Julian Assange's
case exposes the prevailing doctrine of state feminism in Sweden and its
accompanying propaganda machinery.
It is a machinery where
man-hating radical feminists with no grasp of feminism's legacy, journalists
who wield power but have no real understanding of the purpose of journalism,
and members of the judicial system who want to make a career out of the equal
rights and opportunities doctrine work hand in hand.
What is happening
in Sweden today is unworthy of a country that calls itself a democracy.
But that's not all!
Julian Assange's case has revealed the true face of Swedish patriotism as well.
Whosoever dares criticize this propaganda machinery risks being either ignored
or condemned through guilt by association.
But
I take this risk because, after all, I am a journalist and a feminist in
Sweden, and the right of freedom of expression also applies to me, even if I am
critical.
Julian Assange’s
affairs in Stockholm opened the floodgates for the downgraded variants of
feminism and journalism that are present in Sweden today.
The preliminary
investigation protocol detailing Julian Assange's liaisons with two women makes
for shocking reading for a Swedish feminist pioneer of the 1970s.
I am one of those
who, as the host for many years of the legendary women's program Radio Ellen on
Swedish Radio, fought for women’s rights and equality between the sexes.
I could never have
dreamt that a legitimate struggle for equal rights and opportunities for both
women and men would degenerate into state feminism devoid of common sense and
reason.
Those of us who
pioneered feminism in Sweden in the 1970s fought for our sexual freedom and for
the right to take responsibility for ourselves, but we also fought to be able
to, like men already do, enjoy sex.
Sexual liberation
went hand-in-hand with the demand that we as women must be able to support
ourselves and not be economically dependent on men. This is essential because
only when we women are economically independent will we be able say 'no' if we
feel we are being sexually used. Being a feminist is not about hating men.
Feminism is about strengthening women’s self esteem, not about making ourselves
into victims or being categorized by the state as victims by default.
But in today's
feminist Sweden, the following can happen. In the preliminary investigation
minutes for the case of Julian Assange in Sweden, I read: Woman A. says about
her relationship with Julian Assange: "I was proud as hell to get the
world's coolest man in bed and living in my apartment." After having sexual
intercourse on numerous occasions, she goes to the police.
How did Sweden's
sexual revolution of the 1970s transform into an oppressive 21st
century power apparatus where men are portrayed as potential enemies and
threats to the state? A state in which those who criticize the prevailing
system are denied a voice in the media.
Liberation feminism
was hijacked in the late 1980s when it was disarmed and renamed 'Jämställdhet'
(the equal rights and opportunities doctrine) and co-opted into the power
apparatus. Jämställdhet became the
state norm and an ideology in Sweden. And it became a career ladder, especially
in politics, civil service and in the judicial system.
Many pioneering
feminists disappeared into Swedish universities, where they transformed our
struggle into 'scientific knowledge', and became elite feminists. They got
money from the State, as universities in Sweden are publicly funded. Instead of
talking about 'the sexes' they started talking about 'genders', and the
struggle no longer focused on transforming the state apparatus: it switched to
targeting the male sex and men as sexual creatures. The present totalitarian
gender ideology was also promoted by the Swedish media, which does what is
required from it by the State.
In today's Sweden,
the media is dedicated to educating the population rather than to keeping power
in check.
When it comes to
Julian Assange there are, naturally, underlying motivations. He challenged
media by doing what every journalist dreams of: a global Scoop!
What Julian Assange
and WikiLeaks did was wound the pride of many journalists.
Every journalist
dreams of getting The Scoop, but very few manage to pull it off.
The Swedish tabloid
Expressen tried to turn Julian Assange himself into the scoop with the
headline: "Manhunt for Wikileaks Julian Assange - suspected of rape in
Sweden."
Some hours later
the investigation was cancelled. It was later re-opened by a new prosecutor,
Marianne Ny, who clearly holds radical feminist views. She collaborates with
the politician, lawyer, and former Jämställdhet
ombudsman, Claes Borgström.
And now it’s not
only the two women who voluntarily invited Julian Assange to their homes and
slept with him several times before they discovered that he was simply a normal
horny man. Now, the media too had discovered that Julian Assange was not some
saint, but a typical horny man.
But the
bloodthirsty media forces initiated a hunt without checking the facts of the
case and without waiting for a trial. Instead, the media became judge and jury
because the politically correct approach in today’s Sweden is that women are
always victims and are blameless when it comes to sex.
That fact that the
media behaves like some kind of people’s court of mob justice in the case of
Julian Assange is very serious; the media whipping up a hostile sentiment
against Julian Assange before he has even been brought to trial in a Swedish
court is in violation of his human rights. It is a grave state of affairs when
Sweden's biggest newspapers won't even publish his own words.
The media should
not take the role of the courts by speculating about a case before due process
has been carried out and judgment rendered. The media's role is to examine the
facts and show respect for the rule of law in a democracy.
Sensationalist
headlines, tabloid journalism based on rumor and personal antagonism is not
journalism. It is simply a way of selling newspapers and cheating the public.
This form of Swedish journalism is unworthy of a democracy.
Worst of all is the
fact that Julian Assange has been under house arrest in England with an
electronic tagging device on his ankle for over 500 days. He does not want to
go to Sweden because he fears that Sweden will extradite him to the United
States.
Julian Assange's
case raises serious questions about human rights violations in the democratic
country we call Sweden. But the media will not report on this. It is
preoccupied with creating as much antagonism towards Julian Assange as
possible.
Helene Bergman
Journalist,
feminist and former radio host of the legendary women's programme Radio Ellen
on Swedish Radio.
Translater from Swedish to English:
Traci Birge
Translater from Swedish to English:
Traci Birge