• 2 Posts
  • 10 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • Jag har nĂ„gra frĂ„gor till er i trĂ„den som Ă€r för fastighetsskatt. För egen del kan jag anse att det vore bra eftersom det antagligen skulle dĂ€mpa de skenande huspriserna vi sett sedan sekelskiftet.

    Men jag har hört nÄgra invÀndningar som jag funderar över. Dels kan husÀgare som rÄkar ut för gentrifiering i omrÄdet eller förlust av inkomst, trots vÀrdeökning i en fastighet, hamna i ett lÀge dÄ de inte ha nÄgra reella medel att betala fastighetsskatten med. PÄ snarlikt tema uppstÄr frÄgan om vi inte dÄ av rÀttviseskÀl ocksÄ behöver införa förmögenhetsskatt igen? Fastigheter kan ses som en slags placering, varför inte beskatta en aktieportfölj pÄ motsvarande sÀtt? En annan Àr att investeringen som ett husköp innebÀr för en privatperson sker med redan beskattad inkomst som dÄ blir beskattad tvÄ gÄnger, dessutom kontinuerligt före en eventuell placeringsvinst Àr uttagen, till skillnad igen frÄn den dÀr aktieportföljen.


  • Sweden is definitively a part of the problem. Everyone needs to make changes. On an individual level, as a community, state, and internationally. And, like everyone else, Sweden too can do more than one thing at a time. There is nothing stopping Sweden from both 1) do everything in their power to clean up their own act and go all in on renewables, while they also 2) act forcefully on the international scene to get other states to do the same thing.

    Besides, while the carbon emissions per capita in Sweden isn’t the worst of the bunch, we’re not the best either. We’re still a net-producer of carbon emissions. That must stop.

    In addition Sweden and Swedes are ideal placed to improve on this area. We have very good living standards, are well educated and have a high tech industry, are resource rich as a country and have a high GDP. We can make huge changes without hurting our quality of life. I’d rather see that we sacrifice more of our comfortable life, if that means that less fortunate people around the world can leave poverty, poor health and bad living conditions behind.




  • It’s a waste spending time and money on nuclear today. Building a nuclear plant takes a decade and costs more than renewables. Better to go all in on renewable sources, especially wind and solar power.

    Sweden, like many other countries, already experience a huge interest in, and investments and production of renewables. Why not build on that? It’s less expensive, has faster time to market, and results in a more resilient power grid when large single points of failure can be avoided.

    What is sorely needed in Sweden is making it easier to getting approval for building wind turbines, especially at sea where noise and light pollution is a non-issue, and power grid improvements to support distribution from these new production sites. One area where government support could be really useful is investing in large scale energy storage to be able to deal with peak load.



  • AFAIU. Swedish regulations as a general principle state that arms cannot be sold to states that are either, actively engaged in a military conflict, have a non-democratic rule, or violates human rights.

    The catch is that there are some exceptions in the law which are often used as a loop hole. F.x Sweden sell arms to Saudi Arabia, USA, Pakistan, and Thailand. All of whom violates one or more of those rules to some extent.

    So in reality that law does not stop Sweden from supplying Ukraine with arms, and indeed Sweden has already repeatedly supplied Ukraine with weapons after February 2022.