per Fibæk Laursen from Aarhus University says that no one can demonstrate concrete educational results in schools from such expensive study trips to distant countries. The real explanation for the expensive municipal trips can only be that they are far more exotic and enjoyable than a cheap bus trip to the neighboring municipality to exchange experiences.

In every third municipality, the politicians come a long way when they need to be inspired for their political work. To New York, Toronto, Singapore – just name it. This is evident from an inspection of documents that Jyllands-Posten has obtained from 87 of the country's 98 municipalities. The material shows that most municipalities go on study trips within Europe's borders, but 33 municipalities – corresponding to one in three – have sent local politicians outside of Europe at least once. In Aarhus, city councilors have thus been on over 25 trips abroad, including to Canada, the USA and China. Together, the politicians in Aarhus have traveled for more than DKK 1.7 million. At the beginning of 2018, it emerged that directors and board members of a number of municipal and semi-public heating, electricity and waste companies have spent huge sums on luxury trips abroad. All at the expense of consumers.

The independent online media NB Kommune has reported that the municipalities use tax-funded spin people to embellish the municipal reality, which is misuse of taxpayers' money - in plain Danish: corruption. An estimate from NB Municipality shows that there are now at least 632 people working with mediation in the country's municipalities. This is explosive growth. In 2004, three out of four municipalities had no communications staff at all. It is the same development that is seen in Christiansborg, where an army of spin experts has occupied both ministries and the political parties. In politics, it is all about controlling history all the time, so that reality appears most advantageous to oneself. The Danes are therefore served an image of a municipal Disneyland with happy children in well-run children's institutions and schools, satisfied pensioners, well-functioning infrastructure, new parks and success in the local sports clubs. The conclusion is that the population ends up with a false, tax-financed glossy image of reality.

In all the examples above, we are talking about misuse of public funds - in plain Danish called corruption. The remarkable thing is that the corruption is completely legal and that no one in Denmark questions it. There are many examples of a public take-home board and a lack of care in the handling of entrusted funds. But in Denmark, which is world famous for its hygge, legalized misuse of public funds is not perceived as actual corruption, but as innocent hygge corruption.

It is part of the picture that Denmark is a small country where everyone knows everyone, and where it can be particularly difficult to prevent close personal ties between the civil service, the politicians and the business world. According to Transparency International's 2021 report, 25 per cent of the Danes surveyed that within the past 12 months they have used personal connections when they have had to use the public sector. One in four also believes that corruption in Denmark is increasing.

Corruption in the trade union movement
For decades, senior employees from Falck and 3F have traveled to warm climes in USA and Nicaragua prior to collective agreement negotiations. Critics call it cronyism, while the parties themselves call it common practice. Professor Henning Jørgensen from Aalborg University, who is one of the country's leading trade union experts, calls the trips problematic. 'We end up in an ethical quagmire. When you travel with those with whom you have to negotiate agreements, you have to ask if the role definition becomes unclear. This is not normal practice. It looks like some camaraderie with someone you actually have to fight with about agreements, and it will look like a couple dancing ballet rather than the boxing match that is agreement negotiations', he says.

If agreements are hammered out over a drink in Nicaragua, then the process smells more of camaraderie and covert agreements than the openness and mutual trust that the much-vaunted Danish model is said to be characterized by. The widespread pampering and cronyism in the trade union movement means that one can raise doubts about whether employers and employees can have confidence that their interests will be taken care of seriously during collective bargaining.

Corruption in Denmark's Radio
It caused outrage when it emerged in 2017 that DR had paid nearly DKK 70,000 for the transport of journalist Johannes Langkilde's wife's horse across the Atlantic in connection with Langkilde's employment as a US correspondent. And that DR's news director, Ulrik Haagerup, has spent DKK 571,841 over three years flying to work at the DR headquarters in Copenhagen from his home in Jutland. It didn't help the situation either, when it became known that the former media director, Gitte Rabøl, could keep his large salary in a new position as 'diversity consultant', which DR chairman Michael Christiansen had difficulty explaining the content of.

Corruption in business
The list of scams and scams in business grows and grows. It includes not only unknown companies, but also Danish icon companies such as FLSmidth, Mærsk, Hempel, Novo Nordisk, Burmeister & Wain Scandinavian Contractor, Carl Bro Gruppen, SAS, Danfoss, Grundfos and Atea.

Eight Danish banks helped bank customers to arrange themselves in tax shelters. The banks' internal audit and control departments have not checked whether the banks' customers are using accounts for tax evasion purposes, despite the fact that the banks otherwise emphasize to the outside world that they make a great effort in this area. A good 1,500 billion DKK, which, according to the authorities of several countries, originates from criminal activity, was in the period 2006-2015 taken to tax havens via accounts in Danske Bank and Nordea. For 12 years, Jyske Bank had Rifaat al Assad, the uncle of Syria's dictator Bashar al Assad, as a customer in the bank's branch in Gibraltar.

Denmark has a long tradition of cartel formation, and the number of cartel fines is rising sharply. Many of the largest cartel cases in Denmark have taken place in the construction industry. In Denmark's by far the largest cartel case, 33 construction companies have been suspected of illegal coordination of prices. 17 companies have chosen to accept fines of over DKK 25 million. DKK. But other industries can also participate. In the cartel case in the demolition industry in 2016, a number of the largest Danish demolition companies have been suspected of having shared information about each other's prices for years. Between 10-20 people and companies have been charged. Luftfartsselskabet SAS has been involved in cartel cases twice. Most recently, SAS was fined 70.2 million euros by the EU Commission in a major cartel case on freight prices. And in 2017, Carlsberg and Royal Unibrew were accused of coordinating prices and deliveries in Greenland.

In 2021, 18 discotheques and their joint purchasing company were fined up to DKK 278,000 for forming a cartel. They have had agreements not to open branches in each other's cities or within a 20 km radius of each other. Some agreements have been in place for over 15 years. It is the purchasing company NOX Network and 18 discotheques, mainly located in Jutland, that have acknowledged the offence. The violations have taken place for periods ranging from just under two years and up to 15 years. The fines were between DKK 28,000 and DKK 278,000.

Mistakes are made on the assembly line in Danish business when it comes to tax. In fact, almost seven out of ten Danish companies with less than 250 employees report incorrect figures to the tax authorities. Exactly 68 per cent fail. of the companies. And even if the majority are simple mistakes that are due to a lack of knowledge and not ill will, 12 per cent are of the companies - i.e. one in eight - involved in such gross errors that it can be interpreted by the Tax Agency as punishable attempts to defraud.

The Danes, and especially Danish farmers, are such upright and nice people that you can easily reduce the control of the aid millions that the EU system sends up to Denmark. This remarkable message has come from Venstre's EU parliamentarian, Morten Løkkegaard, who said in DR that 'one should not control the wrong people. When you are already the duke in the class, and all experience shows that the Danes and the Danish projects are, then there is no reason to take a huge control system over it'. Such. We already know the villains - they live down in Southern Europe somewhere. Løkkegaard's message is not bought in the EU. The Union's anti-fraud office, Olaf, has registered Danish fraud cases for over DKK 200 million over five years. DKK, with especially Danish farmers as the culprits.

The culprits investigate themselves
You might think that it is only in corrupt banana republics that the guilty investigate themselves, but they do so to a large extent in Denmark as well. In 2010, the Norwegian Armed Forces Audit Corps thus failed to go to Afghanistan to investigate the alleged killing of a five-year-old child by Danish soldiers. Instead, the auditors left it to the Danish military police in Helmand province to question soldiers and the victim's family. The interrogations were sent to the auditors, who in a report have cleared the soldiers of having done something wrong. The auditors have an independent status, and the military police do not. This therefore means that the military has examined itself.

'We have made mistakes, but have otherwise followed the law'. This is what the Norwegian Working Environment Authority concluded in 2011 in a report on the poisoning scandal at LM Wind Power, where thousands of workers have been exposed to the toxic substance styrene. Flemming Ibsen, professor at the Center for Labor Market Research at Aalborg University, believed that it was 'deeply problematic' that the Norwegian Working Environment Authority and the Norwegian Working Injuries Agency had investigated themselves. He believed that it was an expected acquittal.

In 2014, the police investigated themselves in cases of fire investigation where innocent people could have been convicted. 'It would have been better if an impartial party had investigated whether the police's fire investigation is good enough. The investigation is thorough, but when several experts both at home and abroad say that there have been serious mistakes in parts of the investigation, it is relevant that there are impartial people who investigate it', said Martin Henriksen (DF) to DR.

In September 2015, Djøf's Bo Smith committee came up with its report on the modern civil servant. According to Michael Gøtze, professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen, it appears that this is a party submission in support of the acquittal of the incompetent civil service apparatus.

In connection with the scandal in SKAT – also in 2015 – it was the Ministry of Taxation's internal audit, and not external impartial experts, who investigated the matter.

If a citizen wants to complain that the police e.g. has arrested the citizen, handcuffed him or thrown him into detention, the citizen must complain to the officer's chief, i.e. the director of police. These kinds of complaints make up more than half of all complaints about the police, according to a report made by DR2 Dokumentar in May 2018. Thus, the majority of complaints about the police are not dealt with by the Independent Police Complaints Authority (DUP), which was established in 2010 to strengthen people's trust that their complaint will be handled correctly and independently by the police.

In the teledata scandal in 2019, the Ministry of Justice investigated itself. Inger Støjberg, who was justice rapporteur for Venstre, wanted an impartial investigation into the teledata scandal. 'After all, there are people who are left behind, who ask themselves what kind of legal system we have. What we are witnessing is authorities investigating themselves. It is a Ministry of Justice that has examined itself and says that they just have to learn from their mistakes. It must be investigated much more thoroughly', said Inger Støjberg to TV2 News.

Most recently, following Berlingske's revelations about lost 112 calls, the politicians in the Capital Region adopted a draft for an internal investigation. It's just that the investigation had to be carried out by the region itself instead of external experts. 'Can you imagine other places where the accused is allowed to investigate his case himself? It is now and here that the region should show that it has the courage and will to put everything before external experts and get a completely unbiased assessment', said Finn Rudaizky, member of the regional council for the Danish People's Party.

Danish whistleblowers live a dangerous life
According to the whistleblower organization Blueprint for Free Speech, Denmark occupies a not particularly flattering place as number last in Europe when it comes to the real protection of whistleblowers who reveal corruption.

In several cases, the authorities have e.g. passed on confidential information about notifications of possible money laundering to the companies that have been in the spotlight. This has been concluded by FSR, the auditors' trade association, on the basis of inquiries from its members. The former director of the organisation, Charlotte Jepsen, has criticized the authorities' actions in the cases. 'The information is subject to confidentiality and non-disclosure for the person who informs, and therefore it is of course a serious problem both for the auditors and others - but also for legal certainty - that this kind of information is passed on', she said.

You might think that Danish diplomacy is the epitome of integrity, but even Danish diplomats cover up corruption. In 2019, Carlsberg's business partner in India and Nepal approached the Danish embassy in Singapore, where he warned that corruption and other possible illegalities were taking place in the brewery group. But instead of reporting the matter to the authorities, the ambassador chose to inform Carlsberg's Danish headquarters directly about both the content of the inquiry and the identity of the whistleblower.

Denmark has not adopted employment law provisions or other types of laws that protect whistleblowers against reprisals or dismissal. As a Danish citizen, you should therefore think carefully before contacting the Danish authorities with information about illegal activities. If you discover corruption and fraud at your workplace, it is wisest to look the other way.

The myth of the corruption-free Dane
When the myth of the corruption-free Dane is alive and well, it is because Transparency International's measurements are based on the subjective and highly colored assessments of the level of corruption in Denmark by Danish 'country experts'. It goes without saying that the 'country experts' use a propagandistic filter to portray Denmark in as positive a light as possible. Transparency International Denmark then forwards the experts' assessment of corruption in public Denmark to the head office, which takes it for granted. This is how the false image of Denmark as the least corrupt country in the world is built up.

The fact that Denmark is still number 1 is partly due to the fact that corruption in the private sector is not measured and included, and partly to the fact that many Danish corruption scandals are only mentioned in the local, Danish-language media. Without international publicity, no impact on Denmark's ranking in the corruption index. The list of conditions Transparency International does NOT include is long. This applies, for example, to conditions such as tax fraud, VAT fraud, bribery, cartels, money laundering, illegal work, etc.

Just imagine if the following corruption cases in the private sector were included in the Danish country experts' assessment: the Atea case, Nordea's shady banking dealings in the Panama Papers, Danske Bank's money laundering in Estonia, nepotism in the Armed Forces, fraud with dividend tax in the Ministry of Taxation and invoice fraud in the Defense Property Agency for just to name a few examples. All of this goes under the radar in Transparency International's corruption index. If that type of corruption was included in the index, Denmark would immediately lose its fine ranking.

The level of corruption cannot be proven
Although Transparency International claims that it can measure the level of corruption in Denmark, according to Christian Bjørnskov, who is professor of economics at Aarhus University and has researched corruption, it is really impossible to measure the level of corruption in a country on the basis of empirical data. There have been attempts to do so by comparing the number of fines, trials and convictions for corruption. However, the figures cannot be regarded as reliable measures of the level of corruption, but rather as an expression of how effectively a country's media, prosecution and courts detect, investigate and prosecute corruption.

Denmark is downgraded to 'moderately corrupt'
In 2021, Transparency International has placed Denmark, which for several years has been placed in the category with a 'low' risk of corruption, in the 'moderately corrupt' category, together with countries such as Italy, Columbia, France and India. This is due to the significant increase in cases of corruption, fraud, abuse of office and nepotism in the defense sector, especially in the personnel sector and in arms procurement. Transparency International points to, among other things that there is a 'very high risk' of corruption in connection with Denmark's missions abroad, where the employees lack both precautions and training to avoid corruption, and that the Ministry of Defense abuses sections of the Public Disclosure Act to keep documents secret.

Power corrupts. It does so in all countries. Also in Denmark. The actual corruption in this country is more widespread than you think. However, it is often handled internally and thus under the public's radar. The corruption that you hear about in the Danish media is therefore only the tip of the iceberg.
Times are changing.
 
Trond Harald Haaland has been forcibly admitted to the psychiatric ward in Stavanger for nine days due to a post on Facebook that was reported as a report of concern.
he is fortunately acquitted, but it is a worrying incident when a doctor can forcefully commit a person when she has not even read the posts.

 
Denmark and the Marshall Plan, an example of how US aid paved the way for increased US dominance
To understand the current influence of the US and aligned forces in and on Denmark, it helps to go back to how the US increased its influence through the Marshall Plan.

Recently, I encountered a memoir by Erik Ib Smidt, who was a high ranking official in the Ministry of Finance. The Danish title is: Fra Psykopatklubben, Erindringer og optegnelser, which translates to From the club of psychopaths, memories and records. What caught the attention was of course the title, which referred to a remark from a former Prime Minister, Hilmar Baunsgaard who
used the term in a conversation under four eyes about a particular group of people on Slotsholmen, (the parliament building and seat of the Government), It was the small group of economists which in the years after WW2 had moved forward to top positions in a number of ministries. Most of them knew each other from their student time in the 1930ies, when they had participated in various left wing activities, not least in the Association of Socialist Economists.
However, what I found most interesting are his description of the political dealings in relation to the US and NATO, though the space they take up is limited. Below are some, mainly DeepL translated quotes:

Linking the Marshall Plan with Cold War defence spendings
The first excerpt is a comment on the relation between the US and Denmark. After WWII, the country needed money, but as time passed it became clear there were several strings attached.
Harsh American demands

It was understandable and acceptable that the US government interfered quite extensively in the distribution and use of Marshall Aid in each country, as long as its purpose was to promote economic reconstruction. But in the final years of the Marshall Plan, when NATO policy had moved to the forefront as the central theme of foreign policy, there was a conflation of Marshall aid and defense policy that we certainly did not like. The motive had now become to get the Danish rearmament going.

The ball was opened at a meeting in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on November 19, 1951, i.e. in the final phase of the Marshall Plan.

"Here they unexpectedly linked the question of the allocation of dollar aid in 1951/1952 with the question of a very substantial increase in Denmark's defense effort in the current fiscal year," reads a memo from November 20. November 1951 from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to the Government's Finance Committee; and it goes on to state very bluntly that Denmark can "secure a firm commitment of a total of 30 million dollars against a commitment to increase defense spending from DKK 650 million to DKK 840 million in the financial year 1951/51" (This 30 million dollars was hardly the actual Marshall Aid, which was distributed via OEEC).

In the meeting on the 19th, which I attended together with a few people from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Trade, we expressed the view that it was "quite unrealistic" to spend DKK 840 million on defense in the financial year 1951/52.

Gunnar Seidenfaden, Head of Office in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who had chaired the meeting, wrote the following day a draft of an internal memo.

"Already this somewhat brutal way in which the Americans are trying to pressure the Danish government into an increased defense effort, which will raise a large number of complicated economic, technical and internal political problems (...) seems to indicate that Denmark must choose to adopt a wait-and-see attitude (...)

However, it must be recognized that the policy pursued - or not pursued - by Denmark during the Marshall period with regard to making itself independent of extraordinary dollar support makes it necessary for the Danish government to disregard proud sovereignty views and make a realistic assessment of whether one or the other alternative will lead to the least burdensome defense effort and the greatest possible dollar support."

(p. 272 -273)
For adding context to the above, an entry from an article published by University of Aarhus is helpful. If translated, it reads:
The political significance of the Marshall Plan
The Marshall Plan had both economic and political objectives that were closely linked. The US wanted to strengthen the European market, as the Americans had a strong interest in helping a weakened Europe. They feared the rise of communism and wanted to prevent political chaos in the crisis-stricken European countries. Thus, the aid program became a part of the Cold War, and it helped to bring Western European countries like Denmark closer to the United States. The Soviet Union had also received the offer, but turned it down because, for security policy reasons, it did not want to involve the US or other countries in the Union's economy, which the Americans had demanded of the recipient countries. In this way, the Soviet response was a foregone conclusion.

The Marshall Plan was a highly successful American foreign policy initiative during the Cold War, and it was accompanied by massive propaganda from the US side and counter-propaganda from the Soviet side. The propaganda was aimed at European countries in both the East and West. The Soviets ran a campaign in Eastern Europe against American "dollar imperialism" and also prevented Eastern European countries and Finland from receiving aid. US propaganda, on the other hand, was based on American ideals such as democracy, prosperity and consumption, i.e. a capitalist ideology. Later, the Americans also used the aid to pressure Denmark and other Western European countries to increase their defense budgets. This meant a reduction in Marshall Aid to Denmark in 1951/52, as the Danish government insisted that defense budgets should be negotiated within NATO and not bilaterally with the US alone. From 1953, Denmark refrained from applying for further aid.
Returning to the memoir, the US not only wanted to influence markets and defence spendings, it also wanted to influence foreign policies...
The Danish government's position was unequivocally that it wanted to maintain the traditional peaceful relations with its large neighbor to the east, and no less that it wanted to take advantage of the benefits of expanding trade eastwards. A highly controversial part of this was our export of tankers. Despite strong American protests, the government carried out several agreed deliveries and in return was able to secure the import of coal and grain and animal feed etc. from the East.

These were views I expressed at the meetings in Paris as well as in many lectures, including at the NATO Defense College, where officers from all NATO countries underwent training. At one of the lectures here, I said that many Danes were deeply concerned to see that a person like MacCarthy could play such a dominant role in the United States and that one of the member countries of the alliance, Portugal, was a dictatorship. This remark caused a Portuguese captain among the participants to stand up and leave in protest. He then complained to the course leader, with whom I had a conversation. There I stated that it was undeniable that there was a dictatorship in Portugal and that it was causing outrage among many in Denmark. However, I omitted the remark when I next gave the lecture (p. 288-289)
The above sensible wishes from the Danish Government, to trade east considering the nearness of the Soviet Union, are certainly not honoured today The ability to identify so fully with US self interests, that it has practically buried its own, is characteristic for the situation in a few other European countries as well, partially buried under the pretexts of the need to implement Green policies.

More comment about the American way of handling the Marshall plan
One can ask if a Danish refusal to receive the Marshall help, which could have meant a prolongation of hardships, would have changed the dependency of Denmark to the western block. I think it is unrealistic, given the political constellations at the time. For context, here are more translated notes from the article from Aarhus University:

Crisis and reconstruction after World War 2
The end of World War 2 meant that Denmark had to find its place in the new world community. Many countries had been hit hard by the war, and in this context, the Marshall Plan (European Recovery Program, ERP) played a significant role in the development of Europe, including Denmark. The Marshall Plan was named after its originator, the American General and Secretary of State George C. Marshall, who was one of the United States' most influential leaders. Marshall, who was one of America's most pivotal strategists of the 20th century. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1953 for his role in the rebuilding of Europe.

In a speech at Harvard University on June 5, 1947, U.S. Secretary of State George C. Marshall expressed his willingness to help Europe out of the economic crisis the continent was in. The message was that healthy economies would ensure political stability. This was the core of the Marshall Plan as expressed here: avoiding political chaos, as seen in the previous 30 years of two world wars and the rise of totalitarian regimes. The greatest threat from an American perspective was now communism, and it had to be contained and limited. In this struggle, the Marshall Plan was of great importance, and it also became part of the escalation of the Cold War while contributing to the reconstruction of Western Europe and the economic integration of the participating countries.

Danish support for the 1948 plan

In the first post-war period, Denmark had tried the so-called non-bloc policy, in which they unsuccessfully attempted to stay out of the bloc division of Europe that was developing. However, after unsuccessful attempts to create a Nordic defense alliance, Denmark chose to join the Atlantic Alliance (NATO) in 1949, becoming a full-fledged Western ally. However, joining the Marshall Plan in 1948 was an early sign that Denmark belonged to the Western bloc.

The Social Liberal Party was extremely skeptical about leaving the non-bloc policy. The Social Democratic Party and the bourgeois parties were also concerned about the design of the Marshall Plan and the demands that would follow. Danish sovereignty and the right to self-determination were at the heart of these concerns, but Denmark needed the financial contribution, so it agreed to the plan. When the plan was passed by the Danish Parliament in April 1948, only the Communist Party of Denmark voted against it. The DKP did not want to lean on the United States, as the party was afraid of becoming part of American foreign policy. Furthermore, it was linked to the Soviet Union for obvious ideological reasons.
[...]
The economic importance of the Marshall Plan
The economic dimension of the Marshall Plan was also central to the Americans, as they had a strong economic interest in being able to export goods to a large and strong European market. Part of the Marshall Plan strategy was also to liberalize the European market and create economic cooperation between the countries. This was to be administered through the OEEC (Organization for European Economic Cooperation), where membership was a prerequisite for receiving aid.

The total Marshall Aid amounted to approximately USD 13 billion, of which Denmark received USD 305 million (over DKK 30 billion in 2010 exchange rates) in the period 1948-53, of which USD 33 million were loans and the rest were grants. The dollar subsidy provided vital leeway in the crisis-stricken Danish economy, where there was a shortage of dollars for imports. The leeway was used to import key goods such as animal feed and metals as well as important technology, especially from the US, so that industry and agriculture could be developed. However, it took until the late 1950s for Denmark's economy to really take off.
Since Denmark and Germany were closely linked economically, it is possible that no Marshall help would to Denmark would not have meant so much after all, as the Danish recovery only really began in earnest in the late 1950ies. But then what if Germany had not received Marshall help? Like that, one can ask questions. Here is the Wiki for the Marshall plan.


Daily living before and during WWII
Other quotes from the book, unrelated to foreign policy, might serve as inspiration for an eventual collapse of the US world, that Scandinavia is rather tightly linked with.


The first concerns the author as a young man. On his professor's recommendation, he went on a study trip to Berlin in 1932-33. In the end, however, the house he lived in was subjected to a Nazi raid in late February 1933, and the almost finished manuscript for his thesis in experimental psychology, along with his private library, was confiscated and destroyed. Before the next university course, where he switched to economics, he went to the Soviet Union for four months in the summer of 1933, and translated literature to be published in Denmark. The description of life in Moscow includes lines about the place he lived.

The daily bread
Bent's accommodation was rather primitive; he lived in one of the housing complexes built exclusively for the numerous foreign experts who were called in to help realize the many ambitious projects of the five-year plans. But Bent only had a modest 8 m2 room equipped with a bed, closet, table and two chairs and access to a shared bathroom, toilet and kitchen. I had to lie directly on the floor in my sleeping bag.
[...]
Lunch was provided at the workplace as part of the salary.
[...]
Lunch consisted of an inch-thick hunk of black rye bread, chleb or "sleve" in Old Danish, and a slice of sausage, sometimes also some crunchy black "caviar". In addition water or lemonade.

It happened that there was only bread, and also that it was announced that "unfortunately" no food had arrived for us today. (p 99-100)
The story about the engineer that made room for his friend even though he only had 8 m2 including furniture, shows that a lot of space can be found if the conditions require, and people are willing.

Back in Denmark, having completed the second education a few years later and married, WWII began, and new problems arose for Schmidt and his family:
Coping with shortages during WWII
Although the various substitute goods helped fill in the gaps, people gradually realized that there were other ways to get by.

First and foremost, most of us learned to keep our stuff. Old clothes could be re-sewn, perhaps into children's clothes. Inga competed with her mother to sew old sheets into diapers for Søren. Curtains, bedding, carpets, etc. that under normal circumstances would have been replaced were used for a few more years. "It will have to wait until the war is over" was the constant refrain. This also applied to furniture and other household goods. If wooden furniture broke so badly that it was not worth repairing, it was chopped into kindling and put in the fireplace or stove.

Food rations could be "stretched", nothing was allowed to go to waste. Leftovers were carefully stored for later consumption, even though refrigerators were a relatively unknown concept. Anything that could be reused in some way was put aside. If nothing else, there would come a day when someone in the family or circle of friends might need it.

Gardeners had their heyday. It was no longer about flowers and ornamental shrubs, but useful things like potatoes, carrots and tomatoes, as well as blackcurrants, redcurrants, gooseberries, etc. Many people who didn't already have a garden or allotment rented a small plot of land where they could grow potatoes, etc. The City of Copenhagen was helpful in making some of its land available for this purpose.

Collecting berries, rose hips and mushrooms in forests, fields and public spaces became a passion and science for many. Inga and I found out where we could get our bike baskets filled with mushrooms when we went on our Sunday bike rides with the kids.

When we couldn't get warm enough in the living rooms during the very cold winters we had in those years, we had to put on more clothes. It was good to get hold of woollen underwear, and never have so many thick woollen sweaters, socks, etc. been knitted (p. 208-209)

First-hand impressions, as in a memoir, add colour to dry historical analysis and descriptions.
Reading the book helped me to revisit the history that has led to the situations we have today, and I think to understand the people who are strongly influenced by the US initiatives to take over the foreign policy after WWII, still believing that the Marshall plan was US charity, and think this in general is what guides US foreign policy, say in Ukraine. While arguing against such views, often bring little to those who hold them, I do think it helps for my patience.
 
⚠️ Pipeline Finland - Estonia, possible explosion
10 Oct 2023

I didn't know exactly where to put this, and thought neither Gas explosions nor Russia-Ukraina conflict fit, so I put it here instead. TG "Slavyangrad" reported first about it, but then i bumped into another article via X (Twitter) later.

IMAGE-2023-10-11-01-44-14.jpg

So; here is the first text from TG "Slavyangrad" as follow

The Balticconnector, an undersea gas pipeline between Finland and Estonia, has been shut down due to an unusual drop in pressure, with sabotage being suspected as the cause, although there is no confirmation yet

Finland's president stated that the pipeline suffered damage due to an "external influence." Officials are being cautious in their statements, but Bloomberg reports that the leading hypothesis is sabotage.

In response to this situation, gas prices in Europe surged by 12% to reach $534 per cubic unit.
Balticconnector connects the gas transport networks of Estonia and Finland, playing a crucial role in the regional gas market.
A significant press conference on this matter is expected this evening.

And later following X entry


Norwegian independent seismic monitoring foundation NORSAR:"NORSAR have detected a probable explosion along the Finnish coast of the Baltic Sea at 01:20 (local time in Finland) on 8th October 2023. This explosion was detected using stations in Finland."


Image
 
Last edited:
⚠️ Pipeline Finland - Estonia, possible explosion
10 Oct 2023

I didn't know exactly where to put this, and thought neither Gas explosions nor Russia-Ukraina conflict fit, so I put it here instead. TG "Slavyangrad" reported first about it, but then i bumped into another article via X (Twitter) later.

View attachment 83083

So; here is the first text from TG "Slavyangrad" as follow



And later following X entry


Cross-post from the energy shortage thread:

Potential Food and Energy Shortage Across the World
 
Back
Top Bottom