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Home » Letter to the editor. Noted by DN’s readers on April 9

Letter to the editor. Noted by DN’s readers on April 9

Letter to the editor. Noted by DN’s readers on April 9


Why does Sweden’s radio sound (« Studio 1 », 9/4) A Trumpist comment on Trump’s trade war, namely Thomas J Philipson, who has been the president’s financial adviser? He has, among other things, compared to customs threats with nuclear weapons threats (« News Morning » in TV4, 22/3) and considers that the United States is a victim in relation to the EU. Surely there are more objective economists to ask?
Jens Busch

Anders Ahnlind, Director General of the College of Commerce, tells SVT’s « Morning Studio » Regarding US customs, it is important that the EU and Sweden do not escalate the situation « . So Europe reasoned when Russia invaded Ukraine, but did not become the create more peaceful for it. Bends the outside world for Donald Trump, he is likely to be greedy for more concessions. Isn’t the least bit bad alternatively receiving Olle in the gate with a cake of tariffs that makes Trump’s voters, Republicans, business, and people in his administration go against him?
Niclas Kuoppa, Stockholm

I don’t think anyone has missed that the coffee price has ended up on the « gold price list » and now last Price height with upwards of SEK 20 per packagewhether it is 500 or 450 grams. I live in the big city and do not often visit a coffee place. The price of a cup of Java on local is among the most expensive you can consume counting per volume. Alcohol is purely cheap when you make that comparison. However, reading bubbles and other diluted water can be worse. As with most price increases, the price of coffee will affect the consumer price of course. It is called to compensate for increased costs. As far as the coffee is concerned, it can highly mean a cost increase of SEK 1 per mug and half per cup. So the question I ask myself is how much the compensation for this cost increase will be? Should be interesting to see!
His morling, Solna

Image transmitters by Marie Lind, Linköping.

Now the government is going Invest millions of kronor on new SIS homes. Imagine if you had invested that money in school activities. It would be helpful for many children with different difficulties, perhaps especially in vulnerable areas. It is certainly not too late, new children are constantly coming. Start investing and supporting young children (and families) so hopefully we will need fewer SIS homes in the future.
Annchristin Alm, Umeå

At the EU summit in Brussels recently, the multi-year budget held debate. Sweden’s attitude is to EU budget is not to increaseit can be redistributed. This corresponds to the government’s bill on budget effects of Sweden’s membership in the EU prior to the referendum in 1994, which states, among other things: « The Community budget must be balanced. It is financed through fees from the Member States. » That is what Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson meant by saying in connection with the summit: « If you want to take on new tasks in the EU, you have to be prepared to delete old ones. Every penny we use in the EU system is a penny we cannot use nationally, and vice versa. » It is good that our prime minister protects our interests. Kristersson may also mean that Sweden’s interests do not coincide with the EU. Then he should raise the question that Sweden is leaving the EU, so we can use all SEK nationally.
Erik Granström, Uppsala

Speaking of The article on DN Debate on Public IT crashes Can it be added that « the public » should also be better organized. A new Axel Oxenstierna with IT competence is desired! Why should we have 290 municipalities and 21 county councils that procure and/or develop IT systems individually, for needs that should be very similar for municipalities and respectively. regions? Where are Sweden’s municipalities and regions in this context? Even within the state administration, coordination should also be able to take place between ministries and other authorities, which often need to share information among themselves, and which often have similar requirements for, for example, confidentiality. A power collection here with excellence and joint support functions would be in place?
Lars Jacobsson, Retired Senior Surfare

Image transmitters by Gert Jönsson, Simrishamn.

I want to highlight Ulrika Ellemark’s submitter « Why are you not angry when you see the kids in Gaza, Kristersson? » that goes straight into the heart. Israel has committed international law in Palestine for 50 years without bourgeois governments breaking. If any other country acted as Israel, sanctions would have been introduced a long time ago. It is high time to take off the shadows, cut the ideological buoys and act on facts.
Fredrik Svensson, Rotebro

Big thanks to Ulrika Ellemark With several for your submissions about Gaza in DN on April 9! The fact that Israel’s indiscriminate murder in Gaza and now also on the West Bank can continue without the outside world, that is, we, react is shameful. Figures such as 15,000 children have been killed and many more injured for life does not seem to be enough to create any greater commitment to the tormented population of Gaza. But if we instead saw close -ups of the boy who carried his dead little brother in a blooded backpack or hungry, crying child, it would surely arouse both disgust and anger. So the question is who benefits from being spared from seeing the incredible suffering of the Palestinian population?
Ann-Britt Wrenner, Finspång

What is this trams!
Why can’t the world keep the same?
If we want to preserve our mother earth
Must the countries unite around the same table!
Right?

Berit Dreyfert, Adelsö

Reply to Gerhard Kronberg (Noted on April 8) that asks the question of any responsibility to be claimed after the trixing with the purchase of unlisted Northvolt shares: in the electoral movement promised the Moderates To introduce official responsibility, which will hardly be implemented, because then it was good to prosecute those you are wondering and certainly a number of other officials. So probably the answer to your question is: No!
Mikael Beckman, Täby

Reply to Robert Ranow (Noted on April 8): About the symbolic meaning of flags you can have different opinions. I myself strongly react to how right-wing movements use the Swedish flag as a weapon against dissent and in their eyes non-Swedes.
Lars Wengrud, Bromma

Opinions about DN

A non-representative picture of today's healthcare personnel, believes a submitter writer.

Why does DN often use a stereotypical genre of healthcare professionals, two slightly overweight women in green clothes (have happened at least three times)? At the care home I visit, I am greeted by neatly dressed, well -trained young men, trained for nurses or nurses. Their country of origin: Afghanistan and Somalia. The healthcare professionals of reality are often made up of young people who in a few years with a new language, without family and without a study tradition, the place as a good taxpayer. The salary of approximately SEK 26,000 can be complained about, but not the professional pride.
Eva Nykvist

Do you also want to submit a contribution to the vignette listed? Email [email protected]! A smaller selection is published on the submitter side in the newspaper and a larger selection at dn.se/insandare weekend -free Monday – Friday. More about how to write submissions in DN you can read here.



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