Swedes massively protest wiretap law
- added July 8, 2008
- 23 responses
-
-
-
- Sons_Of_Liberty
- added this
-
-
- related topics
-
- Activism (737)
- Protest (549)
- Civil Liberties (121)
- Sweden (79)
- P2P (56)
- ThePirateBay (11)
In June the Swedish parliament passed a controversial surveillance law that gives authorities a mandate to read all email and listen in on all phone calls without warrant or court order. In response to the law, The Pirate Party organized rallies, bloggers and journalists turned into activists, and even Google decided to relocate their servers.
That’s not all. Google and former public telecoms company Telia moved their servers out of Sweden. Belgium says it will sue Sweden since Belgian citizens may be wiretapped without any apparent reason. Anne Ramberg, secretary-general of the Swedish Bar Association, has called for challenges to the law in Swedish and European courts and similar demands have been heard from several other interest groups, like the Journalist’s Union. It’s FRA hunting season this summer in Sweden!
It is now obvious that the legislation was a deal made between the leaders of the four government parties without full support, even from within their own ranks. Active party members resigned in protest, like Fabian Norlin of the Moderate party who quit on June 24 and instead launched FRApedia, a Wiki covering everything about the law and the authorities.
Meanwhile, the people responsible have not uttered a word in defense of the legislation. They haven’t even tried to justify it. In fact, the few quotes that were made referred in smug terms to the nature of the debate and the debaters. Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt said “It would be best for everyone if the debate would calm down.” Others have called your-rights-online-bloggers “spirited amateurs”, sparking even more fury.
During the time since the vote, the Members of Parliament have appeared everything from sad through to ridiculously stupid when trying to handle the turbulence. A representative of the “ridiculous” faction was Liberal Party member Gunnar Andrén who wrote a very upset internal email claiming he hadn’t been told by party colleague Camilla Lindberg that she was going to vote against the bill (she was the only member of any of the four government parties that voted against the bill and received much appreciation and media by it). His email was leaked to the press by another party colleague and Andrén was later heard on a recorded phone-call exclaiming that his secrecy of correspondence had been broken and that it was “Gestapo methods”. Dude, you just voted for a bill that allows all emails to be read and all phone calls to be recorded. Live with it!
The big shift in public opinion came at the time of the vote when the blogs, who had pushed on the issue for many weeks before the vote, finally found the mainstream media with them, and with that the power to reach the masses. Some 6.6 million emails were sent to the Members of Parliament through an online petition created by daily newspaper Expressen which allowed easy protests to the members. Göran Petterson of the Moderate Party (until 2006 an military officer and one of those in favor of the FRA legislation) wrote on his blog: “Email is a great way to communicate with my voters but then you can’t do like Expressen has done now. […] Now, normal emails from the citizens are drowning in these.” Clearly, he didn’t understand his voters were trying to communicate with him, sending him a clear message of what they thought of him and his party.
In Malmö, Peter Sunde of The Pirate Bay spoke at the rally saying “the FRA bill is unnecessary, ineffective, unwanted and last but not least, expensive. The government should listen to the people, as they cannot replace us. However, we have the power to change the government.” Meanwhile, in Stockholm, Maria Wetterstrand of the Green Party promised that an abolishment of the FRA bill would be one of their demands in order to form government with The Social Democrats after the elections 2010 while Alice Åström of the Left Party promised to motion this fall to give members of the government alliance parties the possibility to break up the legislation.
That’s not all. Google and former public telecoms company Telia moved their servers out of Sweden. Belgium says it will sue Sweden since Belgian citizens may be wiretapped without any apparent reason. Anne Ramberg, secretary-general of the Swedish Bar Association, has called for challenges to the law in Swedish and European courts and similar demands have been heard from several other interest groups, like the Journalist’s Union. It’s FRA hunting season this summer in Sweden!
It is now obvious that the legislation was a deal made between the leaders of the four government parties without full support, even from within their own ranks. Active party members resigned in protest, like Fabian Norlin of the Moderate party who quit on June 24 and instead launched FRApedia, a Wiki covering everything about the law and the authorities.
Meanwhile, the people responsible have not uttered a word in defense of the legislation. They haven’t even tried to justify it. In fact, the few quotes that were made referred in smug terms to the nature of the debate and the debaters. Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt said “It would be best for everyone if the debate would calm down.” Others have called your-rights-online-bloggers “spirited amateurs”, sparking even more fury.
During the time since the vote, the Members of Parliament have appeared everything from sad through to ridiculously stupid when trying to handle the turbulence. A representative of the “ridiculous” faction was Liberal Party member Gunnar Andrén who wrote a very upset internal email claiming he hadn’t been told by party colleague Camilla Lindberg that she was going to vote against the bill (she was the only member of any of the four government parties that voted against the bill and received much appreciation and media by it). His email was leaked to the press by another party colleague and Andrén was later heard on a recorded phone-call exclaiming that his secrecy of correspondence had been broken and that it was “Gestapo methods”. Dude, you just voted for a bill that allows all emails to be read and all phone calls to be recorded. Live with it!
The big shift in public opinion came at the time of the vote when the blogs, who had pushed on the issue for many weeks before the vote, finally found the mainstream media with them, and with that the power to reach the masses. Some 6.6 million emails were sent to the Members of Parliament through an online petition created by daily newspaper Expressen which allowed easy protests to the members. Göran Petterson of the Moderate Party (until 2006 an military officer and one of those in favor of the FRA legislation) wrote on his blog: “Email is a great way to communicate with my voters but then you can’t do like Expressen has done now. […] Now, normal emails from the citizens are drowning in these.” Clearly, he didn’t understand his voters were trying to communicate with him, sending him a clear message of what they thought of him and his party.
In Malmö, Peter Sunde of The Pirate Bay spoke at the rally saying “the FRA bill is unnecessary, ineffective, unwanted and last but not least, expensive. The government should listen to the people, as they cannot replace us. However, we have the power to change the government.” Meanwhile, in Stockholm, Maria Wetterstrand of the Green Party promised that an abolishment of the FRA bill would be one of their demands in order to form government with The Social Democrats after the elections 2010 while Alice Åström of the Left Party promised to motion this fall to give members of the government alliance parties the possibility to break up the legislation.
-
-
-
-
- Sons_Of_Liberty
- 1 month ago
-
How come the Sweds are out in mass protest and Americans sit by, ignorant that they may be wiretapped. Maybe Americans have the attitude of "lets complain but do nothing about it"
-
I agree. But hell, if shit is that bad for the right to protect against unreasonable search and seizure, the right to privacy, and the Nordic states, supposedly the happiest places on earth, are culprits along with our government, then that makes me hopeful for the entire world. Everybody is going to put this era of reactionary policies into perspective when history sheds its light. The world wide right to privacy will come out stronger than ever. Big Brother will never win.
-
Some U.S. citizens have been protesting, but most have no clue how many rights have been stripped away.
-
-
-
-
- TopScruffy
- 1 month ago
-
-
I hope you're right about Big Brother Judah but I reckon it's going to take some serious effort to stop him
-
-
-
-
- Paul_Flynn
- 1 month ago
-
-
america is protesting, its just not shown on the main stream media
-
The world wails and who listens?
-
It seems like the Swedish care more about their rights than Americans do. While they are protesting, Americans are sitting at home waiting for the All-Star game and Home Run Derby to begin. Let's see... do I want to be out protesting for my rights or sit at home comfortably watching a baseball game? That's a hard decision to make.
-
It irks me that the sweds care more about their privacy than we americans do. The Bill of Rights is printed in blood. Lots of good men died so that we could have a life outside of our government. How can we sit idley by and let our freedoms be striped off one by one??
-
-
-
-
- bansheewail
- 1 month ago
-
-
Funny how when shit like that happens to us, it's as if it goes unheard and not talked about, but in any other country people actually stand up for their rights.
-
-
-
-
- cerealforeal
- 1 month ago
-
-
Heh, I love the giant banner that reads "STFU, GTFO".
-
-
-
-
- Dmitri_Molotov
- 1 month ago
-
-
If 'Pac was alive I know he would do something about it
-
WTH is going on in Sverige that anyone would want to wiretap the peeps ? i'm all for wire-tapping if anything truly actionable could come from it ( which means i'm basically against it ) .
-
Malathion,
The key word is "Actionable". If laws are broken to obtain the intel, then any future action would be illegal according to our Constitution. No law superceeds the good ole' Constitution. (except for Bush's neat lil signing statements.] Do the Swedes have the same set-up??
Love the handle Malathion. pest control, huh?-
-
-
-
- bansheewail
- 1 month ago
-
-
This was the dumbest thing that Sweden has ever done. The conservative groups have a small majority and use fear to make change, just like our GOP. However, who would be dumb enough to attack the most open door society in the whole f'en world?
-
-
-
-
- tomofnorthcal
- 1 month ago
-
-
Do they want their voters to be angry with them? this seems like a self-destructive act for polotitians
-
-
-
-
- Lite_Black
- 1 month ago
-
-
Start writing letters to your elected leaders. If people are silent, those elected leaders will continue to do whatever they want, (some do anyway).
But they need to be instructed by the people that employ them.
Login/Registration is required to add a response.
