MichaelReilly wrote:Hrafn wrote:the Left Party's "feminism" is in reality only hatred against white european men is no news.
You white European men are so oppressed.
How do you even get out of bed in the morning with all that persecution you're the victim of?
Elf wrote:Sadly the Centre party could have a lot of potential as representatives of a green libertarianism/conservatism from the countryside. In an alternative dimension where Sweden is less crazy I could see myself in C. But it's been screwed over by the faction called "Stureplancentern" several times over who combine the (imho) worst tendencies in contemporary libertarianism and ecologism. Stureplan (Sture's Plaza) is a hideously run-down place in central Stockholm most famous for its giant concrete mushroom where people from the countryside come in Dressmann suits and buy drinks for like 20 dollars and think they've suddenly turned into brats. If you've ever been outside Sweden - I have a friend who makes digital models of luxurious apartments in Tel Aviv for instance - you know something about how ridiculous it is when wannabe upper class folks think they're something because they hang out there.
The article was kinda... "interesting" in general. A lot of cherry-picking, imho, to "prove" the rebirth of some sort of indigenous "radical conservatism", because a guy had written a book about some old Swedish conservative thinkers who were opposed to universal suffrage or whatever... The journalist was with us for like 6 hours, she was quite charming... and these where the quotes she chose. I have a feeling I won't be invited to Punsch evenings at Heimdal (which is sort of like a Swedish version of the Conservative Monday Club) anytime soon. To be fair, she told me that she had met some identitarians over there, and IIRC I was kinda referring to those and not Heimdal as a whole in that quote..[...] On his arm he has a tattoo of Aslan, "who is like God in Narnia". He talks lyrically about how the best fantasy series are based on a kind of longing for family, nation and religion and after filling the sense of rootlessness with something.
[Elf], 24, who became Catholic at the age of 14 and is critical of Islam, thinks the SD's major problems are so called “friends of Sweden” on the internet.
"There is this swamp of whiny Gothenburgers like Joakim Lamotte, Marcus Birro and Ingrid Carlqvist as well as literal Nazis, everyone is welcome as long as they feel offended. Kent Ekeroth and Björn Söder are becoming more and more of a burden for the party. I'd rather look to the right-wing faction of the Young Christian Democrats. Paula Bieler would make a good party leader.
The difference feminist Bieler, who has attended several meetings of the Conservative League, is visibly admired by all around the table. [Another guy], board member of KDU Lidingö, agrees:
"It feels as if the line of succession of the party is quite certain.”
[Elf] is happy to take a stance against what he considers dubious elements in the conservative movement. When the SDU was kicked out of the mother party, he and two friends celebrated at Wijnja's Wine and Cheese Bar in Stockholm.
"It is easy to become nerdy about conservatism. At the Heimdal student league, there's probably a lot of people who think they understand truths others don't. There is a spiritual bond between them and the Identitarian movement - both think that they belong to an “elite“ who have the answers no one else has. Heimdal is their “safe space”, where they can say what they want, where they can sit and listen to fascist music without anything happening.”
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