Jag tror att det inte skulle vara omöjligt att övertala Christian Engström
och Amelia Andersdotter på något sådant här från Piratpartiet.

/Erik


On Thu, Aug 29, 2013 at 12:24 PM, Erik Josefsson <
[email protected]> wrote:

>  On 08/29/2013 11:47 AM, Hanna Larsson wrote:
>
>  Shit vad bra!!! Vad är nästa steg?
>
>
> Nu gäller det att få ihop ett gäng moderater och/eller kristdemokrater att
> hålla med Svallfors.
>
> Det lär inte finnas några i Sverige, så det är lika bra att försöka
> utomlands. Börja med grannländerna runt Östersjön. Börja medsols: Finland,
> Estland, Lettland, Litauen, Polen, Tyskland och sist Danmark.
>
> MEParna finns listade här:
> http://parltrack.euwiki.org/meps/?date=29/08/2013
>
> Skriv helst på modersmålet. Översätt gärna artikeln till Finska, Estniska
> och Polska (skaka fram kompisar som är tvåspråkiga och/eller deras
> släktingar).
>
> Sacharovpriset kommer att diskuteras i alla politiska grupper
> Europaparlamentet nästa vecka, antagligen på Tisdag 2 september. Vore bra
> om alla EPP MEPar från norra Europa åtminstone sett förslaget innan dess.
>
> *Target:* An independent cross party nomination by 40 EPP+ALDE+ECR MEPs.
>
> Deadline för nominering är 12 september.
>
> //Erik
>
>
>
>
>  Aug 29, 2013 kl. 11:35  skrev Erik Josefsson <
> [email protected]>:
>
>  Sydsvenskan publicerar idag 29 augusti en artikel av Professor Stefan
> Svallfors:
>
> *"Låt Snowden få Sacharovpriset"*
>
> http://www.sydsvenskan.se/opinion/aktuella-fragor/lat-snowden-fa-sacharovpriset/
>
> Nedan en engelsk version.
>
> //Erik
>
> *A Sakharov for our time?*
> Since 1988, the European Parliament has awarded the Sakharov Prize. According 
> to its statutes, this is given to a person or group "who made remarkable 
> efforts to defend human rights and fundamental freedoms" and thus "worked 
> against intolerance, fanaticism and oppression."
>
> The award is given in memory of the Russian physicist Andrei Sakharov 
> (1921-1989), known as one of the men behind the hydrogen bomb but even more 
> as a Soviet dissident with his Human Rights Committee and his defense of 
> political prisoners. Sakharov stands as a symbol of the individual human 
> being who dares to stand up against tyranny and oppression, even when the 
> personal cost is very high.
>
> A most deserving recipient of the 2013 price would be the American whistle 
> blower Edward Snowden. In May, The Guardian published his disclosure of the 
> extensive, illegal and deeply intrusive monitoring conducted by the American 
> National Security Agency. For this heroic effort Snowden has paid a heavy 
> personal price. He is hunted as an outlaw by the U.S. government, accused of 
> crimes that will put him in jail for the rest of his life. The U.S. 
> government has threatened the governments that dare to offer him asylum with 
> serious consequences. In a painful irony, the only sanctuary that had been 
> found for Snowden is Russia, a country whose democratic problems and 
> authoritarian tendencies are obvious.
>
> But is really Snowden a worthy recipient of the prize, someone may sneeze. Is 
> not America the world's leading democracy, a friend of Europe, committed to 
> the rule of law? Yes. But even democracies can hide pockets of tyranny in 
> their hearts, a democratic state may well coexist with other systems that are 
> characterized by anything but democracy and law. As the monitoring system 
> which now puts its global tentacles far into the private lives of citizens. 
> By exposing this system Snowden made it possible for us to say No – this is 
> not a development and a society we want, we protect our civil rights and 
> freedoms when they are threatened.
>
> Snowden's revelations make explicit demands on citizens and politicians to 
> act and react. How have we responded to these demands? Not in any impressive 
> way one must say. Individual politicians and many citizens have reacted, 
> expressed support for Snowden, trying to act in his defense. They see the 
> unpleasant consequences of a surveillance system where innocent citizens get 
> their electronic communication and their phone calls tapped and mapped. The 
> German President Joachim Gauck, with his personal East German experience, for 
> example stated that Snowden "deserves respect" for his actions. But otherwise 
> an awkward silence, evasive answers, gentle tiptoeing. Merkel hums, The 
> European Commission whispers, the parliaments remain silent.
>
> On the Swedish side, even more depressing inaction is observed. Sweden acts 
> together with Britain to make sure the question should not be addressed at 
> European level. This is a bilateral issue and by the way, no Swedish 
> interests are at stake, the Foreign Minister distractedly announces before 
> returning to Twitter. The government obviously sees no reason to allow this 
> issue to eclipse the splendor of Obama's forthcoming state visit. From the 
> political left, a complete disinterest is shown. No social democratic 
> position is advanced or even formulated.
>
> It is tragic to see how thin the liberal veneer is in many places. When 
> liberalism is no longer easy and obvious, when it requires courage and 
> sacrifice, when we are forced to choose and our choices have real costs, what 
> happens then? We fall into line, we bend to power. Without grumbling we let 
> fairly manageable threats from terrorists sweep away fundamental rights and 
> freedoms.
>
> We must demand more of ourselves and our elected officials than that. We 
> could start by giving Edward Snowden the price whose name symbolizes a man 
> who refused to bow to oppression and thereby actually changed history.
>
>
>
> Stefan Svallfors
> Professor of Sociology at Umeå University
> & the Institute for Future Studies
>
>
>
>

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