• stoy@lemmy.zip
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    8 months ago

    Swede here, shit is BAD, but this is relative to how things used to be before this shit started, so in relative global terms Sweden is still a damn good place to live.

    That being said, this behavior should be seen as a warning to not take culture clashes lightly.

    I am sure I am going to catch a lot of heat for this, but damn it, it needs to be said.

    The gangs we see are a direct result of a terribly run migration policy.

    We have taken in far, far, far too many migrants in a way, way, way too short ammount of time.

    This combined with a integration policy that keeps failing over and over as we continously refuse to enforce even the most basic attempt by migrants to integrate. There are many migrants who has lived in Sweden for many years without speaking either Swedish or English, they still have a right to free interpretors when dealing with doctors and government services, this is fucking mental.

    We have punnishments and laws fitting Swedes from the 1960s or so, they don’t do shit against the modern gangs.

    So what needs to be done?

    Start actually deporting criminals, log their DNA and give them a lifetime ban on returning, check all migrants against this database.

    To those born in Sweden, start instituting extra long prison terms for criminals who keep reoffending.

    Enforce learning the Swedish language and check compliance with in-person tests, and mandatory lessons. If you need an interpreter after 3 years, you have to pay for it yourself.

    • Geth@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      8 months ago

      Wait, why would anyone have the right to free interpreters at any time? That sounds like such a waste of public resources and like you said, enables people to never even try to learn the language.

      • stoy@lemmy.zip
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        8 months ago

        As an initial concept, it is resonable to help people get the care they need even if they don’t speak the language, but after 5 years of working to live here you should be expected to be able to communicate without an interpreter, even if it is not fluent.

    • Ifera@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I am down with this and even some more, except regarding having to pay for interpreters after 3 years. Working folks are hardly going to have the time to learn a whole ass language to proficiency in just 3 years, especially with kids to take care of

      • franglais@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        I moved to France,not able to speak a word, and within 3 years, I was working in a french only environment. It’s difficult, and I won’t pretend that everyone will have my luck, and opportunities,but it’s not unreasonable either.

        • Ifera@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Good for you, but an older person, especially near retiring age would not be able to pick up a language that quickly normally. Especially with the depth required to handle complex legal or medical matters, while also working full time just to make ends meet. And if on top of that, they are taking care of kids, which is a very common scenario for older migrants, that seems like too much of a stretch.

          • franglais@lemm.ee
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            8 months ago

            I agree, it’s very difficult to change habits as you get older, but the hardest thing is to put yourself out there, and not be afraid of making mistakes, and actually put in the monumental effort required to integrate. Older people who I have met, are more likely to find a bubble of people who speak the same language. I was lucky, I was only 28 when I arrived, and my wife is french, hence why I am lucky.

            • Ifera@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              It is not so much a matter of changing habits, often migrants such as my parents take their elderly with them to the new country, leave their kids with them, and go to work, so their elderly parents get stuck in a new country, without speaking the language and being basically the only guardian their grandkids have.

              Hell, my grandmother went from being a teacher in the old country, to a nanny who never managed to learn how to speak the local language, despite learning how to read and write in it, to a college level.

              Most languages are far from phonetically true, and a lot of languages lack written accents. Things aren’t as black and white as you make them seem.

        • Valmond@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          I needed over 10 yeara before I was able to communicatd “OK”, 20 to be fluent in French.

          Everyone isn’t a language god like you.

          • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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            8 months ago

            If you are fully immersed in another language, it shouldn’t take 10 years to have a coversational skill level. It’s on you.

            • Valmond@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              Lets take this conversation to French.

              I mean if you are not a little lying bitch :-)

              Also you’re goalposting so hard, like now it’s having a “conversional skill”, go write some French lol.

              • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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                8 months ago

                D’accord. On peut parler en français si tu veux.

                Imagine utiliser un ordinateur chaque jour pendant 10 ans et ne pas savoir comment l’utiliser. Est-ce que c’est un problème de l’outil qui est trop difficile ou un problème utilisateur?

                Si pendant 10 ans , tu résides dans un pays sans en apprendre le langage, est-ce que c’est un problème du langage ou de la personne qui le parle?

                Les vieilles personnes sont capables d’apprendre, bien qu’en vieillissant, notre capacité d’assimilation de l’information et de la connaissance diminue. Il faut donc mettre plus d’effort pour apprendre, mais rien d’impossible.

                De mon expérience, les vieilles personnes qui n’ont jamais appris la langue de leur pays d’accueil, c’est parce qu’il se sont toujours fiés à quelqu’un d’autre pour traduire. Ce n’est pas un problème d’apprentissage, c’est un problème d’attitude. C’est acceptable au début lorsque la personne arrive fraichement dans le pays d’accueil, mais si après 10 ans, il te faut encore un traducteur pour commander au restaurant, c’est un problème de ne jamais avoir essayé.

                Enfin, mon point initial a toujours été d’avoir un niveau conversationnel, pas technique.

                Même dans notre langue maternelle, c’est normal de ne pas comprendre le jargon technique.

                Edit: j’ai changé un mot pour que mon français soit plus neutre.

  • ExtremeDullard@lemmy.sdf.org
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    8 months ago

    I asked Finnish colleagues what they thought of the situation in Sweden - and not just the latest events, but how the country has turned evermore violent and dangerous for the past 20 years. They told me quite unapologetically: “Well, the Swedes opened their borders wide to all kinds of people from wildly different cultural backgrounds coming from really troubled countries and the Finns haven’t. Now they have the problems those people brought with them and we don’t.”

    I’m starting to think there’s some truth to this. But as a foreigner, whenever I go to Finland, the reverse - the lack of cultural diversity, the sea of whiteness and the absolute lack of non-Finnish-sounding names - is equally unsettling, rather stifling and feels genuinely bizarre sometimes.

    I guess you can’t have the best of both worlds…

    • Wolo@lemmy.wtf
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      8 months ago

      Which is kind of hilarious since Finland has a much higher murder rate than Sweden.

    • AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space
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      8 months ago

      Sweden also is a sea of whiteness, beyond a small number of BAME immigrants often concentrated in banlieue-like outer suburbs and the adoption of kebab-meat pizza as a comfort food. Even in Stockholm, it’s a lot less diverse than, say, Paris or Berlin.

    • DessertStorms@kbin.social
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      8 months ago

      I guess you can’t have the best of both worlds

      Of course you can, you just have to not maintain an exclusive society, because an exclusive society depends on excluding others, and when the “others” can’t be excluded anymore, that’s when the full blown racism kicks in. Knowing that people see racism as some inevitability rather than a deliberate system of oppression created and imposed by individuals who benefit from its existence (if to varying degrees) is pretty fucking terrifying.

      The idea that there was no crime before immigration, or that the Finns (or Nordic people in general, who all maintain a similar society and are facing similar issues with racism now that they can’t maintain their white supremacist exclusivity anymore) are innocent little lambs who have never committed a crime before the brown people arrived is not only absurd, it’s pretty racist and disgusting in its own right.

      They love to laud themselves as the best most developed most progressive countries, but the reality is they’re just a couple of decades, if not a century behind the rest of Europe when it comes to integration (this does not equal equity or equality, just integration), and are following exactly the same route as the other countries have - capitalist government and the media that supports it need a scapegoat (who they’ve rigged the system against so they’d have to struggle by default, living in poverty, feeling excluded, attacked for their race) to shift blame and attention to, while they continue to exploit the people of their country (the fact that there are Nordic billionaires easily contradicts any claim to socialism they might raise, and you don’t need to look far to thoroughly debunk it altogether).

      The fact that you’re an immigrant and are seriously considering there’s some truth in this racism is pretty fucking sad and scary, but mostly goes to show just how powerful the propaganda is (and how similar it is in all countries, which is probably why it hits a nerve with you even though you don’t live there).

    • Iceblade@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      As a Swede, I sometimes wonder if I would feel more at home moving to one of the other Scandinavian countries - because I don’t really feel at home here anymore.

  • Drinvictus@discuss.tchncs.de
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    8 months ago

    It all comes down to Erdogan. He’s the one harboring the heads of these criminal organizations because they pay him well. The Turkish government essentially became a part of a drug empire.

    • stoy@lemmy.zip
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      8 months ago

      Ok, I’ll bite, how would you solve the current problem with gangs in Sweden?

      This is a giant clash of cultures, covering you wars and shouting “Racist” over and over will acchive nothing.

      So let’s hear it, how do you suggest solving the current situation?

      Or have you just come to whine?

      • Plastic_Ramses@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        How about identifying why these people are joining gangs rather than just “brown people join gangs because theyre brown”

        Perhaps its because they are treated differently than their swedish compatriots or perhaps its a socioeconomic reason.

        Sadly, i do not have the ability to conjecture without data. However, i can make one thing clear. Theyre not joining gangs “just because”.

      • Jimmycakes@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        In America migrants just want to be as American as possible as quickly as possible. We don’t have the experience to help you with this one thing. Americans also just learn Spanish for the largest foreign group between their broken English and our broken Spanish we can work out most things no need for state sponsored translators that is a ludacris idea.

      • stoy@lemmy.zip
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        8 months ago

        lol.

        It’s not like you offer any suggestions on how to solve the situation. You are just whining.

        • Plastic_Ramses@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          And its not like europeans are offering any solutions beyond the right-wing-US style of thinking of these people are foreign and are bad.

  • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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    8 months ago

    I though that part of Europe was suppose to be Utopian? I guess everyone focuses on the positive from an international perspective. Regardless, I still know nothing about Sweden other than it is the headquarters of Ikea