dang 1 day ago

There have been multiple posts about this and hundreds of comments, so there is clearly appetite to discuss it, although none of the submitted links have been very detailed.

I've merged the other threads into this one, so you'll see some anachronistic timestamps below.

  • sph 1 day ago

    The post linked has been removed, so I don't know what more we can speculate upon, 650+ comments in.

    It's strange to see HN mods allow this much attention to a political, and contentious issue.

    • dang 1 day ago

      What has been removed? The links I saw didn't have much information but as far as I can tell they're still up.

      From an HN point of view the idea is to give the discussion a place, since the community obviously wants to have it.

      • sph 1 day ago

        The Mastodon post itself. I get a 404 error. It was fine when this reached the frontpage yesterday or when was it. Looks like the author deleted it.

        EDIT: nvm it's rate limited

      • naturalmovement 22 hours ago

        > From an HN point of view the idea is to give the discussion a place, since the community obviously wants to have it

        So where do you draw the line?

        Just this week I saw multiple offtopic Epstein schizoposts by 10+ year old accounts that were alternately flagged and vouched. Should we allow that too?

        My takeaway is this is a highly politically charged rant on a niche social media site — exactly the kind of discussion we're meant to avoid.

        Things are rotten below ground and you give an inch, they'll want a mile.

        • dang 21 hours ago

          We try to draw the line according to principles that I've explained many times over the years. If you scroll back through the comments, for example, at https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&so..., you'll find them. If you read some of those and then still have a question that isn't answered there, I'd be happy to take a crack at it.

          Btw, I'm not claiming that we make every individual call correctly - that's an undecidable question anyhow since everyone will have their own evaluation of "correctly". But at the more general level of what principles to apply, I do think there's a certain consistency: they've been the same for many years, and we do our (fallible) best to follow them.

    • modeless 23 hours ago

      I don't think "appetite to discuss" should be a justification to override the guidelines against political submissions and discussion. There is far too much politics on HN and it leaks into unrelated discussions too. There are plenty of other places to discuss politics on the internet.

      • dang 21 hours ago

        The guidelines say that most political articles are offtopic. Most != all. The question is what should be in the setdiff of all - most.

        About that, there are lots of past explanations: https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&so...

        Edit: more at https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48724830 in this thread

        • modeless 20 hours ago

          I'm aware of what you've said about this in the past. I'm expressing my disagreement. HN would be improved dramatically by a significant change in where this line is drawn.

          • MichaelZuo 15 hours ago

            How would you draw the line?

            A 100% airtight filter against political articles seems unrealistic to maintain. Since “political” is itself not fully settled.

    • microgpt 22 hours ago

      Well the title already says most of it, doesn't it?

      I'm also surprised. Usually opinions opposing the far right are removed from HN.

      • mlrtime 6 hours ago

        Wait what? I see the exact opposite, and what is the 'far right'? You mean anything republican/conservative?

kfreds 3 days ago

Hi,

Mullvad has two owners, founders, and CEOs - Daniel Berntsson, and me, Fredrik Strömberg. All posts I've seen yesterday and today, including the newspaper articles, talk about Mullvad as if Daniel is the single owner, founder and CEO. It should be obvious that Daniel's private donation to a political party is not part of Mullvad's values or mission.

If you have any questions, comments or concerns you're welcome to comment on this thread, or email our customer support.

See below for the response you'll get from support:

-----

Mullvad is a political company. We fight for freedom of speech, freedom of information and the right to privacy. These are firmly held values of the founders of Mullvad.

Mullvad protects the right for people to express things we don't agree with. We protect the right of everyone to access views we don't agree with.

We also live these values by being tolerant in our daily work. Everyone is welcome to collaborate with Mullvad if they share these narrow core values. As employees, contractors, customers, suppliers, lobbyists, campaign partners or whatever it might be. No matter what their other opinions are and no matter whether the founders or anyone else in Mullvad dislike them. The founders themselves fundamentally disagree on several important issues.

This is what allows us to advance our common causes. Being in a tolerant and intellectually open environment is also liberating and promotes truth seeking.

The more people do this, the better a place the world will be.

It should be obvious that Daniel's private donation to a political party is not part of Mullvad's values or mission, in the same way that someone's opinions on animal rights, taxes or public healthcare policy isn't.

That said, if you no longer want to be a Mullvad customer for philosophical reasons, we think it's important to honor that. In that case, reach out to support.

  • actualwitch 3 days ago

    Hello Fredrik! As a heavy user of Mullvad in the past, easily spending hundreds of euros over the years, I was reserving my judgement to see what the official statement on this would be. Thank you, now I have my answer.

    > It should be obvious that Daniel's private donation to a political party is not part of Mullvad's values or mission.

    It should be obvious that what people are concerned is their money being used to support these political causes, whether it was done in a way that keeps the company out of it or not is besides the point. Daniel, of course, is free to choose what to do with his money. I am, too, and based on this I will be making a choice to not spend any more money on Mullvad subscriptions. Nothing personal, and it's a shame because I have nothing but praise for the technical side of it. So long, and thanks for all the fish.

    • jasonvorhe 23 hours ago

      It should be obvious that he's perfectly fine with your decision because he wrote exactly that in the post you just replied to.

    • kfreds 22 hours ago

      Of course. Sorry to hear you're leaving. Thank you for the compliment.

  • vrganj 3 days ago

    Hi Fredrik, long time user of your service.

    I have to say, this is a disappointing message. The thing about intolerant movements is that tolerance doesn't fix them, it makes them worse and lets them accumulate power until they can destroy the tolerant.

    I'd recommend reading Karl Popper and his Paradox of Tolerance, which he formulated after seeing this exact thing play out in his native Austria with the rise of the Nazis.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradox_of_tolerance

    • kfreds 10 hours ago

      Hi! Thank you. Both Daniel and I are well aware of Karl Popper. We've both been interested in politics since we were teenagers.

  • kamaitachi 2 days ago

    Hi Fredrik

    I’m a long time Mullvad customer, likely paid Mullvad upward of 400€ in the past number of years, as well as recommended it to friends and family members.

    What you seem to be missing in your comment, is that some of that money I paid, found its way to support an organisation that has extreme racist views.

    I’ve reached out to support and requested a refund of my outstanding credit.

    I’ll be moving on.

    • ciefa 1 day ago

      Where will you move to?

      Are there any alternatives left?

      For me, Proton isn't one.. not sure what else there is.

    • dgellow 1 day ago

      Not just “support”, it’s literally the main source of funds for the party. >70% of donations. If it was a small donation that would be sort of controversial but maybe defendable, but here we are talking about funding pretty much the whole party

    • nevon 1 day ago

      I did the same, except I'm paying for Mullvad through the Tailscale partnership, so I reached out to them and expressed my desire for them to partner with other privacy focused VPN providers like Njalla, Airvpn and others. I don't feel great about my money funding ethno-fascists in my country.

    • kfreds 22 hours ago

      Hi. I get what you mean. I made that post with limited time. Sorry to hear you're leaving.

    • deaux 14 hours ago

      Hi Kamaitachi,

      What you seem to be missing is that every single € you've spent on virtually anything in the past number of years, some of it has found its way to support organisations that have extreme racist views.

  • alexseman 1 day ago

    Thanks Fredrik, will actually be switching to Mullvad.

    • everfrustrated 1 day ago

      Indeed I see this as a positive. There is a common meme that the CIA might well run VPN companies. It would seem less likely for Mullvad.

      • anuramat 1 day ago

        > less likely

        how so?

  • mrhottakes 1 day ago

    So you're a political company, but you don't want people to examine the politics of the people running the company? That seems naive.

    • panarky 1 day ago

      >> Being in a tolerant and intellectually open environment ...

      Karl Popper said, "Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them."

      >> the same way that someone's opinions on animal rights, taxes or public healthcare ...

      We're not talking about reasonable people disagreeing about tax policy, we're talking about free expression, the entire purpose of Mullvad.

      When you make a large donation to a political party whose most fundamental policy is restricting the free expression of people, that is wholly incompatible with everything Mullvad says they stand for.

      When a founder and executive with influence over Mullvad policy and operations is exposed actively and financially support restricting free expression of people, it's not "tolerant" to pretend that's somehow compatible with the mission and brand of the company.

      • armchairhacker 1 day ago

        > restricting the free expression of people

        I don’t support remigration, but calling immigration “the free expression of people” is a stretch. It’s orthogonal.

        You can argue that remigration isn’t protecting the privacy of those who are surveilled by the government or deported to repressive countries that surveil their population. But Mullvad’s product protects even those people (it must, because it hides the identity of who’s using it from itself).

        • ambicapter 1 day ago

          The words "immigration" or "remigration" do not appear in the comment you are replying to. That's wholly your own construction.

          • torginus 1 day ago

            It does not, but does appear on the party's English wikipedia page that they support 'remigration'. However when switching to Swedish, it seems they are pro (forceful) assmilation, rather than remigration.

            I don't know enough of Swedish politics or social issues to determine which one is the more correct characterization of the party, but even that is a serious difference in policy.

        • panarky 1 day ago

          Örebropartiet policies directly target and restrict the religious, educational, and cultural expression of people who legally reside in Sweden.

          Their polices focus on the way people dress, the languages they speak in public, the institutions and schools they build, the traditions they practice.

          People would be forced to self-censor their speech, their beliefs, and their behavior.

          It's not a "stretch". It's the whole program.

          • armchairhacker 22 hours ago

            > Their polices focus on the way people dress, the languages they speak in public, the institutions and schools they build, the traditions they practice.

            Do you have sources and quotes for this? Wikipedia only says “remigration”, although another comment mentioned that the translated Swedish word implies “assimilation”. Trying to restrict what people (even immigrants) do goes against free expression: deporting those based on ethnicity is immoral for other reasons but does not.

          • account42 3 hours ago

            And what does the "religious, educational, and cultural expression" you're talking about says about others outside that group? Maybe your arguments support Örebropartiet more than you want to admit.

        • loup-vaillant 23 hours ago

          > I don’t support remigration, but calling immigration “the free expression of people” is a stretch. It’s orthogonal.

          Far right political parties have a marked tendency to severely restrict freedom of expression once they’re in power. They routinely call for it when they’re the underdogs, but that often changes fairly quickly once they get their way.

          In some cases you can see hints of that before they came into power. In France for instance, our main far right party (Rassemblement National) supports drastic budget cuts to state-financed media, and I believe a more direct control of said media from executive power.

          One would have to check whether the Swedish Örebro party is similar of course. I personally no absolutely nothing about that party. Still, it is not a stretch for me to strongly suspect that a party that calls for deportation (let’s call it what it is, okay?) is also a party that is, or at the very least will be, against freedom of expression and freedom of information.

          If it is, then Mullvad’s co-founder has a serious conflict of interest, and I would have no choice but seriously lower my confidence in their VPN.

          I hope their sister company, Tillitis, is mostly free of such. Though even if it too is tainted, their TKey is fully open source (schematics and all if I recall correctly), and simple enough to be independently audited. They even have an unlocked version you can burn yourself so you don’t even have to trust their provisioning process. That’s the difference with a VPN: a VPN is like a Palantir, you kinda have to trust Sauron will do right by you. The TKey is more like Nemik’s astro-navigator: the user can verify themselves they are its sole master, once they did they can trust it even if it was manufactured by the Empire itself.

          I mean, I love my TKey. I don’t care if Elon Musk and Peter Thiel themselves oversaw its manufacture, now it’s mine, and there’s no way I’m letting the enemy have exclusivity over it.

          • armchairhacker 22 hours ago

            This is an over-generalization: you even mention that you “have to check” the party’s policies, which seem to be far-left except for the immigration part.

            I actually agree that many far-right parties seem to restrict freedom of expression when they have majority power, but so do many far-left parties. Far-right may be generally statistically worse, but again, this says nothing about Örebro specifically who aren’t typical.

            • loup-vaillant 22 hours ago

              Okay, let’s just focus on the "remigration" thing, then.

              Sure, Örebro is not typical, and may indeed be an exception.

              But.

              This apparent racism remains cogent evidence that they are also against freedom of expression — even if perhaps not openly. Also, I have yet to know of one political party who sincerely advocates for both deportation and freedom of expression.

          • account42 3 hours ago

            > In some cases you can see hints of that before they came into power. In France for instance, our main far right party (Rassemblement National) supports drastic budget cuts to state-financed media, and I believe a more direct control of said media from executive power.

            What does defunding state-funded media (aka propaganda) have to do with the freedom of expression?

      • fastball 1 day ago

        > When you make a large donation to a political party whose most fundamental policy is restricting the free expression of people

        Where can I read more about how this is the fundamental policy of the Örebro party?

        • MarkusQ 1 day ago

          So far as I can tell, the main source of this claim is the comment you are responding to, and similar.

          I think the real issue is this: "The party is heavily opposed to political corruption and high politician incomes and wants to reduce the wages of politicians and senior officials." (from Wikipedia, among other sources.)

          • solid_fuel 23 hours ago

            This is disingenuous.

            From Wikipedia:

            > Some of its key issues include lowered wages for politicians, ending the tax payer funding of various sculptures, monuments and art, large scale remigration, a stricter immigration policy, and free dental care.

            I think most criticism of this party is probably around "large scale remigration" and "stricter immigration policy", which are often nice ways to word "getting rid of everyone that doesn't look like us".

            But if you want to play this little game, I can play too. Personally I think the real issue people have with this platform is the free dental care. Big tooth obviously doesn't want to lose profit.

      • wtrwqyw 1 day ago

        > restricting the free expression of people,

        Is it? They appear to be some sort of hardcore pseudo libertarians with some nationalistic vibes. To an extent that seems to overlap with Mullvad’s declared value?

      • znpy 1 day ago

        > If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them."

        yeah i'm sick and tired of hearing this, because it gets applied very asymmetrically.

        we routinely tolerate certain kinds of intolerants and silence other, and that sucks.

        case in point: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jun/17/hamtramck-mi...

        people happily tolerate lgbt-intollerant people, afraid of being called islamophobic and/or intollerant, and but we do not tollerate at all people that have been calling that risk out for years.

        so yeah, popper's writings are being grossly misused, and i'm sick and tired of seeing that come out in every discussion on these topics.

        ---

        Also: if only mullvad is taking that kind of political stance (no-log vpn etc)... maybe you should think twice about who is actually on your side.

      • something765478 1 day ago

        I'm always wary of people bringing up the paradox of tolerance; most of the time, it's just used as an excuse to justify censorship while claiming to be opposed to it. "When you censor me, you're being intolerant and that's wrong; when I censor you, I'm doing it in the name of tolerance, so I'm correct".

        I'm not Swedish, so it's possible there's something that I am missing. But skimming the wikipedia page for the party (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96rebro_Party#), I don't see anything that says the party is pro censorship.

        • panarky 23 hours ago

          No political party is going to say they're "pro censorship".

          But if they promise to target specific groups of people to close their schools, regulate how they dress, ban their prayers, and suppress their art, it's all about restricting their freedom of expression.

          That's the whole program.

          • something765478 23 hours ago

            > No political party is going to say they're "pro censorship".

            There are plenty of political parties that proudly claim to oppose "hate speech".

            > But if they promise to target specific groups of people to close their schools, regulate how they dress, ban their prayers, and suppress their art, it's all about restricting their freedom of expression.

            I could be wrong, but it looks like their plan is to cut public funding, not to censor those things.

        • int_19h 21 hours ago

          The "paradox of tolerance" is only a paradox to people who can't tell the difference between words and actions, anyway. There's no paradox in tolerating the words if you draw the line at action to implement those words.

      • akimbostrawman 1 day ago

        >"Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them."

        does that fight against "intolerant" also include fighting people from other culture that are systematically and religiously opposed against your current society and its tolerance and will undermine it within the next couple decades by reproducing more? nvm im aware asking for self awareness is too much.

      • like_any_other 23 hours ago

        > Karl Popper said, "Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them."

        It's weird he said that, given that at the time there were many examples of intolerant societies that had become increasingly tolerant. So the statement is factually incorrect, and, given how educated he was, he knew this. In other words, the statement is a lie. But very useful if you manage to put yourself in the position of being the one to define what is intolerant, and which things are so important to tolerate that they should be beyond democratic decision-making.

        That said, I don't disagree that private donations can be incompatible with (or more accurately, counter-productive to) the stated mission of a company. And it's not unreasonable for journalists to report on it, on the logic it may affect consumer choices. But I'm not familiar with Örebro, and nothing in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96rebro_Party#Policies indicates they're against online anonymity or free expression. But maybe I missed something?

    • neya 1 day ago

      "Rules for thee, but not for me"

      Classic

    • jasonvorhe 1 day ago

      I don't see him saying he doesn't want people to look into that. What I see is an explanation for why he thinks the company is better for having a multitude of views and opinions on their staff, a correction of some lazy reporting in the media and stated tolerance for people who no longer want to use said company's products for perceived value incompatibility (which he also seems to disagree with though).

    • kfreds 1 day ago

      Allow me to provide some nuance.

      I cannot speak for Daniel. I know there are some policies he likes and there are things he doesn’t like. Personally I am not a fan.

      This morning Daniel explained his rationale to most of the company. Speaking for myself, I don’t like that he made this donation and I know this view is shared by many of my colleagues. Speaking as the co-CEO of Mullvad, we will continue to protect the universal right to privacy. People should feel safe using Mullvad regardless of their political affiliation.

  • dreambuffer 1 day ago

    Why does it say your comment was made 2 days ago, when the thread has only been up for 6 hours?

  • BitWiseVibe 1 day ago

    Thank you for everything you do Fredrik. Very happy to be a customer of a company that supports freedom and privacy for everyone regardless of views.

    • gpm 20 hours ago

      > that supports freedom ... for everyone

      Unless you happen to be of Somalian descent in Sweden. Then you should be ripped away from the only home you've ever known, indeed possibly the only country you've ever been in, and sent to a foreign country you have no citizenship in, where you have no home, don't understand the language, know no one, and be forced to try and survive.

      • peterfirefly 11 hours ago

        > don't understand the language

        Seriously? It's not like the Somalis have been in Sweden that long.

        • Hikikomori 9 hours ago

          Their children might not speak their language.

          • peterfirefly 9 hours ago

            Most of those children wouldn't be able to communicate with their own parents, if that were the case.

            Somalis are usually not spread out among the natives. They tend to clump together in ethnic enclaves where it is very easy to learn Somali (and where life is unpleasant for the unfortunate child who doesn't learn it).

            • Hikikomori 8 hours ago

              And some parents do learn Swedish so their children might not know their parents native language. Or have you inspected every Somalian family in Sweden? It might not be that many, but doesn't make his point any less true.

              • peterfirefly 8 hours ago

                I'd say it makes it "fewer" true ;)

                Surely we can agree that if such kids exist then they must be very, very few in number?

                • Hikikomori 7 hours ago

                  So its okay then I guess?

                  • mlrtime 6 hours ago

                    Do you know of one, or is this some hypothetical think of the children argument to get sympathy?

                    • Hikikomori 4 hours ago

                      Not just against it for children, at this point they might be grown up attending university or even working. In theory it would even apply to my colleagues which have become citizens but do not speak Swedish.

                      I don't believe that integration has worked well either, but it doesn't mean that I think we should "send back" people that were born here and don't have any other citizenship.

          • account42 4 hours ago

            But they do.

            That's actually one of the biggest problems with mass migration - that all incentives go against integration into the host culture.

    • kfreds 19 hours ago

      Thank you!

  • honr 1 day ago

    If you still wonder why there are sudden attacks on Mullvad, I "heard" there are Chinese (in addition to the others; dual- / triple- vendoring is key) LLM-based tools to check for swarm origins and campaigns.

  • kgwxd 1 day ago

    > This is what allows us to advance our common causes. Being in a tolerant and intellectually open environment is also liberating and promotes truth seeking.

    Nope, that is what will get you taken over by the assholes. Reasonable defense is necessary in reality. There ARE bad actors, they must be kept out.

    • jasonvorhe 23 hours ago

      Everyone has their own definition of a bad actor. The fact that you're implying to know how to spot them says a lot about your tolerance for differences in opinion.

      • drngdds 19 hours ago

        I think you're just bad at identifying assholes

      • kgwxd 17 hours ago

        You would have been so much better off just ending on the, already obvious BS, part about how his views aren't the companies. Instead, you went on to downplay the obvious problem.

        Mullvad was one of the last products I felt I could honestly recommend, and feel good about. Never falling for this garbage again. The world is complete shit right now.

        • kfreds 10 hours ago

          I'm sorry to hear that. For what it's worth I think there's nuance in his decision that most people don't see. Of course that doesn't mean I think it was the right decision to make.

          Here's something worth considering: why would someone whose ideal is open borders, who has been an animal rights activist, and someone who has led Mullvad for 17 years (with the track record it has), choose to donate to this party? If you like what Daniel and I have done together over the past 17 years, and now vehemently oppose his choice to make this donation, doesn't that make you just a little bit curious?

          It made me curious. It didn't change my ultimate stance, but it did temper my emotions about it.

    • peterfirefly 11 hours ago

      > There ARE bad actors, they must be kept out.

      There are very good (and well-documented) reasons to believe a large part of the recently immigrated foreigners in Sweden are exactly such bad actors.

      Your arguments don't really work the way you seem to think they do.

      • therouwboat 11 hours ago

        Recently? Some people have been saying foreigners are bad for 30 years.

  • Pr0ject217 1 day ago

    Thanks for supporting civil liberties.

  • miyoji 1 day ago

    > It should be obvious that Daniel's private donation to a political party is not part of Mullvad's values or mission.

    No, in fact, the opposite of this is obvious.

    • fastball 1 day ago

      How do you figure?

      • iAMkenough 22 hours ago

        Money that leaves your wallet and goes to Mullvad ends up funding politicians that believe non-whites shouldn’t have speech at all, as a personal choice by a top executive of the company.

        The company’s values aren’t reflected accurately if you believe your money is funding free speech regardless of race.

        • fastball 18 hours ago

          It's a company: the deal is that they help enable free speech of their customers, not everyone on earth or everyone in Sweden or anywhere else.

          A great litmus test for the (somewhat outrageous) claims in this thread: does Mullvad refuse to provide service to non-white immigrants in Sweden? If yes, then you have a point. If no, I do not think Mullvad is the entity that is confused in this situation.

      • miyoji 2 hours ago

        Do you typically start companies that are opposed to your values, or do you start companies that align with your values?

        If you are the co-CEO of a company, will you push it to align more with your values, or less?

        This isn't a company founded 300 years ago by a long-dead evil man in a business vertical completely unrelated to how it started, it's a baby company with the evil founder still actively involved at the highest level of management. Maybe you can regale me with epic stories about the companies you've worked at where the founder had no ability to influence the company and its values, but that's not been my experience at all, in any human organization anywhere.

    • dijit 1 day ago

      Is IKEA fascist? Because the founder was a Nazi supporter; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingvar_Kamprad

      I'm not saying this to dunk on IKEA, but sometimes even when there's a sole founder, the mission of the company and the mission of the person who founded it do not necessarily align.

      EDIT: It also seems that the party is extremely left leaning but is anti-immigration, as a person who lives in Swedens third largest city (which is predominantly non-Swedish, like myself: I am also an immigrant) I can understand Swedes desire to minimise this, it's not a "far-right" topic anymore.

      • devindotcom 1 day ago

        Is IKEA's founder alive and currently donating lots of money to a political party advocating for mass deportation of "parasites"? If so let me know and I will stop buying IKEA furniture!

        • dijit 1 day ago

          You seriously didn't buy IKEA furniture 10 years ago?

          I do not believe you.

          Regardless: do you think IKEA did more to promote Naziism in the decades that proceeded Ingvars death, or more after?

          (the answer is of course: the exact same amount, which is none).

          If you're unhappy making people wealthy who you disagree with, unfortunately I'm going to have to suggest that you disengage with society, your taxes fuel wars (largely against brown people), you're forced to use technology created with slave labour in order to engage with banking applications and you're going to be really mad when you discover what goes into your food.

          Taking an absolute position against one person who creates a service that would allow you to evade fascism is pretty ironic given the way the world is going regarding online speech.

          • plagiarist 1 day ago

            "Yet you participate in society. Curious!"

            • dijit 1 day ago

              Yes, we must cleanse every provider of wrongthink, especially those who might help us to speak without being censored or moderated, and tracked with ID.

              We must make sure that they follow our politics.

              • plagiarist 23 hours ago

                Of course you would set up another strawman for this. Yes, very intelligent, declining to support a business when their founders have odious politics is exactly the government's thought police enforcing wrongthink violations.

                • dijit 23 hours ago

                  People are not permitted to question the notion that their culture and demographics should completely change in a generation or two otherwise they are odious and we should destroy their business until they step down.

                  There are so many worse people but lets not care about that, because one of the men who founded something that permits people to escape censorship did something that we should censor him for.

                  He dared support other opinions than the prevailing groupthink.

                  Jesus wept, this whole thread is a fantastic recruiter for the right wing. Anything less than unfettered migration is “disgusting”, how can any person reasonably have a conversation in this environment, someone in this thread even indicated that the Mullvad founder “promoted people who didn’t want him to live”.

                  This hysteria is fucking laughable.

                  within a single generation 12% of the Swedish population was imported, if we did the same thing to an african nation we would rightly consider that a problem. I’m not saying it’s a problem, but drowning out more moderate politicians from being allowed to speak about it is exactly why SD (a party of racist retards) starts gaining credible support.

                  But yeah, you do you. Moron.

    • myrmidon 1 day ago

      An honest question: Would you like to live in a world where company/employer exerts more control over the views that are publicly expressed?

      Do you actually want voting to happen via wallet?

      This whole view kinda confounds me. I don't see how you can honestly profess to be on the tolerant/right side, morally, while trying to boycott someones business over his political views. Would you have preferred early feminists or LGBT advocates to be hounded in their professional life? Would it have been better for more people to do that?

      If you want to vote for or against Örebropartiet, then just do it at the booth.

      Plenty of people here basically seem to indirectly advocate for company based censorship and some kind of budget-plutocracy, and no matter how "morally correct" your views are, that is under no circumstances a worthwhile endeavor.

      • MichaelDickens 1 day ago

        > An honest question: Would you like to live in a world where company/employer exerts more control over the views that are publicly expressed?

        I don't really object to you asking this question, but I do object to you calling a rhetorical question "an honest question".

        • myrmidon 8 hours ago

          The question is not rhetorical. A lot of people in this thread advocate for hurting Berntssons career for the political views he expressed with his donation.

          I personally believe that a lot of those people did not think through the consequences at all: Making it acceptable/typical/common for political expression to be punished at the workplace would obviously lead to self-censorship and direct/indirect censorship by employers.

          My view is that this is utterly incompatible with liberalism (but a lot of the proponents would claim to lean liberal themselves!). I have not found good counterarguments for my current view so far.

      • helterskelter 1 day ago

        This is about what customers are comfortable supporting. This guy doesn't just have what many consider to be unpalatable political beliefs, he's one of the biggest funders of what many consider to be an unpalatable political party. Lots of people don't want to give money to something which they feel will in part be funneled to an organization which is antithetical to their views. Realistically, I kind of doubt Mullvad is rolling in swimming pools filled with cash getting syphoned to neonazis, but that brings me to my next point...

        For many, it's not just an intellectual position but an emotional one. This doesn't necessarily mean it's wrong, but you probably won't be able to reason them out of it. It's the same reason I don't listen to Michael Jackson. He's dead and none of that streaming revenue would go to him or to raping children but...yuck.

        At the end of the day, there's an irony in this guy supporting the very freedoms on the internet which are being used to disseminate criticisms against him, and perhaps inducing people to starve one of the vehicles which helps maintain those freedoms.

        • carlosjobim 1 day ago

          > what many consider to be an unpalatable political party

          That description fits every political party everywhere in the world.

        • myrmidon 22 hours ago

          I can absolutely respect the emotional argument.

          The "irony" in supporting that party I believe is a stretch. I don't see how support for some neo-nationalists is inherently "anti-freedom"; would that not apply to any party arguing against open borders?

          My personal belief is that professional discrimination because of political support is a very slippery slope, and I honestly think that a lot of people directly or indirectly advocating for it are not fully understanding of what this means and where that slope ends:

          When asking about professional boycott for "questionable" past positions (like being gay in Turings time) I only get silence in response because people presumably realize that such witch-hunting often ends up looking really bad in retrospect.

          edit: I just misunderstood your last point, completely agree.

          • helterskelter 22 hours ago

            I think I wasn't as clear as I could have been in that last part. The irony I was referring to is that this guy is doing more than most people to support freedom online, and that very freedom he supports is being used by people who disagree with his political position to potentially organize a boycott of Mullvad and possibly deprive everybody of a tool which helps protect freedom online.

            It's like people who think Americans shouldn't shouldn't have first amendment rights. The irony is that the first amendment protects their ability to criticize the first amendment.

            For better or worse, the internet and all its collective outrage is now the world's HR department.

      • shermantanktop 1 day ago

        > Do you actually want voting to happen via wallet?

        Money has a huge influence on politics, and recognizing that reality isn't the same as wanting it or encouraging it.

      • Barrin92 23 hours ago

        >If you want to vote for or against Örebropartiet, then just do it at the booth.

        I'm kinda confused here. The context of this is that a rich tech bro uses his money to fund and promote a political party, with our money, but we can't decide to not pay him because that's influencing money with politics (???)

        What kind of bizarro world is this, he can use his vast wealth to promote racist parties but we can't collectively use ours? How about he just "does it at the booth" and donates his money to the against malaria foundation?

        • myrmidon 23 hours ago

          My point is that if you are boycotting the company despite living on the opposite side of the world from Örebro (thus being inherently unable to vote at the booth), then you are not really participating in politics, you are participating in a witchhunt (with negligible political effects).

          I'm suggesting that small political progress is simply not worth witch-hunting for. If you have political concerns, engage by voting, starting your own party or advocating for your cause instead of ruining the career of a person you disagree with.

          • Barrin92 22 hours ago

            >if you are boycotting the company despite living on the opposite side of the world

            If I'm living at the opposite side of the world and my money was indirectly influencing Swedish politics then I'm doing Sweden a service by discontinuing my payment. After all the only thing I'm doing is reduce the power of corporations in a democratic process, I literally cannot take any Swedish vote away. That's exactly what you asked for.

            > If you have political concerns, engage by voting, starting your own party or advocating for your cause

            I do all of that, I'm an active member of a European political party and engaged far beyond just voting. But I'm also not going to stop to make sure my money as far as I can control it does not go into the pockets of millionaires who single handedly decided to bankroll 70% of the funding of a party that runs on ethnic hate. That is money in politics. If there was no money in politics, these people wouldn't be able to spread their hate. All of these parties on our continent are funded and supported by oligarchs across the world.

            • myrmidon 6 hours ago

              > But I'm also not going to stop to make sure my money as far as I can control it does not go into the pockets of millionaires who single handedly decided to bankroll 70% of the funding of a party that runs on ethnic hate.

              My view is: its not your money that goes to a party you dislike, its Berntssons; money doesn't stink, and it's not your responsibility how some fraction of it is spent after you paid someone for a completely unrelated purpose.

              You basically try to avoid a second order effect (Örebropartiet getting money) by leaning on an inherently anti-liberal mechanism (applying pressure via workplace).

              You might think the end justifies the means here, but I strongly disagree; legitimizing discrimination at the workplace based on political beliefs is in my view much worse than anything that Örebropartiet could ever achieve.

              You are obviously completely free to do business with whoever you want, but if you are advocating for boycott here (=> pro corporate censorship) you are directly doing more damage to liberalism in my view than some swedish local party ever could.

              I'm confident in this view because I'm certain that politically motivated workplace discrimination is/was/would have been absolutely horrible for tons of people that turned out "right" (=> secularists, feminists, LGBT advocates, ...). Nothing that could be realistically achieved by such boycott appears even close to worth the trade to me.

              Crucially, almost everyone ever believes his own moral compass to be "correct", but many turn out (somewhat) "wrong" decades or centuries later. So allowing more avenues to force views on others is always a risky proposition because those avenues are not just accesible to people that you believe to be "right"-- you also open them to people that you know to be wrong (i.e. rightwingers that want to get you fired for being an anti-nationalist traitor or w/e).

      • miyoji 2 hours ago

        I don't know why your comment is flagged dead, there's no good reason it should be.

        > This whole view kinda confounds me. I don't see how you can honestly profess to be on the tolerant/right side, morally, while trying to boycott someones business over his political views. Would you have preferred early feminists or LGBT advocates to be hounded in their professional life? Would it have been better for more people to do that?

        Okay, first of all, early feminists and LGBT advocates were and are hounded in their professional lives. This has happened to progressives for all of human history, it's actively happening under the current US administration, and it's going to continue happening forever.

        A bigger point here is that your argument is morally worthless. You're just saying that I shouldn't judge anyone, because other people have judged wrongly in the past. I disagree entirely. I wouldn't buy juice from a rapist, I wouldn't buy a computer from a murderer, and I wouldn't buy a VPN from a fascist.

        The largest point however, is that your argument implies that I am compelled to spend my money on Mullvad regardless of what I think about the people who work there or what they do, and that's an obvious absurdity. I am free to spend or not spend on whatever I choose for whatever reasons I choose, and politics is going to be one of them. You'll have to get over it.

  • epistasis 1 day ago

    I'm pretty familiar with these right-wingers that claim to fight for "freedom of speech" they all end up fighting for "freedom of speech for the things I want to say, jail for those who oppose me." The 2024-2025 swing was pretty extreme on that front.

    Political extremists are all the same, left or right, nobody should be surprised because they seek power above all else.

    I had been pretty concerned about the level of advertising for Mullvad I've seen recently, that's usually a really bad sign for a VPN type company. But seeing this comment, in combination with the news article linked here, tells me everything I need to know for trust.

    VPNs are all about trust. Mullvad has completely broken all trust with me.

    • JuniperMesos 21 hours ago

      Do you think any of the people publicly claiming that they will no longer do business with Mullvad because Daniel Berntsson donates to an anti-immigration political party, wouldn't make donating to that party an illegal, jail-able legal offense if they had the political power to do so?

      • alextingle 10 hours ago

        Racial discrimination is illegal where I live, and I believe that's a good thing. Political parties that advocate racism are simply antithetical to the whole concept of liberal democracy.

      • ninjin 10 hours ago

        Why would we? There are plenty of us that believe in free speech, but would rather not see our money go towards bankrolling further destroying public discourse like you see Allard doing. It is perfectly possible to forward your opinions without setting the public square on fire. The kind of rhetoric that you profess here is dangerous and I see it all too often in the US. If no side attempts to hold the high ground, all we will have is a race towards the bottom and at some point arguing that it is high time to send the other side off to the camps and that is not a future I want to see.

      • 9935c101ab17a66 8 hours ago

        Any? As in one of them? Maybe. I think it’s incredibly unlikely though, and I think you’re making a huge and questionable leap. Boycotting a business isn’t normally a precursor to fascist dictatorship.

  • crossroadsguy 1 day ago

    People in this thread are slowly (or maybe not so slowly) realising "… this was also a business after all… just with a different "model"… huh". There's caring, there's caring PR, and then there's caring theatre.

  • WhitneyLand 1 day ago

    Fredrik, while acknowledging everything you said, the fact remains some of my money can end up empowering politics I find repugnant.

    If it were a small amount of money, it wouldn’t be an issue. If the politics at stake were less important, it wouldn’t be an issue.

    They’re not going to stop at immigration, look at other places in the world to see the future risk.

    Sorry, I was a paying and satisfied customer, and now I’m out.

    • kfreds 23 hours ago

      I'm sorry to hear that. I'm not defending his choice, but consider reading Daniel's rationale in the Flamman article. There's also his blog [1], which explains some of his views. I know he doesn't share all of Örebropartiets views, but I should let him provide that nuance.

      As I said in another comment, speaking for myself, I don’t like that he made this donation and I know this view is shared by many of my colleagues.

      [1]: https://dberntsson.info

      • McDyver 23 hours ago

        > As I said in another comment, speaking for myself, I don’t like that he made this donation and I know this view is shared by many of my colleagues.

        Maybe there's a case to distance Mullvad from him, then. Not taking a stand is also a political choice.

        • kfreds 22 hours ago

          Consider GWB's "Every nation, in every region, now has a decision to make. Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists." For and against are not always the only options. Sometimes there are nuances, or other concerns.

          Daniel made this decision as a private individual. Some of his colleagues (including me) dislike it as private individuals.

          I recognize that the amount as well as his position of power within the company (co-founder, co-owner, co-CEO) make people who disapprove more uncomfortable than if it had been a much lower amount from a regular employee.

          However, as others have argued, what would happen if Mullvad started weighing in on politics unrelated to its mission?

          Better to see Mullvad almost like a force of nature: Mullvad believes privacy is a universal right. You might disagree but at least it's consistent, and I'd argue that's one path to trustworthiness - you know how we're likely to treat you as a customer. (equally, regardless of your political affiliation)

          Obviously everyone is free to make their own choice on whether they like this stance or not.

          • 8ytecoder 22 hours ago

            I know what you’re saying sounds perfectly rational to you and I do applaud you for holding the moral position separating someone’s private life from their contribution to the company. But, think about the number of people who were let go for far less controversial actions. At some point an officer of the company doing things in their personal life becomes a distraction to the company’s goals. My question is, would you act differently if this person were not a co-founder?

            • JuniperMesos 21 hours ago

              If Mullvad fired an ordinary employee for donating to an anti-immigration party or pressured them into not donating, I would absolutely find a new VPN provider that doesn't do this over it.

              • kfreds 20 hours ago

                As would I. That doesn't seem like a nice workplace. I'm pretty sure it's illegal too, at least in Sweden.

              • Gerharddc 11 hours ago

                For sure, and I think most people would agree with this. However, I also think most people treat it differently when it is someone so high up because they have a lot of control and, more importantly, accumulate a large part of the profit.

                I don't think you should not be allowed to have strong political opinions in such a position. I just think that in this case, it is very dangerous to express so much support for them in such a public way. I say this because (from my perspective at least) a large part of Mullvad's "competitive advantage" is their brand image, and it just feels that a link to controversial politics probably does more harm than good to this brand image.

            • kfreds 20 hours ago

              > would you act differently if this person were not a co-founder?

              I have several colleagues who I'm fairly certain are anarcho-syndicalists, meaning they want to abolish the state and capitalism. I don't know about my colleagues, but in general anarcho-syndicalists seek to bring about their vision through organising trade unions, and use that to seize control of the means of production and distribution. I on the other hand am clearly a capitalist pig seeking to oppress my workforce. Why else would I invite them to join me on the barricades against mass surveillance and censorship? Shared values around privacy? :P

              I have no business questioning which demonstrations my colleagues participate in, or what they write on their blog. As long as they are not actively malicious against me, our workplace, or their fellow coworkers.

              It's getting late, maybe I'm missing something in my description. I guess that's a rough approximation of how I feel about tolerating differences of opinion.

              • smokedetector1 7 hours ago

                You don’t consider supporting “remigration”, aka forced expulsion of non-white-skinned people, to be actively malicious? What if he was physically going door to door and assaulting immigrants? Would that also be out of scope for you?

          • maximilianburke 22 hours ago

            You can say Mullvad is apolitical all you want but the problem is money paid to Mullvad is eventually ending up in the hands of Örebropartiet by way of Daniel directing his compensation into his donations.

            • HDBaseT 17 hours ago

              He didn't say Mullvad is a apolitical, in fact, he said Mullvad is inherently political because they fight for freedom of speech, freedom of information and the right to privacy.

              You are saying something incongruent with what kfreds said!

              • maximilianburke 16 hours ago

                Allow me to reword, using 'kfreds phrasing.

                "Mullvad is weighing in on politics unrelated to its privacy mission because money given to Mullvad is eventually ending up in the hands of Örebropartiet by way of Daniel directing his compensation into his donations."

                There, better?

                The crux of what I'm saying is that if you give money to Mullvad you are giving money to Örebropartiet, and that's unchanged by the first part of the statement.

          • ignoramous 21 hours ago

            > Mullvad believes privacy is a universal right. You might disagree but at least it's consistent ...

            Is privacy inconsistent with right to dignity, liberty, and equality?

          • kqp 21 hours ago

            Thank you for taking this stance. It is the mature, intellectual, and virtuous one, and with it you are on civilization’s side.

            The US is currently in a very bad place politically. It’s visible not just in politicians, but in everybody’s minds, all the time. A person who believes they’re fighting for their life obsesses over “us vs them”, and forgets their every principle and even most reasoning, until the fight is over. When we spit on your principles, please know that they are our principles, too, we just are not currently well enough to remember it.

          • drakonka 21 hours ago

            Of course the distinction itself is important in its own way, but I think/hope everyone here fully realizes and accepts that he technically donated as a private individual. You can clearly see it from the headline - it does not say "Mullvad VPN AB is the main financer of the Swedish Örebro party", after all. For those who have an issue supporting Mullvad after this, that is unlikely to be the point of contention. The issue seems to be simply in this case, some people clearly find the private individual's actions objectionable enough to not want to support a product that individual is deeply associated with, profits from (and then funnels those profits into said actions), etc. Fixating on this being done as a private individual just comes off like a bit of a deflection attempt from a pretty straightforward case of individual actions having consequences.

            • kfreds 20 hours ago

              > I think/hope everyone here fully realizes and accepts that he technically donated as a private individual

              In this forum, yes. Unfortunately there are lots of people who don't care to inform themselves in the least. During the weekend my impression was that most people assumed Mullvad only had one founder, owner and CEO. Some people were implying that Mullvad's workforce supported this, which of course is ridiculous. I don't want to be associated with this donation. Then there are the people who think he donated 5 million USD or EUR. Sigh.

              It would be nice if people didn't resort to make things up, and instead expressed their disapprovement based on fact. That's what I'm doing. As are several of my colleagues.

              > The issue seems to be simply in this case, some people clearly find the private individual's actions objectionable enough to not want to support a product that individual is deeply associated with

              Yes, that is clear.

              > Fixating on this being done as a private individual just comes off like a bit of a deflection attempt from a pretty straightforward case of individual actions having consequences.

              Ah, thanks. That was not my intent. For sure an individual's actions has consequences, especially when you're in a position of power. In this case people are holding Daniel accountable by switching providers. They are acting according to their beliefs. That's fine.

              Meanwhile I am also trying to clarify Mullvad's position on the matter. Many people understand it and still disagree. That's also fine.

          • fzeroracer 18 hours ago

            > However, as others have argued, what would happen if Mullvad started weighing in on politics unrelated to its mission?

            A bit too late for that now, isn't it? Extreme anti-immigration stances have always been associated with anti-privacy because eventually those stances evolve into state apparatuses designed to identify dissidents and targets for deportation. What will you do when the party your co-founder supports eventually demands stripping away privacy for the sake of finding 'terrorists'? Trying to hold this thin veneer of apoliticalism outside of your privacy stance is a remarkably foolish one and one that most people can identify. Especially those who saw that progression occur in real time.

          • Hikikomori 9 hours ago

            And if the Örebro party decides it wants chat control or similar things? Will Daniels privacy principles stand or will it bend to suit his likely stronger beliefs in anti immigration? Has he made similar contributions to parties against chat control?

        • honeycrispy 22 hours ago

          > Maybe there's a case to distance Mullvad from him, then. Not taking a stand is also a political choice.

          They are making a stand. This stance that they've taken has made me decide that I'm switching from another VPN provider TO Mullvad. Not many people have the backbone to actually stand behind freedom of speech when it may cost them something. It's very admirable.

          • JuniperMesos 21 hours ago

            Depending on what your current VPN provider is, this might be a good idea anyway.

          • applfanboysbgon 21 hours ago

            Purchasing political power has zero relation to freedom of speech.

      • gpm 21 hours ago

        > I'm not defending his choice, but consider reading Daniel's rationale

        This is literally defending his choice. More than that it is providing direct support to the views you are apparently trying to distance yourself from by suggesting people read literature in favour of them - not in a context where they even see opposing arguments.

        But as a fun aside to the people debating that his views aren't right wing... consider this quote from the aforementioned blog (translation made via firefox's swedish to english model)

        > A building permit officer at a municipal city building office is primarily dedicated to preventing, making it difficult, costly, delayed and uneasy construction. He causes great damage and thus produces negative value, but still also receives his salary from the tax of others and is thus supported by others.

        Can we get more right wing than claiming that imposing standards on industry so they don't go around building death traps that kill people to save a few bucks "causes great damage and thus produces negative value". Not even as an argument that this particular office is overly restrictive, but just as a statement about building permit officers in general.

        • scottyah 21 hours ago

          Back in my day, the right wing was "conservative" and used to be the ones making the permitting processes to slow down "progress".

          • gpm 19 hours ago

            Using regulations and permitting to improve safety, living conditions, and similar things to support people has always been left wing.

            Using regulations and permitting to discriminate against people who you don't like is a long standing right wing tactic, but isn't the nature of the complaint I quoted above.

            • xhkkffbf 3 hours ago

              Really? If someone passes a law that criminalizes the activity of migrants, they say they're doing it to improve safety and living conditions. But it seems like the current people in the left-wing tent hate restrictions on migrants and view such regulations as racist.

        • int_19h 21 hours ago

          How did we get to the point where suggesting that you hear out what someone has to say for themselves get equated to "literally defending his choice"?

          I'm very far left myself, but I hate this tendency to equate any intellectual engagement with the right wing thought whatsoever with support. It's almost as if rightist politics were some kind of cooties that you catch simply by being in the same room or something.

          • tremon 6 hours ago

            > It's almost as if rightist politics were some kind of cooties

            Rightist politics may not be, but rightist rhetoric surely is. Consider GW Bush' statement "if you're not with us, you're against us" (or the 2025 equivalent "either you support genocide, or you're an antisemite"): where is the room for intellectual engagement in statements such as these?

            Your suggested "intellectual engagement" with absolute positions such as these serves absolutely no other purpose than to lend them an air of legitimacy. There absolutely exist rationales that do not deserve to be "heard" or "considered".

            Or put another way:

              "Let's meet in the middle", says the unjust man.
              You take a step forward; the unjust man takes a step back.
              "Let's meet in the middle", says the unjust man.
            • account42 5 hours ago

              The irony is palpable.

          • Lerc 4 hours ago

            I would characterise myself as being very left. Yet people who I perceive as to the right of me perceive themselves as much further left.

            I have always considered compassion the driving force underlying left wing views. I really can't understand the mind of the spiteful left, it seems such a contradiction of values.

          • ksec 3 hours ago

            >I'm very far left myself,

            I know it is now an internet meme, but those who considered themselves far left 10 years ago would no be a moderate.

      • throwaway85825 11 hours ago

        >I don’t like that he made this donation and I know this view is shared by many of my colleagues.

        Its a strange world now where everyone is expected to have a public opinion on everyone else's opinions to keep them in line. Very anti privacy, anti freedom, and against plurality of opinion.

        • Eupolemos 10 hours ago

          I'm sorry - you're saying that having a public opinion on another person's opinion is against the plurality of opinion?

          • davidee 6 hours ago

            I didn't read it that way (but I can see multiple possible readings).

            Here's my interpretation: When someone has a shitty public opionion, we force others to MAKE PUBLIC their opinions.

            And because our society is so polarized, we don't talk about opinions or their nuances; we reduce them to binary views (it's possible they are but not always), we pick a side and we light our torches.

          • animuchan 4 hours ago

            This thread reads as an example of anything BUT plurality of opinion -- most of the people here never in their lives considered that the country in question has political discourse at all, and what's going on in there politically, so no opinion was ever present.

            Furthermore, consider that the opinion-like discourse is clearly performative. We all know what the correct virtue signaling looks like, and we know that we need to ruin every person not doing the correct virtue signaling.

            So it's less of a plurality-of-opinion situation, and more of a direct-democracy situation: a lynch mob.

            (Not saying it's good or bad btw -- not my circus, not my monkeys. Just dishonest to say we love some sort of plurality while doing this I think.)

            • kfreds 31 minutes ago

              To be fair there are also many examples in this thread of courteous, empathetic and intellectual discourse, where people agree to disagree.

              Relatively speaking HN is an oasis compared to other platforms. Which makes me wonder, are there forums with an even higher quality than HN?

        • jonnybgood 5 hours ago

          No, it's not everyone and it's always been this way. Nobody really cares about the opinion of random strangers.

          People care about the opinions of those they're invested in (emotionally, politically, financially, etc.) and it's those opinions they want to know. People want to associate with those who share their values. It has always been this way.

        • surgical_fire 5 hours ago

          That's... Not really what is happening here.

          The guy who made the donation is entitled to his opinions. No one is questioning his right to make a donation.

          People are, however, that by paying for the services of a company he owns, they are as a second order effect financing politics they find repugnant.

      • gruelsandwich 11 hours ago

        Really fighting windmills with the hot takes about things that aren't true. "Sweden actually has a hidden wealth tax" and "The money supply is the real inflation!!"

        Really in line with typical views of right-leaning people you see on X etc.

        • SZJX 9 hours ago

          Curious, what’s exactly not true about these? The Nordic (and Central European) countries are surely not friendly to people accumulating wealth, and it’s a widely known fact that monetary supply got out of control especially since Covid. Data about it are all available in public.

      • animuchan 4 hours ago

        I wonder if by this thread's logic, it is now my turn to virtue signal as if I'm leaving Mullvad as a customer, because now you said that don't like someone else's freedom of conscience, and I value freedom of conscience.

        Such a bad place we're in: people say they value "freedom", but then you can't choose you own political representation without being witch-hunted to death by the same "freedom" group.

        (I honestly think that the perfect response in this case would be to support the cofounder, if anything, to make their own choices, and refuse to hate on the person's political leaning. But alas, the chains of freedom are super heavy.)

        • asdewqqwer 4 hours ago

          At 21 century, especially on a topic regarding Europe, I thought we should have long learnt the lesson from how problematic Legal Positivism and naive "freedom" is from Weimarer Republik‘s constitution.

          In short, freedom should at least maintain the capability of preserving basic poltical freedom. From my understanding of that party, they are clearly against other people's existing political freedom.

        • bingoMen 3 hours ago

          The same applies to people who say they support freedom but are then opposed to immigration because their concept of freedom is tied to wealth, privileges, and the preservation of those things. But that has little to do with freedom. We are only free when everyone is free.

          • kfreds 36 minutes ago

            > The same applies to people who say they support freedom but are then opposed to immigration

            Indeed. Open borders is the ideal. That's also one of the views that Daniel and I share.

        • ksec 3 hours ago

          >without being witch-hunted

          I still remember in 2013 to 2021 when this was happening in the US and wider internet on twitter and reddit. A lot of people in Europe / AUS / NZ thought it was some soup opera made up by the internet's few.

    • handedness 18 hours ago

      > If it were a small amount of money, it wouldn’t be an issue.

      I'm not speaking for or against anyone's views for or against anything here, but it's worth noting that Brendan Eich's $1K donation caused quite the stir.

    • ouraf 16 hours ago

      If you bought the product, the money went to the company. You don't need to take personal responsibility beyond that, and the company isn't doing the thing you hate so much. By the same token that "some of your money might end up (after many twists and turns) empowering politics you find repugnant", a much bigger share of this money is paying for the food on the table of the employees, their families and their children.

      How many people unrelated with your personal gripe, people that were doing a good job since you were paying and satisfied customer, are you willing to punish in order to "send a message"?

      This is an impossible standard to live by and demand from everything you buy and every service you pay for. Doubly so if you need to announce to the world you're dropping a product because of something that isn't done by or responsibility of its employees.

    • vr46 11 hours ago

      I am so so disappointed with Mullvad and this founder. I can’t believe I let myself get suckered and then paid up-front for the year again.

      The only influence I have is with my money.

      • mariusor 9 hours ago

        Perhaps you should talk to customer support and try to get your money back. Even if it won't work, there's no faster way to reach the company to make a stand than to have an explicit paper trail to customers that are leaving them because of this.

    • hnben 11 hours ago

      I am sympathetic to the sentiment, but the argument does not hold water.

      > the fact remains some of my money can end up empowering politics I find repugnant

      are you paying taxes? are you using gasoline? are you paying for amazon?

      Some ratio of your money will always go toward something you hate. The big question is: is for a mulvad subscription that ratio bigger than for the alternative? The next question is: how is the ratio for things you like?

  • tamimio 1 day ago

    It’s time to create nullvad, Fredrik.

  • wanderer2323 23 hours ago

    Thank you for supporting the civil liberties and individual freedom of expression!

    • kfreds 22 hours ago

      Thank you. :)

  • ryan_n 23 hours ago

    > It should be obvious that Daniel's private donation to a political party is not part of Mullvad's values or mission

    Why should this be obvious? I don't think that's obvious at all. The owner of a company could very easily decide to one day use their company to further their political beliefs/ideologies (see: Twitter, FaceBook, etc..). Why would Mullvad be any different?

    • kfreds 23 hours ago

      I'm sorry to hear you'll be leaving us.

      To answer your question, we started building this organization in the summer of 2008 for idealistic reasons, and we are still idealists who think privacy is fundamental to a civilized society.

      The best strategy for achieving societal impact through entrepreneurship is consistent, long-term, and value-based ownership. For us, this disqualifies taking outside investment, either through venture capital or going public. Mullvad has instead been growing organically without outside investments.

      Our principles have withstood the test of time. Our conviction has remained unchanged through multiple serious offers of acquisition and outside investment. Words are cheap of course, but consistent action over the course of almost two decades is not.

      Mullvad is about privacy. Neither Daniel nor I have used Mullvad's brand to promote our personal opinions.

      • nout 22 hours ago

        It's stupid when one of the CEOs of a private VPN company decides to fund political actors. That's just PR issue bound to happen. Funding bad actors bites you every single time - so maybe have a chat about if you have seen this coming - and if not why were you blind to this?

        On top of this don't change your service based on this outrage. If you change it, then you will prove that Mullvad is malleable by political pressure. You can guess what happens next...

  • vitally3643 23 hours ago

    That's great and all but can I have a refund for the portion of my mullvad subscription that went to supporting organizations who think that people like me don't deserve to live?

    • dijit 23 hours ago

      Can you point to the charter where the Örebro party ever said that you don't deserve to live?

      The embellishments of what people actually believe is extremely exhausting.

      FWIW, I'm an immigrant in Sweden and if they gained power I would be affected, but we talk about people with differing views to us as if they're actively violent in order to shut down conversation.

      This catasphrophising language will eventually not help your cause, because ordinary people start to feel numb to it and the hard-right will not be defeated by it.

      • therouwboat 23 hours ago

        Its not that they start to feel numb, they didn't care in the first place. I have had random co-workers start talking about how they don't want foreigners in Finland and that in Sweden immigrants (maybe you) get free money and don't work.

        • skjoldr 19 hours ago

          Asylum seekers in the EU indeed get a monthly allowance and are prohibited from working. Is this not a known fact?

          • therouwboat 11 hours ago

            They need to get permission, but they can work. I did mention that this person wanted all foreigners out.

          • wolvoleo 4 hours ago

            Which is a direct result of the right-wing conservatives complaining about them taking locals' jobs. There are some exceptions like for Ukrainian refugees.

            By the way this is only during the validation of their asylum-seeker status. Once they get permanent residency they can work.

  • krig 23 hours ago

    [flagged]

    • dang 12 hours ago

      You can't post like this here, no matter how wrong someone else is or you feel they are.

      You may not owe founders whose cofounders you feel are behaving badly better, but you owe this community better if you're participating in it.

      If you'd please review https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html and stick to the rules when posting here, we'd appreciate it.

  • microgpt 23 hours ago

    Fredrik, can we expect you to start a new company with the same values without the bullshit?

  • dom96 23 hours ago

    As a customer I can no longer support you.

    But as someone that has been in a similar situation to you, I understand it's tough to end up building something big with someone who's politics you do not agree with. I would seriously urge you to consider building something new that rejects this kind of politics explicitly.

    • kfreds 20 hours ago

      I'm sorry to hear that.

      Oh, I definitely agree with some of his political opinions, the obvious ones being around free speech, free press, and privacy.

      There are important issues where we don't agree. His values around empathy stretch to most sentient beings, and he believes I commit torture when I eat fish for lunch. And he's still willing to associate with me.

      • timmytokyo 19 hours ago

        >he's still willing to associate with me

        Presumably because you are not an immigrant (or the child of an immigrant).

        • kfreds 10 hours ago

          You presume wrong. He has nothing against immigrants as a group. He sees open borders as the ideal, and have since he was a teenager. As far as I can tell the only reason he doesn't actively advocate for it at the moment is because of mismanagement of the government. Something like that. I don't want to say more because I don't want to misrepresent his views.

          • lightbritefight 2 hours ago

            The above isn't believable. He gave $500,000 to a political org that has explicitly called immigrants "parasites," dehumanizing phrasing that mirrors Nazi speech and has been used to justify mass murder.

            He is in fact the main financial patron of this racist political party. Saying he supports open borders at the same time is just a flat non sequitur.

  • insane_dreamer 22 hours ago

    What you said makes sense, but what the founders do matters. I'll never buy a Tesla car because of Elon's actions. I cancelled my Amazon Prime subscription because of Bezos' actions.

    There are plenty of people for whom it doesn't matter, but for some it does.

    • kfreds 22 hours ago

      Indeed. It matters to me. In fact, most of my political opinions have atrophied, or rather I have self-censored. Daniel believes that is not the right trade-off to make in this case. I understand his point of view, and disagree.

      • insane_dreamer 22 hours ago

        And to be sure, I agree Daniel is entitled to his opinions and the right to do with his money as he pleases. Of course there may be business consequences for doing so in terms of how the user base reacts.

        I think the bigger problem -- and I don't know the rules for political donations in Sweden -- is that any individual is able to pour millions into a political party of any persuasion. In the US this situation is made much worse since a Supreme Court ruling known as Citizens United which opened the floodgates for the ultra-wealthy to bankroll politicians. But that's another discussion altogether.

        • peterfirefly 11 hours ago

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Party_finance_in_Sweden

          > is that any individual is able to pour millions into a political party of any persuasion.

          It's an even bigger problem that political parties are heavily subsidized by the state, which favours the establishment.

          This goes beyond purely monetary subsidies. Some people employed by the state have an essentially political function or have a large political influence over the population and they have been hired (and incentivized) by the established parties over decades.

  • gustavus 22 hours ago

    For whatever it's worth I use Mullvad because it lets me pay in Bitcoin is super easy to re-up and is super anonymous.

    I don't really give a darn who you voted for or what your founder did. I like the product I'll keep using it.

    • iAMkenough 22 hours ago

      Do you happen to drive a Tesla?

      • throw-the-towel 18 hours ago

        Even if they do, it's none of your business.

        • iAMkenough 5 hours ago

          Your opinion has been duly noted thank you for sharing.

  • iAMkenough 22 hours ago

    You may try to unsuccessfully hold this distinction, but at the end of the day money that I give to your company ends up being used by far-right politicians to oppose Mullvad's supposed mission.

  • simio 22 hours ago

    This response completely fails to address what is the issue for me and many others, and frankly I find it quite offensive. The Örebro Party uses racist and transphobic rhetoric and dog whistles, and openly advocates for ethnic cleansing. Their political actions have already hurt people I care about. Berntsson's donation is explicitly meant to support the party in bringing their politics to the national level. This would bring material harm to me, to family and friends, and to many others.

    And Berntsson's ability to fund ÖP in doing that harm is directly linked to the financial success of Mullvad. Whether you or Mullvad agrees or disagrees with Berntsson or ÖP is irrelevant. Thanks to Berntsson, more money to Mullvad means more harm to us. So why on Earth would I pay you anything?! On the contrary, it would quite obviously be in our best interests if Mullvad fails as a company, if possible to such an extent that Berntsson is ruined financially and can no longer fund "nationalist socialist" parties such as ÖP.

    It just doesn't matter whether Mullvad believes in free speech or not, not when Berntsson is making it so that giving you money causes us to be persecuted and harmed. And to be perfectly honest, I find your framing of this as "philosophical" to be profoundly appalling, and it tells me that you do not at all understand what is actually going on.

    • kfreds 10 hours ago

      I'm sorry to hear that. Since writing that response I've added plenty more to this thread.

  • khriss 22 hours ago

    Fredrik, thank you for a clear and honest statement of Mullvad's position rather than corporate word salad.

    > Mullvad protects the right for people to express things we don't agree with. We protect the right of everyone to access views we don't agree with.

    > That said, if you no longer want to be a Mullvad customer for philosophical reasons, we think it's important to honor that

    Combining the above statements, would you have any recommendations on VPN providers for people who choose to leave Mullvad? As you will agree, anonymity and privacy are under attack the world over and even people who leave Mullvad deserve have access to tools enabling the same.

    The VPN space is a cesspool of shady operators who seem to spend more on marketing than technology and it's really hard even for the HN audience to know which providers are legit. This is where your background and experience are really valuable, so any recommendations would be very welcome.

    Yes, I am aware that the ask here is to endorse a competitor, however if someone has made up their mind to leave Mullvad, they are going to do so anyway. Enabling them to do so while retaining their anonymity and privacy will go a long way in advancing the political aims Mullvad stands for.

    • kfreds 19 hours ago

      Hi! No worries. I haven't spoken with Nick Pestell of IVPN in ages, but he's always struck me as genuine and empathetic. We met the first time at RightsCon in 2018 I believe. TunnelBear and ExpressVPN were also there. We all wrote this thing together: https://mullvad.net/en/blog/2018/10/17/signals-trustworthy-v...

      Since those conversations I've always thought that IVPN is closest aligned with Mullvad's values. Again, I haven't spoken with Nick in ages, so I don't know what IVPN is doing now.

      • khriss 16 hours ago

        Thank you! I wasn't even aware that IVPN existed.

  • jwildeboer 22 hours ago

    FTR. The reports I have seen have always made it clear that Mullvad has two owners/founders/CEOs. And while the donations may be private, they obviously come from money earned as part of being one of the founder/owner/CEO of Mullvad and thus raises questions on corporate responsibility.

  • RIMR 22 hours ago

    >Being in a tolerant and intellectually open environment is also liberating and promotes truth seeking

    I agree 100%, which is why the dehumanizing intolerance of the Mullvad CEO completely disqualifies your organization from being on the same side as that statement.

  • JuniperMesos 21 hours ago

    I'm a long-time Mullvad customer, and I respect what the company has been doing and the pro-privacy political stance it openly and publicly stands for.

    I agree that Daniel's private donation to a political party is not part of Mullvad's values or mission, and shouldn't be.

    But what I do care about, strongly, is that Mullvad as a company doesn't bow to pressure from pro-immigration activists who are attempting to impose social and financial consequences on people and institutions like Mullvad that tolerate anti-immigration political speech. Which is of course why people are publicizing this donation and publicly stating that they will no longer do business with Mullvad because of it.

    I want to state publicly that what would make me no longer do business with Mullvad is if Mullvad, organizationally, attempted to pressure Daniel Berntsson into not donating to anti-immigration political parties because it induces pro-immigration activists to attempt to boycott the company. I don't want to live in a world where people trying to run a pro-privacy VPN feel pressure to police anti-immigration speech unrelated to the core mission among people in their organization, and that's the principle that my customer dollars are riding on.

    • kfreds 21 hours ago

      > I'm a long-time Mullvad customer, and I respect what the company has been doing and the pro-privacy political stance it openly and publicly stands for.

      Thank you.

    • gpm 21 hours ago

      The speech people are objecting to isn't anti-immgiration. It is pro crimes against humanity against people who previously immigrated, and their descendants.

      A stance that Sweden should reduce the amount of immigration they accept would be utterly unremarkable and never result in outrage like this.

      • JuniperMesos 20 hours ago

        > A stance that Sweden should reduce the amount of immigration they accept would be utterly unremarkable and never result in outrage like this.

        I don't believe this claim, because immigration is a live political issue in my country (the United States) just as it is in Sweden; and people absolutely claim that reducing the amount of immigration the US accepts is immoral and genocidal. Seriously, claims of this nature are a huge amount of contemporary American politics and this is obvious to anyone who has seen the name "Donald Trump" in a news publication talking about the US in the past decade. Also I've read Bryan Caplan's argument that not having open borders is morally equivalent to Jim Crow, and read plenty of other people who think similarly to him.

        • paulryanrogers 20 hours ago

          > people absolutely claim that reducing the amount of immigration the US accepts is immoral and genocidal

          I'm in the US too. Can you provide some sources?

        • skulk 15 hours ago

          Immigration in the US is a completely different problem with its own crazy complex history of cause and effect. Using one as a lens to study the other seems foolish at best.

          • mlrtime 6 hours ago

            That is sort of the point, this has become a wedge issue to separate people. You are either pro-immigration (world wide) or not.

            It's the same "You're either with us or not" argument that forces a side.

            So it is related.

        • armchairhacker 7 hours ago

          No, plenty of people in the US want to limit illegal immigration and expand legal avenues.

          It’s the Democrats and Republican politicians and party activists who can’t compromise. The Democrats don’t address illegal immigration, even the easy wins like when immigrants were placed in hotels while homeless Americans were in the street and crummy shelters (Maine). Then Trump finally deports criminals, but also technically-illegal people who’ve lived decades and started families here (and haven’t commit any crimes beyond speeding tickets), and restricts and harasses legal immigrants.

          There’s something wrong with politics where parties can’t even accept the most obvious exceptions to their “controversial” issues, maybe because of the stupid “slippery slope”. I expect people to fight over 1 million refugees who aren’t misbehaving but overloading systems. I don’t expect people to fight over an immigrant who assaulted someone, or a legal immigrant who is giving more than they take.

    • bigyabai 21 hours ago

      > Which is of course why people are publicizing this donation and publicly stating that they will no longer do business with Mullvad because of it.

      But you're doing the same thing, making the same threat. You've only escalated it from a conscientious protest to a Mexican stand off.

      I'm not icked-out by immigration discussion, but I am concerned by business owners starting down a political path. VPNs are not a very glamorous segment of the industry, and Mullvad had carved out a niche in taking a neutral side and fostering trust through a transparent product. My former boss spoke well of them and visited their sites in-person after hearing the marketing line about their RAM-only VPNs. Their appeal was not in protecting politicized speech, but protecting all speech and defending it as an apolitical technological imperative.

      Now more than ever, it's hard for me to believe their brand identity. You're allowed to have political opinions, voice them and vote for them when you're a CEO. But spending your paycheck on inordinate political investments is how you ask for a boycott. It's how I would feel about any political investment that their CEOs make, and its already tarnished the Mullvad brand for me.

      • JuniperMesos 20 hours ago

        > But you're doing the same thing, making the same threat. You've only escalated it from a conscientious protest to a Texas stand off.

        Yup, because I want the people attempting the conscientious protest to have less power to influence businesses and the people businesses employ. An apolitical firm is less likely to bow to pressure from one group of activists if they know that another, opposing group of activists is paying attention to how they respond to pressure from the first group of activists. Really, this has nothing at all to do with Mullvad specifically, except it does happen that I am a long-time customer of theirs.

        > Now more than ever, it's hard for me to believe their brand identity. You're allowed to have political opinions, voice them and vote for them when you're a CEO. But spending customer money on political campaigns is how you ask for a boycott. It's how I would feel about any political investment that their CEOs make, and its already tarnished the Mullvad brand for me.

        I don't see a meaningful difference between voicing political opinions and voting based on them, and making private donations to a political cause. Any money at all that an owner of a company spends on anything, down to their groceries, comes from their ownership of the company; just as any money at all that an employee of a company spends on anything comes from their salary.

        But also lots of CEOs of companies make all kinds of political donations, many of which I think are bad. The reason this particular donation is making the news is because it's to an anti-immigration party rather than a pro-immigration party or NGO or some other cause; and a lot of people want to exert social pressure to make that specific political stance dangerous. Those are exactly the people I want to lose.

        • bigyabai 20 hours ago

          > I don't see a meaningful difference between voicing political opinions and voting based on them, and making private donations to a political cause.

          One of them is enabled by customer trust and investment, the other isn't? People wouldn't want to cut off their money if it wasn't going towards political parties. It's the connection between the business and the private donations that is causing the outrage, Mullvad's brand can't really escape that sort of conflation once their CEOs spend their paycheck on those donations. Same goes for the rest of Big Tech, look at Oracle or Meta for example.

          > The reason this particular donation is making the news is because it's to an anti-immigration party

          It's because Mullvad had an apolitical reputation. Maybe it was a lie, maybe it wasn't, but by either CEO investing in a non-privacy stance they're risking the brand appeal they once had. It's unfortunate, and I don't think it has to be a winners/loser mentality like you're pushing forward. These sorts of investments are the ones that erode principled businesses and divide their customerbase. Whether or not you agree with it is inconsequential, it's the political vacillation that is concerning beyond the outrage/fringe politics angle.

          Today you might support them, next year you might be wishing you never gave them the confidence. I understand why many customers, even apolitically, see this as their breaking point.

      • account42 5 hours ago

        > But you're doing the same thing, making the same threat.

        "I'll boycott you if you keep supporting free speech" and "I'll boycott you if you stop supporting free speech" are hardly the same thing, especially when aimed at a company whose business is all about free speech, which at the dismay of some people also includes speech you don't like.

    • bingoMen 3 hours ago

      > pro-immigration activists

      literally translated, “humans with empathy”

      • RuslanL 3 hours ago

        No.

        • bingoMen 3 hours ago

          What do you mean by 'no'?

          • krieger_857 2 hours ago

            no because it is a very reductionist clause

      • throwawaypath 2 hours ago

        >literally translated, “humans with empathy”

        That's what abortion activists, genocidal communists, "religion of peace", etc. have all claimed.

        There's nothing "empathetic" about neocolonialism and importing third-worlders enmass to the West.

  • applfanboysbgon 21 hours ago

    > We also live these values by being tolerant in our daily work.

    > The more people do this, the better a place the world will be.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradox_of_tolerance

    The more people tolerate the far right, the worse the world will be because they will take your good faith and use it to extinguish tolerance for anyone but themselves. This is literally textbook. I don't know how you can invoke the word tolerance without understanding this.

    • gib444 20 hours ago

      A lot of the far right is using anger about too much tolerance of intolerant religions brought into a country via immigration

      Oh what a complex web this business of tolerance is...

  • zombot 11 hours ago

    > We fight for freedom of speech, freedom of information and the right to privacy.

    OK, but the far right, like all totalitarians, has an agenda that is thoroughly opposed to this. That leads to the tolerance paradox: You must be intolerant to agendas that would put an end to tolerance.

  • mlrtime 6 hours ago

    Well said, You have a new paying customer from me and I will advocate for others to use Mullvad.

    Going to sign up now through the tailscale partnership.

  • nonplus 3 hours ago

    Obviously there are not easy solutions here. Has Mullvad considered offering to buy out Daniel's shares?

    The mission statement that Mullvad has promised it's users does (did) come with a duty of care.

    In my eyes that mission statement is compromised, it either dies here and Mullvad is just another product financing political parties by proxy, or something is done.

    I hope you find a way to protect Mullvad from actions that are counter to your mission statements.

  • cookiengineer 2 hours ago

    As a counter argument to your marketing fluff comment:

    Name a single instance of right wing parties that did not violate all human rights the second they got in power. Name one, I dare you.

    And no, historically such a fairytale world does not exist that you're trying to paint here. All right wing parties feed off aggression, painting humans as enemies, and populistic lies. It's always been this way, always will be this way.

    Not a Mullvard customer anymore, and going to never recommend you again for any person that asks me in the future.

    Go to history class if you still can't see the truth in my comment. I'm German, and that's our fucked up history, and our messed up ancestry of people "that just followed orders" that I have zero tolerance for. Your fairytale comment reads like the "Hitler just wants peace" protests during WW2.

    There is always a democratic and peaceful option, and right wing parties never choose that option. It's unsystematic to how they fundamentally work.

  • eieiyo 1 hour ago

    Of course sir, just like the chancellor of Germany's time on the board of Blackrock doesn't have anything to do with his full commitment to doing what's best for the German people as chancellor. I think it would be crazy to suggest otherwise.

    Politics and the company you own somehow having to do with each other and influencing each other? Preposterous. Wouldn't happen!

gpvos 1 day ago

"Mullvad AB and its parent company Amagicom AB are 100% owned by founders [1 person] and Daniel Berntsson [...]"[0]

So I'll assume he owns about 50%. Well, that ends my usage of Mullvad.[1] I appreciate that probably many of Mullvad's employees have different views, and obviously Berntsson has every right to his opinions and to express them, and I also appreciate that someone can have control over an opinionated company and run it for one particular set of reasons but not for other causes that someone believes in, but in the end I just don't want my money supporting anti-people causes.

[0] https://mullvad.net/en/about

[1] If it was a small amount, say less than 5% or maybe 10%, I might have decided differently. But it's still millions, so probably not.

  • kfreds 23 hours ago

    I'm sorry to hear that. Yes, Daniel and I own 50% each.

    > obviously Berntsson has every right to his opinions and to express them

    Indeed.

    > and I also appreciate that someone can have control over an opinionated company and run it for one particular set of reasons but not for other causes that someone believes in

    That is exactly the case.

    > but in the end I just don't want my money supporting anti-people causes.

    As is your right. Daniel made his choice and now you make yours, as a number of other people in this thread has done. Some believe this party is left-wing, others right-wing. Some approve of it, others don't. Personally I don't, and as I've said elsewhere in this thread I wish he hadn't donated. As do many of our colleagues. To be fair though, there are also colleagues who do seem to approve. And then there are those who don't seem to care either way.

    Still, I'm glad you recognize the possibility that Daniel and I are able to keep our personal opinions separate from the mission of our company. This is something we live in our daily work as well. As a workplace I'm glad we're not a monoculture of 100% like-minded individuals.

    • SpaceNoodled 22 hours ago

      Ironically, remigration is a means to achieve a monoculture.

      • remarkEon 22 hours ago

        Not all monocultures are created equal.

    • square_usual 22 hours ago

      > As a workplace I'm glad we're not a monoculture of 100% like-minded individuals.

      But if you're tolerant of someone in your workplace that wants to make it a monoculture, and then succeeds in doing so, will you remain glad?

      • kfreds 21 hours ago

        I've known Daniel for 20 years. He's one of the most empathetic individuals I know. Neither he nor I wants to make our workplace a monoculture.

        I get that you disagree with his choice, as do I. But please recognize that we've built this company together over 17 years. To suggest that you know better than me that he wants to create a monoculture at our workplace is ridiculous.

        I'm not sure why you're arguing this point though. It seems we both believe he made the wrong choice?

        • e40 21 hours ago

          I've known pretty far right people that are empathetic. That doesn't matter, given what they support, though. I think you're focusing on the wrong thing.

          And given the party Daniel supports, saying he doesn't want a monoculture... it seems like you are being naive. There are lots and lots of right-wing people in the USA that over the years never said far right things... but their actions have shown a different story.

          I think you need to judge Daniel on his actions, not his words or your gut.

          • kfreds 21 hours ago

            You set the focus. I was simply responding to your comment, same as I am now.

            Again, I'm not defending his choice, but no, I'm not being naive. Over the 20 years I've known him he has demonstrated his values through consistent words and actions. I'd share details but that's not my place to do. You may choose to believe me or not.

            • gozucito 19 hours ago

              You're in a a shitty no-win situation.

              Your choices are to either end a 20 year friendship and enormously fruitful collaboration or defend someone who has demonstrated quite clearly that he holds repulsive, despicable beliefs.

              Imagine you were of immigrant background and your closest friend gave millions of dollars to a party whose sole platform is to strip you of citizenship and kick you out of your country.

              • deanishe 14 hours ago

                Are you kidding? There was a large swing to Trump amongst Latinos in your last election.

                I have no idea why people assume immigrants are pro-immigration. They're pro-themselves.

                • throwaway85825 10 hours ago

                  Latinos are hardly a monolith, though oddly the people demanding sensitivity don't seem to be aware.

        • BoggleOhYeah 20 hours ago

          Direct quote from the leader of the party Daniel is propping up:

          "They will also be forced to leave, even if they are born in Sweden, because they have no natural connection to Sweden. They are not Swedish."

          Very empathetic indeed.

          • kfreds 20 hours ago

            I don't know the context of that quote, but no, that doesn't sound empathetic at all.

        • VeejayRampay 13 hours ago

          he's obviously a xenophobe, that's the opposite of being empathetic

          he supports a party that flat out talks about immigrants as parasites, let's not try to paint him and a good guy, it's infuriating

      • ramblerman 6 hours ago

        > But if you're tolerant of someone in your workplace that wants to make it a monoculture, and then succeeds in doing so, will you remain glad?

        Isn't that exactly the argument Örebro would make about islam and europe.

    • LocutusOfBorges 22 hours ago

      > Some believe this party is left-wing, others right-wing. Some approve of it, others don't.

      For a company that puts political principle so fundamentally at the core of its marketing strategy, it's astonishing to see this kind of stance being taken.

      The man who owns half the company seemingly choosing to funnel his share of its profits to a political party that advocates the mass deportation of people is, in that context, something with significant consequences.

      I understand how awkward the position you're in must be, but it's obscene to present this as somehow being a thing that one can be morally neutral on. In the context of rising fascism across the continent, it's dismaying to see a company that a lot of us rely on so decisively pick the worst possible side.

      • kfreds 21 hours ago

        I was acknowledging gpvos position, as well as that of others, and then stating my own position on the matter. I as an individual understand that there are people who see this party as left-wing or right-wing. That doesn't mean I agree. I as an individual don't approve of this party or its rhetoric. Others do. None of this is Mullvad's official position.

        Mullvad only concerns itself with its mission. Our customers and employees represent a wide spectrum of opinions. You may not like some of them. Regardless, Mullvad's position is that privacy is a universal right, regardless of political affiliation.

        > I understand how awkward the position you're in must be

        Yes. Thank you.

        • GuinansEyebrows 21 hours ago

          > Mullvad's position is that privacy is a universal right

          this is kind of a confusing statement considering the source. if you hold that privacy is a universal right, but you profit from gating access to it (along with someone who appears to have directed this profit to an appalling political project), are you saying that this right should only be afforded to those who pay for it? or are you just cloaking your business model in a moral shroud?

          • kfreds 21 hours ago

            > are you saying that this right should only be afforded to those who pay for it

            Not at all. When we say we believe privacy is a universal right, we're saying that e.g. states and corporations that actively violate your privacy are in the wrong. We're not saying that Mullvad, you or anyone else are obligated to work for free in order to provide privacy as a service.

            Does that make sense?

          • jackothy 21 hours ago

            I think you know that this service is impossible to provide for free, and that the quality to cost ratio of Mullvad's service is highly competitive.

          • reassess_blind 20 hours ago

            Surely this has to be in bad faith. You cannot seriously be shaming a company for charging for their services, can you?

            • GuinansEyebrows 18 hours ago

              a rhetorical question, sure. i didn't really need to include the first question to make the point of the second one.

    • chinathrow 22 hours ago

      Time for a new VPN co then, right?

    • gpvos 21 hours ago

      I would like to add one note: if I were an activist in Iran, or in any other way my livelihood would depend on strong privacy services, I might keep using your service and even be (slightly) more certain of the company's resolve to keep my privacy protected. Although I would be very aware of the irony. But choosing for one's own safety can override other concerns. Very few things in life are black and white.

      • kfreds 21 hours ago

        Indeed. What I hear you saying is that you recognize there is a kind of consistency, and benefit, to Mullvad's position.

        I'll admit holding the line like this, when most people don't understand the nuance, and most of those who do don't value it, is irrational from a business perspective. Then again we founded the company because of our political convictions about free speech, free press, privacy, mass surveillance and censorship.

        I respect your choice to leave, and also appreciate that we're both making an effort to understand each other. I wish all disagreements were like this.

        • nerdsniper 12 hours ago

          If y’all were maximally “business-rational” you would have taken the NPV of under-anonymizing your customers already and selling the data. Sure, it would tank the business in the long run but the short term profits could probably have been re-invested in the stock market or other endeavors for excellent returns. Plus once the reputation hit started coming home to roost you could have sold Mullvad to one of those large VPN umbrella holding companies.

          I’m upset about this to, but honestly I don’t know what other VPN holds Mullvad’s reputation for genuine anonymity. When I learned that y’all take cash by mail, I realized that is fundamentally incompatible with bundling and selling customers data.

      • AliChraghi 16 hours ago

        Iranians use VPNs simply because they want to access the internet. Mullvad services are too expensive for what average people make so i don't think it really matters.

    • e40 21 hours ago

      Who sees the party as left wing? Its seems like a disingenuous argument to make.

      • kfreds 20 hours ago

        My understanding is that the party leader, Markus Allard, is basing his political ideology on some new kind of Marxist analysis.

        You can read more about him here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markus_Allard

        • gozucito 19 hours ago

          After thinking about it, my advice is to start a new company with the rest of Mullvad folks who don't support this:

          Markus Allard has voiced support for the idea of large scale remigration on multiple occasions. On one occasion, in a debate with a Liberal member of parliament, he asked why the Liberal party "does not wish to deport 100 000 social welfare-Somalis?"[19] In the same debate Allard also claimed that "Sweden belongs to the Swedes. We have to make sure that we take care of our own damn people and we must deport these damn parasites who sit and live at our expense."[20] Regarding deporting those born in Sweden, Allard said in a podcast that "They will also be forced to leave, even if they are born in Sweden, because they have no natural connection to Sweden. They are not Swedish."

          I will be happy to continue giving you my money then. Keep in mind the situation also sucks for all of us who have been recommending Mullvad for year, only for our money to go towards that kind of hatred. It is a betrayal. Now I have to start advising against it and explaining the money goes to neo nazis.

    • jlokier 21 hours ago

      > the possibility that Daniel and I are able to keep our personal opinions separate from the mission of our company

      This isn't about opinions. Very large political financing is not a mere opinion. It has a much larger material effect.

      I don't think it's possible to separate "mission of our company" from "large scale political financing", for purely structural reasons.

      I think the legal and fiduciary concept of Conflict of Interest is relevant here, but perhaps only by analogy. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conflict_of_interest is quite informative.

      In some business, political and legal roles, we deem certain structural relations to be a conflict of interest regardless of what people on those roles actually do..

      The mere potential for excessive improper influence arising from the structure of their relationships and roles is what creates the deemed conflict.

      As the owners of a company making substantial profit like Mullvad, you always had the potential capability to financially influence political outcomes on a scale which most your customers cannot, in ways that may seriously harm some of your customers and to be potentially against the stated mission of your company.

      I think the relationship between running a company with an openly advertised public mission, or even an implied mission in the minds of customers, while in another role (wealthy private citizen) being able to make a substantial material action against the same mission, should be recognised as inherently a conflict of interest. But obviously it's one we can't avoid, as long as we allow people to get rich from a mission-driven company.

      What we can do, is recognise that if someone actually takes a large material action against the company's mission, then they have gone a step further and demonstrated the conflict of interest.

      We generally favour free speech, including political donations. But when the money for very large political financing comes mostly from customers who, by virtue of the advertising and marketing of the company's mission, are led to believe they are supporting the company's mission?

      In my view, at that point the customers are being tricked into paying for something while their money is paying for something else which opposes the thing they thought they were funding.

      At the least, it should be dealt with in a similar way that conflicts of interest are dealt with when, for example, directing multiple companies: By making sure everyone knows, so other people are able to consent or not on the major conflict issues those other people might have a view on. The analogy for customers is their consent shown by their informed decision to become or remain customers.

      In Mullvad's situation, that would mean Mullvad should explain to customers, embedded clearly within it's public marketing of the company missions and values, that one of its current major owners receiving customer funds by way of profit, is the main financier of a political party which sponsors remigration in Sweden. Because that is clearly a thing some customers care about when evaluating whether to pay for Mullvad's services from now on. You know that, I know that, so there's no legitimate excuse for not letting customers who would care know.

      Then, as you said, customers will be free to choose.

      • kfreds 20 hours ago

        > I think the legal and fiduciary concept of Conflict of Interest is relevant here, but perhaps only by analogy. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conflict_of_interest is quite informative.

        That's an interesting angle!

        > What we can do, is recognise that if someone actually takes a large material action against the company's mission, then they have gone a step further and demonstrated the conflict of interest.

        As far as I understand Daniel doesn't believe his donation materially harms Mullvad's mission. I am undecided and need more information. I highly doubt he would donate if he believed it would be antithetical to Mullvad's mission, given that the company is founded on our shared values around privacy. I'll ask him.

        • Refreeze5224 12 hours ago

          I take my choice of VPN very seriously, and have used Mullvad for a long time. But now I cannot help but wonder whether the principles the two of you founded Mullvad on, to quote you from above: "because of our political convictions about free speech, free press, privacy, mass surveillance and censorship" are more important to Daniel than the views of his party.

          He clearly is willing to spend large sums on the party's views, and if he can use his influence and access in Mullvad to achieve his party's stated goals, will he?

          It is asking a lot to trust someone who espouses what he does to maintain Mullvad's founding values, and not to exploit Mullvad in pursuit of ideas he values at a very high monetary level.

          I have zero confidence someone supporting what he does and thinks the way he does will protect my traffic, and I sadly cannot use or recommend Mullvad any longer.

          • kfreds 10 hours ago

            > if he can use his influence and access in Mullvad to achieve his party's stated goals, will he?

            Not a chance. He is probably the most principled individual I know. Consider our consistent refusal to use Mullvad's platform to promote anything but messaging around free speech, free press, mass surveillance, censorship and privacy. Or our consistent refusal to sell to the horde of venture capitalists, private equity and competitors who have approached us through the years. We're doing this for a small set of political issues, on which we share values.

            > It is asking a lot to trust someone who espouses what he does to maintain Mullvad's founding values, and not to exploit Mullvad in pursuit of ideas he values at a very high monetary level.

            I'm biased, and have more information than you, but I disagree. We have a 17 year track record.

            > I have zero confidence someone supporting what he does and thinks the way he does will protect my traffic, and I sadly cannot use or recommend Mullvad any longer.

            I'm sorry to hear that.

    • prmoustache 20 hours ago

      The thing is, you can't be pro freedom of speech and pro privacy yet support right wing extremists. They are totally against that.

      It can only means that Daniel is setting up a trap with Mullvad.

    • aarjaneiro 18 hours ago

      Is your buddy incapable of speaking on his own behalf? Im sure he's aware of the reputational damage he's caused your company by now...

  • HDBaseT 18 hours ago

    Lets remember for a second that Mullvad has enabled people on all side of the political spectrum to communicate online, anonymously. This is more noble than almost anything else. Mullvad has enabled freedom for yourself, and millions of others, regardless of their political or personal leans.

    • Parae 8 hours ago

      Let's find another tool that enables the same, while not doating money to a racist political party.

drbscl 1 day ago

Wikipedia of the party in question: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96rebro_Party#

Doesn't really sound all that far-right to me. Nationalist, sure.

I'm not Swedish though, so I would be interested in the thoughts of those who are actually affected by Örebropartiet's policies.

  • ZeroGravitas 1 day ago

    Spot the odd one out:

    > Some of its key issues include lowered wages for politicians, ending the tax payer funding of various sculptures, monuments and art, large scale remigration, a stricter immigration policy, and free dental care.

    • threetonesun 1 day ago

      We want everyone here to be exactly like us, but we do recognize we have bad teeth.

      • honeycrispy 22 hours ago

        No, we just want them to not hate us and our culture. People in general are tired of being tolerant to the intolerant.

        • netsharc 21 hours ago

          Heh, "They hate us, but we're different, we're civilized, so it's fine when we hate them back.".

          • account42 2 hours ago

            Yes. They are free to hate us from their own country.

    • nitnelave 1 day ago

      For context, from wiki:

      > Remigration is a far-right concept referring to ethnic cleansing via mass deportation of non-white minority populations [...] to their place of racial ancestry

    • KaiserPro 1 day ago

      > large scale remigration

      which is literally kicking out people who don't look or sounds like me, out of the country.

      Whenever that has happened it has been rather bad for most parties.

      • DaSHacka 1 day ago

        > which is literally kicking out people who don't look or sounds like me, out of the country.

        Or, more accurately, people who weren't born there (particularly first generation immigrants). No one's talking about legitimately doing deportations via family guy race cards.

        • pesus 1 day ago

          > "They will also be forced to leave, even if they are born in Sweden, because they have no natural connection to Sweden. They are not Swedish."

          - Markus Allard

        • padjo 1 day ago

          Yes they are

      • dijit 22 hours ago

        What about kicking people out who don’t believe in equal rights for women?

        Because, that is pretty core to the Swedish cultural identity.

        • KaiserPro 22 hours ago

          so setup parallel schools to systematically "educate" non Christians, or is that deemed less of a core cultural identity nowawdays?

          • dijit 22 hours ago

            I think we all decided a long time ago that segregated schooling was a bad idea, it increased stereotyping and resentment according to studies: https://academic.oup.com/cdpers/article/10/2/81/8231636

            Parallel societies have never been found to be a positive thing as far as I can tell.

            • KaiserPro 10 hours ago

              It was more an observation on what happend to the Sàmi. Which rather backs up your point really.

              What I don't understand is why integration is so poor in sweden(and the netherlands) compared to the UK. Outcomes for second generation swedes immigrant are terrible in education and employment.

          • oAlbe 20 hours ago

            As someone who was raised Christian, since when do Christians believe in equal rights for women?

    • dijit 1 day ago

      To understand why there might be a desire to limit spending on art;

      There was a recent case where city of Malmo was building a hospital; during the building of the hospital it was decided that a splice of the oldest tree in the world would be installed.

      A very expensive life-support system was developed and an enormous amount of money paid for the splice. (not including the life support system, which was also an inordinate amount).

      The tree didn't take, and needs to be replaced.

      It's called "Spruce Time": https://www.svt.se/nyheter/lokalt/skane/region-skane-har-lag...

      • fc417fc802 17 hours ago

        I think government art projects the western world over would fare better if they went through a reasonably local direct democracy type process. Instead we get unelected bureaucrats with absolutely bizarre tastes commissioning wildly expensive projects that the majority don't really appreciate. Even though that only describes a minority of cases I think it shouldn't be any surprise that it results in backlash and defunding.

      • justin66 17 hours ago

        I hope you don't think that is the odd one out.

  • guerrilla 1 day ago

    > Nationalist, sure.

    That's pretty far-right by itself. The fact that they want mass deportations should solidify it for you though.

    • drbscl 1 day ago

      It's definitely possible to be a left-wing nationalist

      • onraglanroad 1 day ago

        No-one defines what they mean by "nationalist" so it could apply to a rock.

      • guerrilla 1 day ago

        I mean it's definitely possible to call yourself that, but I'd argue no, it's not possible to actually be that.

        • drbscl 23 hours ago

          Famously, Mao Zedong was neither left-wing, nor a nationalist, right?

        • decimalenough 21 hours ago

          How would you describe North Korea?

          • int_19h 21 hours ago

            DPRK is arguably one of the most successful national socialist states in existence.

            (You might look at it and think, "if that is success, then how you define failure"? but don't forget, it took all of 12 years for the German Nazis to go from taking full control to having their country completely devastated.)

            • paulryanrogers 20 hours ago

              In what ways is North Korea socialist? In practice it appears more a hereditary autocracy with an elite class and everyone else barely surviving on the scraps.

              German Nazis were socialist in name only, to appeal to the working class.

              • int_19h 20 hours ago

                In exactly the same way as the German Nazis were socialist.

              • ahartmetz 17 hours ago

                Just as a note on a historical curiosity, the early NSDAP had a left wing that never seemed to be very important, and they got rid of the corresponding intellectuals (Strasser brothers and friends) even before getting into power, and the corresponding brutes (SA) afterwards.

      • SpecialistK 18 hours ago

        Canada's (mainstream) nationalism is also part of its political left.

  • 0xbadcafebee 1 day ago

    "The party has also been described as both right-wing populist and left-wing populist as well as left-conservative."

    Well that clears things up

    • dgellow 1 day ago

      The horseshoe still going strong

    • DaSHacka 1 day ago

      Lol, that quote really reads like "we have terminal direction-brain and can't place these people in our arbitrary categories"

      • jasonvorhe 23 hours ago

        Or: We're cherry picking ideas from all sides where applicable.

      • forshaper 21 hours ago

        It's all a Louis XVI seating chart anyway.

    • onraglanroad 1 day ago

      Fascists always incude left wing policies to try to appeal to the "working man".

      There's a reason the Nazis included "socialist" in their name. It's not because they give a crap about the plebs.

  • yreg 1 day ago

    >Doesn't really sound all that far-right to me.

    To me too, then I got to the leaders quote on TV: "We must deport these damn parasites who sit and live at our expense."

    Yeah, okay. I know some politicians who speak like that, I feel I get the picture.

    • Auracle 1 day ago

      I think you'd be surprised at how quickly that sentiment has moved from the far-right to close to the center. People are (rightly, in my opinion) pretty upset at their governments for letting mass migration happen with pretty much only downsides for their actual citizens. People are all about the idea of helping the downtrodden when it's just an ideal, but when they realize it's having negative consequences for them that can easily change.

      • throwitaway222 1 day ago

        We were sold one thing and got another.

        • microgpt 23 hours ago

          What were you sold and what did you get?

          • nekusar 23 hours ago

            To be fair, it already mostly exists.

            Its 4chan politically incorrect. https://boards.4chan.org/pol/

            And yeah, its as terrible as you can possibly imagine. And then even more so.

            • jackb4040 22 hours ago

              A "free speech" HN is just HN. It would end up with the same cryptic way of describing replacement theory, because it's not for the purpose of evading censors. It's for the purpose of cosplaying having "dangerous opinions". The idea of left-wing censorship on Paul Graham's website is a joke.

      • dpoloncsak 23 hours ago

        I think, all pretty recently (atleast in the 'States), there's been much news and noise about the abuse and fraud of these systems designed to help the downtrodden.

        Now whether that's all true, has always been true, is propaganda...whatever, but it's easy for me to understand why sentiment has been changing as the spotlight is focused more and more on the abuse of the systems as opposed to the benefits.

        I also think there's some 'hierarchy of needs' going on here, where as the economy shifts and more and more Americans are struggling to afford housing, groceries, and other necessities, it's easy to feel like you should be putting yourself first over strangers. Combine that with the prior point, and you have a great recipe to build resentment. Selfish, maybe, but I can understand how you get there.

        This is NOT to say 'There is no xenophobia' or anything...racism in general is alive and well in the USA... but I have pretty sound-minded people around me starting to echo this mindset, and this is my best understanding of what's been brewing.

        • agar 22 hours ago

          For what it's worth, the most effective propaganda is that which reinforces latent biases.

          Humans en masse are selfish, self-serving, and tribal, so it's incredibly easy to believe that there is massive abuse of social services like SNAP/EBT, those delivering services are incompetent, and that we should investment more in fraud reduction.

          However, the reality is that the US spends $3.75 for each $1 of fraud discovered. And, "fraud" includes clerical errors made by the government, so the actual ROI of enforcement is even lower.

          So much of the propaganda -- "immigrants steal benefits paid for by hardworking US taxpayers, so we should ramp up enforcement spending to make more room for [white] citizens" is designed to simply reinforce our biases because it's just so darned believable to a cynical and tribal people.

          In reality, spending more on benefits enforcement just loses taxpayers more money while cutting more US citizens off from benefits they both need and are eligible for. It results in the opposite of its stated goal and this is well known to any policymaker.

          So if saving taxpayer money, and punishing those guilty of fraud, isn't the actual objective of all this toxic propaganda, you have to ask yourself what is.

          • froh 13 hours ago

            every $$ spent on this "abuse" is a $$ not spent on tax evasion while giving an impression of "finally someone is doing something" and the $$ that could be made in plugging corporate tax evasion by gar outrun the $$ saved on the no income side.

            in Germany we talk 350Mio€ vs 10Bio€ y/y

            the us numbers will have a similar ratio

      • microgpt 23 hours ago

        How can you be sure the opinion moved to the center and not that the center moved to the right?

        Migration is all a distraction anyway. Brown people existing doesn't hurt you. Whenever you think they drive up rents or whatever, that has nothing to do with the brown people, that has everything to do with the system that sets rents.

        • antonkochubey 23 hours ago

          Yes, increasing demand for housing and increasing supply of labor definitely does nothing for both salaries and housing prices

          • microgpt 23 hours ago

            What happens to supply of housing and demand for labor, and why?

            • peyton 23 hours ago

              Look up the Curley Effect for an explainer of what might be going on. I’m not Swedish but feel it may be worth examining given their rhetoric.

              • microgpt 23 hours ago

                Sorry I don't get the reference

                • mandevil 22 hours ago

                  https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w8942/w8942...

                  Some economists theorize that a long time Mayor of Boston (James Curley) used economic populism (taxing wealthy people of English descent and redistributing to poorer, usually of Irish descent) and anti-British rhetoric to reshape the electorate in ways that benefited him, even if it didn't benefit the city as a whole. The theory goes, he had a plan to drive out the wealthy people of English descent so the poor people of Irish descent would make up a larger share of the electorate and he could win more elections.

                  My understanding is that even most economists think that this isn't actually real. It's largely a couple of economists building a mathematical model, and then looking at cherry-picked examples, e.g., minority mayors during the 1970's and assuming that it was the result of a dastardly plan by the minority mayors rather than the result of larger social forces driving White Flight from cities.

                  In general, I think that mayors might make dumb decisions, but they largely do it because they think it will be good for the city and are wrong, not because they are twirling their mustache and cackling away.

                  • saghm 14 hours ago

                    A discipline that often likes to model things in terms of perfectly rational actors probably will struggle to consider Hanlon's razor

            • mandevil 22 hours ago

              So for housing it depends on the local laws (1), but for labor this has actually been heavily studied, and the general consensus (2) is actually higher demand for native-born labor. All of those immigrants need goods and services, after all, so they increase demand. Focusing on immigrants providing labor without mentioning that they buy things as well is assuming your conclusion.

              And the demand is not just for doctors and other highly credentialed labor. The most nativist work on the Mariel Boatlift (3) (by Borjas) only found a decrease in wages for native-born high-school dropouts, and the general consensus of other economists seems to be that his work was faulty. The general consensus on Mariel (cite fn2 again) is that it was good, economically, for the native-born people in the Miami labor force when an additional 7% of the labor force suddenly arrived as immigrants over the course of a few months.

              1: How much housing can be built legally is the key factor here. Immigrants can drive up the prices if no more housing can be built but that's just another way of saying that "no more housing can be built" is a really terrible policy that is enormously destructive. If building housing is relatively easy, then it doesn't drive up prices. In fact, immigrant labor is often used to build this new housing. Don't let your area become like the Bay Area and you'll be fine.

              2: Wearing my physics hat, I am not comfortable saying that anything in economics is actually proven.

              3: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariel_boatlift

              • SmirkingRevenge 16 hours ago

                Yep, this is exactly right.

                When people are added to the economy, demand increases, including demand for more labor.

                The downward pressure on wages that one might intuitively expect from immigrant labor is basically erased by those increases in demand. It's self-reinforcing.

          • TheOtherHobbes 23 hours ago

            Perhaps those problems have other causes.

          • saghm 14 hours ago

            This may shock you, but not all numbers greater than zero are equal. Something might cause a price to go up by some amount, but something else might make it go up by an even larger amount, so stopping that first thing might not stop it from still going up higher than people want.

        • fakedang 23 hours ago

          > How can you be sure the opinion moved to the center and not that the center moved to the right?

          I'm pretty sure he meant that what used to be a far-right view is now considered mainstream. Which is true, since even the EU Parliament has now begun passing laws vs migrants, and governments all across Western Europe are now taking steps against migrants.

          > Brown people existing doesn't hurt you.

          Correct, and I'm one of them. Unfortunately some abhorrent elements of our culture, traditions and values hurt erstwhile peaceful societies.

        • throwaway85825 23 hours ago

          Supply and demand economic denialism is dangerously widespread.

          • microgpt 23 hours ago

            What is supply and demand economic denialism?

            • Auracle 22 hours ago

              [flagged]

              • dang 22 hours ago

                Can you please not post in the flamewar style? You crossed into that here and it's the opposite of what we're trying for on this site. You're welcome to make your substantive points thoughtfully.

                https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

                • Auracle 22 hours ago

                  You're right, apologies. I was trying to cut off an argument before it started but I went about it completely wrong.

        • nec4b 23 hours ago

          > Brown people existing doesn't hurt you.

          Why did you feel the need to say "Brown people" instead of migrants? Are you trying to play the racist card? Poles are white and when they migrated en mass to Britain they were also making locals very unhappy.

          • microgpt 22 hours ago

            We all know they are not going to expel Canadians.

          • nly 21 hours ago

            Ironically most of the polish I know who came to Britain returned home to Poland for better prospects.

            Adjusting for purchasing power parity, GDP per capita in Poland isn't far behind the UK.

        • arjie 22 hours ago

          Considering the history of labor unions and their support for the banning of Asian citizenship in the US, I think the right frame is that migration support / opposition has something to do with other things but not entirely. There are only a few ways to come to the US and the employment-based approach is probably the most widely used by unconnected foreigners seeking to live in the US and that pathway is intended to be abolished by Senator Bernie Sanders with no replacement planned. I think it's hard to describe that senator as particularly right-wing.

          Likewise, it was a labour union in Georgia that lobbied to get Koreans deported from the US. It should be unsurprising that those who hold to the Lump of Labor economic school should oppose immigration and that's quite popular among the left-wing.

        • Geonode 22 hours ago

          [flagged]

          • dang 22 hours ago

            Religious flamewar is not allowed on HN so please don't post like this here.

            https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

            • nec4b 22 hours ago

              There is one person/bot here with well over 30 comments in this comment section making all about race and racism even though the topic is migration. Don't you have any guidelines about that?

              • dang 21 hours ago

                Of course we do: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html.

                Don't make the mistake of assuming moderator omniscience (https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que...)! - we don't see most of what gets posted to HN, and we mostly don't read the threads sequentially.

                • nec4b 21 hours ago

                  I don't assume you are omniscience, but I do expect you have at least minimal tools/stats where you can see things getting of charts. You did have to find the comment to which you replied and reminded the author of not starting religious wars somehow too.

                  • dang 21 hours ago

                    Well, if you expect us to see everything you see which deserves moderator attention, it amounts to the same thing - since "you" here means every user (obviously you're not just asking for yourself personally). That's what I mean by moderator omniscience. It's far beyond our ability.

                    When this comes up, it's usually because someone (yourself in this case) saw X getting moderated and Y not getting moderated, and derived signal from that, when in fact it is nearly always noise.

                    By deriving signal, I mean bogus conclusions such as "the mods treat X side harder than Y side", or "the mods must secretly be aligned with Y". This is all non sequitur. Overwhelmingly, what you're seeing is randomness (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clustering_illusion) - but especially easy to overinterpret because of the strong feelings generated by the underlying topic.

                    There's a well-established process for letting the mods know about posts that might need moderator attention - see https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que...

                    • nec4b 19 hours ago

                      Thank you for the link I will use that next time. Regarding everything else, you assume way too much from a single comment. I don't care what side you are on or what side are you reprimanding. On a tech site I do expect you having a certain amount of tools helping you find questionable content and I know you do rate limiting at least for some people.

                      I do like a good political debate, but it was a bad call unflagging a politically charged topic which has no chance to develop into a productive discussion if minimum moderating standards can't be met.

                      • dang 19 hours ago

                        Ok! Sorry for over-assuming - it's very much the common pattern but of course there are bound to be exceptions.

              • peterfirefly 20 hours ago

                I see several pro-mass immigration posters who try to pretend opposition to mass immigration is about racism. Don't think any of them are bots.

        • 17761989 22 hours ago

          they can exist @ home

        • decimalenough 21 hours ago

          > Brown people existing doesn't hurt you.

          In Sweden, brown people are heavily overrepresented in violent crime, so many people are getting hurt.

          Obligatory disclaimer: the problem is not caused by skin color, but by a complex mess of poverty, lack of opportunity, societal attitudes within and against immigrant groups, etc. But voters hearing about a steady drum beat of robberies, rapes, drive by shootings (yes, in Sweden!) don't really care.

          • paulryanrogers 21 hours ago

            Perhaps voters aren't being offered the tools to solve the root problems?

            Scapegoating entire skin colors for systemic failures doesn't seem like it's going to make things better for anyone.

            • decimalenough 17 hours ago

              Indeed, but scapegoating people who are Different(tm) has a long history of being a successful political tactic, at least if you measure success solely in terms of getting elected.

          • tim333 8 hours ago

            Culture's a thing too. If you admit a bunch of Somali warlords they may keep behaving like Somali warlords irrespective of the other factors you mention.

        • saberience 21 hours ago

          "Brown people existing doesn't hurt you"

          Yes, existing doesn't hurt. But when you import mass amounts of people who don't talk your countries language, have no intention of learning, and have no intention of getting a job, and on top of it are intensely religious supporting a religion which is antithetical to your values, then it DOES hurt.

          Western Europe has simply allowed too many Muslim immigrants in than they could ever successfully have integrated. Now Europe is full of ghettos of Muslim immigrants who don't get jobs, don't learn the languages, and sap resources which the countries cannot afford.

          Note: this isn't about being racist or not, it's just common sense. There is a limit of how many immigrants a country can take, financially and culturally.

          • paulryanrogers 20 hours ago

            So is the religion the biggest problem or just a symptom?

            I'd agree immigration must have limits and don't recall any prominent voices calling for unlimited migration or even limitless compassion.

            Being a union, one can hope the load of migrants fleeing wars and violence would be spread among all the states, in proportion to their ability. Economic migration is a more complex matter since everyone benefits from it up to some threshold. Where it crosses into an undeniable problem is subjective. If it negatively affects me personally then it's bad, especially if I can overlook all the benefits I accrued (like lower prices of commodities and services).

        • xdennis 21 hours ago

          > Brown people existing doesn't hurt you.

          BBC:

              About 58% of men convicted in Sweden of rape and attempted rape over the past five years were born abroad, according to data from Swedish national TV.
          

          https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-45269764

        • exiguus 16 hours ago

          That's how populism works and people act if they don't understand that manipulation.

      • mindslight 23 hours ago

        At least from a US perspective, the problem is that the downsides are the deliberate policy goals of the political class. Immigration was but one tool used to achieve them, and now the immigrants themselves serve as a convenient visceral scapegoat for releasing the grassroots political pressure. We finally built enough political capital to do something about the economic vise most Americans find themselves in, only for it to be squandered on performative vice signalling.

      • dbingham 23 hours ago

        No. That sentiment didn't "move toward the center".

        What happened is that the far-right -- and, lets not use euphemisms like "the far right" here, we're talking about fascists and literal Nazis (ethno-fascism is Nazism) -- have successfully taken control of much of our mass media. They've also more or less captured the government of one of the world's super powers. Those two things put together have allowed them to make their views appear mainstream.

        This is exactly what happened during the 1920s and 1930s prior to World War II. And similarly, you were finding Nazi views expressed openly and proudly and being given a veneer of respectability. (See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1939_Nazi_rally_at_Madison_Squ...)

        But they are no less extreme now than they were then. They are still fascist and Nazi views. And they still ought to be abhorrent to anyone who considers themselves a decent human being.

        • Auracle 22 hours ago

          It's beyond incredible that anyone thinks that the far right has taken control of the mass media. It's clearly the left that has control of most of the media, which makes sense. People in cities tend to be on the left. Journalism majors tend to be on the left.

          • plagiarist 22 hours ago

            Which specific mass media are controlled by the left?

            • Auracle 15 hours ago

              NPR. NBC. ABC. CBS has decided to try being moderate, so we'll see how that goes. MS NOW or whatever they call themselves now. The New York Times. The Washington Post. Politico. USA Today. Vox. Slate. The New Yorker. Huffpost. The Atlantic. Much of the gaming media, weirdly. Reddit. Twitter was. Bluesky is. Wikipedia, if that counts as media.

              Allsides even lists the AP as left leaning, though I don't ingest enough direct AP stuff to verify. I'd disagree with them listing the BBC as neutral on quite a few topics, nowadays, and put them towards left - but that's just me.

              Sure, there are right-leaning places like The National Review, but apart from the opinion section of the WSJ and Fox News as a whole they're pretty small.

              • NoGravitas 3 hours ago

                Washington Post is owned by Bezos, so at best center-right. CBS (and its associated properties like Paramount) are owned by a family of far-right oligarchs, who will also soon own Warner Bros Discovery. Said oligarchs appointed a far-right political commentator as a political officer to control editorial content at CBS.

                A lot of the rest you list are not left leaning, but centrist (derogatory).

              • dbingham 2 hours ago

                None of these are left.

                You could make an argument that some of them are "classical liberal" or "neoliberal", but that was the center in the US and everywhere else it is center-right.

                Definitions are helpful here.

                "Classical liberal" is what the US was founded as. It was a liberal Republic. Classical liberals value political freedoms, civil rights, and free markets. They are anti-monarchy and anti-authoritarian. Most of the revolutions of the 1700s and 1800s were driven by Classical Liberals seeking political freedom

                In the origination of "left" and "right", Classical Liberals were "center left". "Center right" were the moderate constitutional monarchists. In the US where we have zero interest in constitutional monarchy, Classical Liberalism was always the center.

                Since World War II, that center became a settled question in much of the western world. The answers are "Yes, constitutions", "Yes, political freedoms", and "Yes, civil rights". Though in many places, civil rights were incompletely extended and so much of the argument has been about extending them fully.

                The other side of the argument is "the social question" which got rebranded as "economics". It boils down to how much do we allow power and wealth to concentrate. This became more and more of an element of the revolutions starting in the 1850s -- the revolutions of 1848 were the first to really feature a true left as it is understood today: socialist, communist, and anarchist. (At the time, it was just socialist. Communism as a theory didn't exist yet and anarchism was nascent.). And just to be clear, the "left" refers to Classical Liberals as "Bourgeoisie liberals" -- capitalists and capitalist defenders -- and does not consider them to be part of the left.

                The center in the US since the 70s has been a neoliberal consensus which argues for allowing the Capitalist markets to do their thing with minimal intervention. And most of the debate has been about how much that minimal invention should be -- with the two sides mostly arguing between "almost none" and "minimal".

                Neoliberalism is more or less a form of libertarianism (US Libertarianism edges into Anarcho-capitalism).

                For all of the 80s, 90s, and early 2000s, Neoliberalism was the center and was the entirety of both the Democratic and Republican parties. The "left" vs "right" argument was focused on things like foreign policy and whether we complete the extension of civil rights to everyone.

                For most of those decades, all of those sources you just named arranged themselves squarely around that center. They were all Neoliberal. They all took rotating positions on foreign policy, aligning with each party based on the political winds of the moment. Many of them did include arguments in favor of the continued extension of civil rights, but many of them also included arguments against it. Few of them whole-heartedly endorsed that extension until after the fact.

                We've never had much of a truly left mass media to speak of.

                In the last decade and a half, authoritarianism, fascism, and neo-Nazism have seen a resurgence world wide. And in the US an explicitly fascist movement with Nazi elements captured the Republican party and then the government. Anyone with a political science background taking an honest, empirical look at the MAGA movement will identify it thus. That movement directly pulled from the Nazi playbook in their rise to power. Trump has often cribbed directly from Hitler's speeches, barely even paraphrasing them.

                During that movements rise to power, we have seen large elements of the wealthy elite that controls much of the media align with that movement.

                At this point, most social media sites are controlled by actors who either have explicitly aligned with the US fascist movement or have effectively acquiesced to it.

                Meta has added fascist aligned members to its board and put fascist aligned people in executive positions through the company. They've also voluntarily acquiesced to the regime's requests to silence anti-regime activists.

                Twitter is explicitly fascist. Elon Musk is a core member of that movement.

                TikTok has been captured by that movement through an orchestrated buyout.

                Most of our media is social media, and right there you now have the biggest source of news and information for the vast majority of people fully captured by the fascist movement.

                As for traditional media, CBS has been captured. Bari Weiss is a part of the fascist movement and her elevation was part of their pressure campaign.

                The Washington Post is owned by Bezos who has aligned with that movement and is explicitly exerting editorial control.

                News Corp (Fox News and the WSJ) is aligned with the fascist movement and is arguably one of its originators. Sinclair group, which owns most local TV stations, is also aligned with that movement.

                And to be clear, I watched this happen. I've long made a habit of subscribing to sources from across the spectrum and made a hobby study of political science and trying to identify source's biases by political taxonomy vs the frustratingly simplistic left / right spectrum. I used to subscribe to The National Review, Reason, The American Conservative, the Weekly Standard, and others. I've largely tried to avoid those that are blatant, ingenuine propaganda (which Fox News has always been) in favor of those making earnest well founded arguments. And one by one, I've watched them fall to the fascist movement over the last decade. Reason is the last hold out, truly committed to civil liberties and libertarianism -- though it hasn't yet recognized the fascist movement for what it is (or hadn't last I checked in on them -- I haven't had the time to read as much lately).

                It's pretty clear that you're in the fascist propaganda bubble, based on your posts and where you put things, and that is badly skewing your perception of where the center is.

                I would strongly encourage you to get out of that bubble.

                • Auracle 1 hour ago

                  I'm not the one in the bubble. You are so far left that think that MS NOW, Huff Post, Vox, etc. aren't on the left in a No True Scotsman type manner, and in your comment you used the word 'fascist/fascism' over 10 times in reference to people that are simply right leaning or even very centrist.

                  I personally have individual beliefs that align with both of our two major political parties, which is something very few people can actually say, for what it's worth.

          • agar 22 hours ago

            Have you looked at media ownership recently?

            The days of a scrappy newspaper or local market newscast are over. Reframe your statement from "People in cities tend to be on the left. Journalism majors tend to be on the left" to "People who own media firms tend to be on the right. People who set journalistic standards for their outlet tend to be on the right."

      • runjake 23 hours ago

        From a US perspective, just up until a decade ago, it was a sentiment that left-center perspective that people like Barack Obama and Bill Clinton had.

        I was caught quite off-guard by this new "open borders" perspective. It doesn't seem sustainable at all.

        • microgpt 22 hours ago

          Who supports "open borders" and what do they support exactly?

          • xdennis 21 hours ago

            Biden. His policies led to a huge increase in illegal immigration.

            Look at the huge jump due to his policies: https://www.economist.com/content-assets/images/20240127_EPC...

            The same was not true for Obama, who was actually much better than Bush.

            • triceratops 21 hours ago

              What was the policy change though?

              • Auracle 16 hours ago

                Biden: "Here's an app where you can make an appointment to illegally cross the border. Our system will be so backed up that you won't need to go to actual immigration court for years, and even then if we tell you to leave and you don't we probably won't go after you. You'll have plenty of time to make an anchor baby. Oh, I can't close the border without a bipartisan bill that essentially enshrines a certain level of illegal immigration. Can't be done."

                Trump: "Border is closed. We're deporting people, starting with mostly those that have committed serious crimes."

                • triceratops 14 hours ago

                  > I can't close the border without a bipartisan bill that essentially enshrines a certain level of illegal immigration

                  How did it do that?

                  • Auracle 11 hours ago

                    The mandatory trigger at 5,000 encounters/day (or 8,500 single-day) implied acceptance of very high volumes—potentially ~1.8+ million encounters/year—before full expulsion authority kicked in. That expulsion authority only lasted for 3 years. It also codified/expanded release authority for asylum seekers under certain "operational" conditions.

                    The main point is that Biden acted like his hands were tied and Trump showed that they clearly weren't, and that we already had the tools to effectively shut down illegal immigration (through the border, at least).

            • devindotcom 21 hours ago

              the graph actually makes it look like the jump was due to Trump's policies, since the spike started in his term. if anything the graph shows that Biden policies arrested it shortly after. I recall reading deportations were actually very high during Biden's term.

            • paulryanrogers 21 hours ago

              Biden, his party, and some Republicans worked for years on the toughest border legislation ever endorsed by a Democratic president. Trump demanded it be shot down so he'd still have an issue to campaign on.

              • loeg 17 hours ago

                Biden's executive actions resulted in the loosest de facto border in recent memory. That he later worked on some legislation that was ultimately ineffective isn't a great defense. He could have just directed the executive branch to be less lax the whole time!

                • paulryanrogers 4 hours ago

                  > That he later worked on some legislation that was ultimately ineffective isn't a great defense.

                  The in-effectivity was due entirely and directly to Trump interfering in the matter. How can a president sign legislation that doesn't reach his desk because the party in control of the legislative body is in the pocket of a man who cares more about his career than the nation's well-being?

                  • loeg 3 hours ago

                    It doesn't matter. You don't get credit for things that don't happen, even if your political opponents were unhelpful.

            • SmirkingRevenge 20 hours ago

              Biden did not support "open borders", nor did he cause the immigration surges during his term. CATO of all places refutes both of these ideas:

              - https://www.cato.org/blog/biden-didnt-cause-border-crisis-pa...

              - https://www.cato.org/blog/biden-didnt-cause-border-crisis-pa...

              - https://www.cato.org/blog/biden-didnt-cause-border-crisis-pa...

              (Also, FWIW, those immigration surges were good things (for the US), and likely helped the US stick the "soft landing" instead of slipping into a post-covid recession)

          • loeg 21 hours ago

            * * *

            • amalcon 20 hours ago

              The obvious solution to the problem of abuse of the asylum system (which is in fact a real problem) is to hire more immigration judges so that claims are processed in a timely manner. Apart from getting rid of the asylum process entirely, that's the only long term solution. It's something Joe Biden made progress on (though he did overstate his progress), and Donald Trump reversed.

              It doesn't show up in the short term numbers because it is a long-term solution. But Americans aren't interested in long-term solutions.

              • loeg 17 hours ago

                I agree that that would be an improvement. I don't know that I would call it the solution.

              • Auracle 16 hours ago

                Tell me, how do you, as an immigration judge, actually judge someone that says their life is at risk due to x,y, or z but you have no way of actually verifying that? Especially when they crossed quite a few countries to get here? I don't see how that's an actual solution to the problem.

                One could easily argue that Trump made for more progress as far as the immigration courts being backed up by simply not having an almost completely open border like we did with Biden.

          • criddell 21 hours ago

            Radiolab (the podcast) did a good series on border policy that was pretty informative.

            IIRC, the US-Mexico border was never open, but it was quite porous. People would come to the US, work for a season to make some money, then go home.

            Then once border security started to be tightened, leaving was too risky so people would stay leading to a huge increase in the number of undocumented people living in the US.

          • jimbokun 19 hours ago

            It’s shorthand for the policies of the Biden administration, who oversaw an unprecedented level of immigration.

          • DesaiAshu 16 hours ago

            Strict borders have only existed for ~100 years, and many were drawn without much regard for the people living there, often constructed with intention of religious segregation, and to maintain europe's global superiority

            They run counter to the notion of sovereignty and local agency which we value greatly in the US

            The irrationality of strict country borders and heavy migration controls will emerge as a heavy global challenge due to economic and climate migration and aging populations

            I don't think we have a good answer for what replaces them, but I don't believe there's enough evidence to state that hasty decisions made after WWI and WWII should forever govern global human freedoms - and we need a better approach than war to renegotiate some of this

            • remarkEon 16 hours ago

              Part of the reason this thread and this topic is so fraught is there are many people, like you, who are willingly and confidently lying about history. Strict borders have existed since ancient times. There are physical markers of them all over Europe that are more than 1000 years old. You can see other borders from space. This idea that only in the 20th century did this idea emerge is so wrong that it’s got the history completely and totally inverted. Why make stuff up like this?

              • beepbooptheory 16 hours ago

                How did they enforce strict borders in the distant past then?

                • pfannkuchen 15 hours ago

                  “Look there’s an X, what is he doing here, get him!”

              • nl 15 hours ago

                To add to this, there are numerous well known examples.

                For example the Bible defined borders of "The Land of Israel" which are still fought over today: https://www.biblica.com/bible/?osis=niv:Ezekiel%2047:13%E2%8...

                The "Eternal Treaty" between the Hittites and Egyptians defined spheres of influence and position of various cities

                The Peace of Antalcidas defined the border between Greek and Persian influence and assigned various cities to different powers: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_of_Antalcidas#Effects

                One of the biggest drivers of strict borders was tax collection: they defined who could collect tax from which subjects. This was a common source of conflict and so anywhere feudalism was practiced strong border definitions were strongly enforced.

                It's possible the grandparent is talking more about the idea of limiting travel across those borders. That is a more defensible position but even then it was more about the the costs of enforcement.

                Trade routes had very strong border enforcement because the borders were places taxes were collected for example, and there were limits on who could travel various routes.

                For example Venice, Genoa and the Ottoman Empire jealously protected European end of trade routes linking to the spice road.

          • knubie 16 hours ago

            The current Mayor of New York City and three candidates that just won congressional primaries in the city belong to a political party called Democratic Socialists of America (DSA). They will be joining two more DSA members in congress. This is the DSA's platform on immigration:

            > Allow workers to freely migrate between countries to seek employment without restrictive immigration controls. Demilitarize the border, end all immigrant detention and deportations, immediate amnesty for all immigrants regardless of current immigration status, and provide access to jobs, labor rights, and social services to all immigrants.

            https://platform.dsausa.org/foreign-policy/

            • jkaplowitz 15 hours ago

              In other words, give labor the same mobility as capital. Nothing inherently unreasonable about that.

              Note they say “to seek employment” and “without restrictive border controls”, not “for any purpose” and “without border controls”. This does not mean they’re advocating to let in convicted murderers or people who just want to migrate for welfare benefits. Calling it “open borders” is an exaggeration in absolute terms, though it is for sure accurate as a relative comparison to what we have now.

              Also, their political party, as such, is the Democrats. DSA is not a political party. But yeah they are members of DSA as well as being Democrats.

          • runjake 23 minutes ago

            > Who supports "open borders"

            It's a very prevalent idea among US immigration activists and left-leaning people.

            > what do they support exactly

            Generally speaking, that people can move anywhere, if they want to. This article/interview/book covers it in more depth:

            https://www.nyclu.org/podcast/the-case-for-open-borders

        • saghm 15 hours ago

          From the Wikipedia article:

          > Markus Allard initiated heavy debate in 2025 by claiming that Sweden is "the land for/belongs to the Swedes"

          > In a debate hosted by Studio3 with Liberal member of parliament Martin Melin, Allard asked: "why won't the Liberals push for deporting 100 000 social welfare-Somalis?" and in the same debate said that "Sweden belongs to the Swedes.

          I don't think it's particularly hard to figure out what these are dog whistles for, and equating my vehement disagreement with it as being in favor of "open borders" is absurd.

          • tim333 8 hours ago

            It doesn't sound much of a dog whistle? More pretty plain spoken. I think Sweden had one of the lowest crime and high trust societies and then admitted a lot of Somali refugees and now has gang warfare and much rape from the guests. Not sure it's that ridiculous to suggest they go home?

          • runjake 4 hours ago

            I am confused. Are you using multiple HN accounts or something? I was not reply to the saghm account and your saghm account isn't even present up the thread.

      • Computer0 22 hours ago

        There’s expected to be 1 billion climate refugees by 2050. What will be this factions answer to that? Bullets?

        • microgpt 22 hours ago

          Yes. Isn't that how most factions answer that? Even most of the ones that are nominally left.

        • remarkEon 16 hours ago

          What is a climate refugee?

      • radicalbyte 21 hours ago

        Migration in my part of Europe (Holland) has largely been workers for jobs the Dutch won't do. These people are abused as a sort of semi-serf labour mainly in the farming sector.

        Some groups are a big net benefit to our (looking at the income the group benefits / social support costs) and others slight net negative. But once you take the economy into account it's positive.

        • denismenace 20 hours ago

          It has been shown repeatedly in multiple studies (you might have heard a very prominent one from Denmark) that Non-European/Non-Western migrants are a net loss for the economy during their lifetime and also their children are a drag on the economy. Meaning the money spent by the government to support them is never made back (from the working) during their whole lifetime.

          So no, most migrant groups are not a big benefit. Especially considering that this is only taking the economy into account. When you take into account the societal disruption and anti-values that they bring with them, then its clear how negative they have been for Europe.

        • deanishe 14 hours ago

          > largely been workers for jobs the Dutch won't do.

          The Dutch were happy to do those jobs 50 years ago.

          After every single "jobs the natives won't do", there's an unspoken "for the dogshit pay we offer."

          • picofarad 13 hours ago

            You'd have to stop importing the things you're not paying people enough to produce, otherwise your own products will be more expensive than the next nation over that has no qualms about poor pay for agriculture or whatever.

            It all sounds great until the last 40+ years goes away, with the apples year round and bananas, etc.

            Going back to just what you can produce in your country is gunna be a rude awakening for billions.

          • schnitzelstoat 11 hours ago

            People wouldn’t be willing to pay those prices for food, so they’d just end up importing it all.

            You could force people to accept the low wages by removing all welfare but that has its own problems.

          • radicalbyte 6 hours ago

            No they weren't, 50 years ago is when they were working very hard to get people in from Turkey/North Africa to do those jobs because they wanted to pay peanuts and the natives had options.

            These are all hyper exploitative industries based on capital exploiting the poor. Which is something we both agree on.

      • ashley95 21 hours ago

        Comparing the US and Sweden, it's also useful to know that the proportion of refugees accepted by these two countries is wildly different. Sweden has historically taken in many refugees (including draft dodgers from the US). In 2015 (an outlier) they accepted rouhgly 1 refugee (163k) for every 60 people (~9.4m) in the country. At its peak in 2024, the US admitted 100k refugees, significantly fewer than the Swedish peak. The impact of refugees is much more visible (also in budgetary allocations) in Sweden than the US because of this difference.

        • Auracle 16 hours ago

          Why are you just comparing refugee numbers? That's incredibly disingenuous. A very large portion of the US's population is here illegally, and it would be significantly larger if we didn't have birthright citizenship.

          They're effectively the same thing.

      • grafmax 13 hours ago

        Immigrants are a timeless scapegoat for the problems faced by the working class.

      • foxes 13 hours ago

        You mean the Overton window or whatever has drifted right.

        Nationalism is a right wing concept.

      • olelele 8 hours ago

        „Letting mass migration happen „ is such a fallacy in and if itself.

      • vrganj 8 hours ago

        Sentiment hasn't moved from far-right to the center. If it feels like that to you, it sounds like your perspective changed because you moved from the center to the far-right.

        • NoGravitas 3 hours ago

          It does appear that the Overton Window has shifted far to the right on immigration, such that far-right views are mainstream enough to be highly visible, and found in representatives of formerly or otherwise centrist parties. I consider this shift deplorable, but it's clear that it has happened.

      • zug_zug 3 hours ago

        I think it's phrasing and the phrase "damn parasites" that makes it far-right.

        The idea of changing immigration policies is not unique to any political party. However the quote isn't that, it's trying to stir up an angry us/them reaction at a large group based on national/racial lines. Also "damn parasites" is somewhat dehumanizing (whether you apply it to billionaires or immigrants).

    • fsmedberg 1 day ago

      I think it’s quite important to understand in what context that have been said. The ”parasites” are immigrants that have not integrated, entire families and generations living off welfare and the ethnic group basically have a super high unemployment rate of maybe 50% or more.

      I’ve listened a lot to talks from the party leader of Örebropartiet, and while I think he would benefit from slowing himself down, yell and insult less, I really can’t see he being racist or far-right. More leftist actually. I think he’s simply VERY motivated/obsessed around questions like to get government less corrupt, much more efficient governence, and to stop major ethnic groups from very poor parts of the world get an unreasonable high amount of the governments welfare spending.

      • dnlzro 23 hours ago

        It's possible to support all of the same policies without referring to human beings as "parasites," and I don't think we should be flippant about what language is used. It's relevant. It reflects a state of mind.

        I personally do not ever see myself voting for (or otherwise indirectly supporting) a politician that speaks like that, regardless of whether you can steelman it with more neutral language.

      • microgpt 23 hours ago

        Isn't that what every politician who ended up doing an ethnic cleansing said?

        • account42 2 hours ago

          I bet they also all went to the loo at some point. Better hope no one catches you there.

    • something765478 1 day ago

      Funny, I usually hear that sentiment from left wing sources complaining about billionaires.

      • nozzlegear 23 hours ago

        Interesting, but what does that have to do with the price of tea in China?

        • microgpt 23 hours ago

          I think they're saying the left and the right are the same

          • nozzlegear 23 hours ago

            Ah, horseshoe theory!

            • int_19h 21 hours ago

              As someone who grew up in Russia in the 90s, I've seen it firsthand that the red/brown horseshoe is not a theory. It was often difficult to tell which one was which; even when it came to religion, our commies have all suddenly found a love for Eastern Orthodoxy.

              The fallacy is that there's only one direction, so to speak. You can be left without being an authoritarian. Of course, the same goes for the right.

              • nozzlegear 20 hours ago

                FWIW, I was lucky enough to be born in the US, but I've long believed that the horseshoe theory is real as well despite my somewhat flippant comments.

      • catlikesshrimp 23 hours ago

        The billionaries don't need/care about sympathy And most importantly, the billionares don't do hard work for minimun pay.

      • wat10000 23 hours ago

        Won’t somebody please think of the poor oppressed billionaires!

      • yreg 22 hours ago

        Well I find the 'Eat the rich' slogan equally disgusting.

      • tastyface 21 hours ago

        Billionaires always have the option to un-parasite themselves, quite trivially.

        Nobody is calling MacKenzie Scott a parasite.

    • xdennis 21 hours ago

      > To me too, then I got to the leaders quote on TV: "We must deport these damn parasites who sit and live at our expense."

      Firstly, you should probably cite that. Searching for it leads here. Hopefully, you didn't manufacture it.

      But, while the language is unfortunate, do you really think natives should tolerate migrants who are not a net positive?

    • cucumber3732842 21 hours ago

      Maybe he was talking about beltway bandits, do they have those in Sweden?

    • zarzavat 15 hours ago

      You have to consider the context which is that Sweden does have an awful lot of fake refugees mixed in with the real refugees. "Parasite" is harsh but unfortunately all too accurate for some of the migrants who are essentially gaming a system intended for people in real distress.

    • tim333 8 hours ago

      It's funny that reading the Wikipedia has they have:

      >"class-conscious populism" which according to party leader Markus Allard takes inspiration from marxist ideology

      which would have been called far left not long ago. Still I guess "far-right" means anti immigrant these days?

  • projektfu 23 hours ago

    Interesting for a European party to choose red and black as colors and be right of center.

    • tokai 22 hours ago

      Not without precedent. Maybe they are big fans of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army.

    • GuinansEyebrows 21 hours ago

      i can think of one notable right-of-center European party that featured those colors heavily.

      • projektfu 21 hours ago

        Fair enough. (And white)

    • tastyface 21 hours ago

      It's not an accident.

  • Aachen 22 hours ago

    I suppose how extreme a party seems to a person depends on the context they're in

  • jimbokun 19 hours ago

    > Some of its key issues include lowered wages for politicians, ending the tax payer funding of various sculptures, monuments and art, large scale remigration, a stricter immigration policy, and free dental care.

    Limiting immigration along with generous government benefits for citizens is an interesting new space for political parties not fitting the traditional left right axis.

    • mullingitover 13 hours ago

      It’s not a new idea. I’d put it at around ninety years old.

    • gnoll_of_gozag 10 hours ago

      just "stricter policy" is an understatement. they want mass expulsions

  • exiguus 16 hours ago

    In my understanding its far-right or right-wing and definitely a populist party. See also the Ideology Section from the link you added.

  • victorbjorklund 12 hours ago

    They are a really strange party revolving around their leader who got a personality. It can be seen more as Trump where ideology isn’t as important as what the leader says.

dsign 1 day ago

Slightly tangential on Swedish society, there are similarities between USA and Sweden. There's a large segment of society that is white and very blond, and there's a largish segment which is not. Along that same line there are all kinds of divisions: economic, education, religious, sets of values, and of access to things and possibilities. What pisses me off is that the cast of "CEOs of successful companies" live in an sphere of privilege where they really are not bothered at all by the brown people. They in fact have plenty of places to go, a vast archipelago, out of reach for anybody who can't afford a boat. Though they get all the benefits, including cheap qualified labor from people who had to leave their homelands displaced by poverty, conflict and war. I'll switch VPN provider too.

One of these days we will elect somebody who is corrupt and morally corrupt, incompetent and poorly educated and who'll promise to screw us over many times and in many positions, and we will let him just do so so that there are concentration camps for the brown people.

  • mjburgess 23 hours ago

    What's the relationship between race and immigration status?

    It's not entirely clear what the argument which unites them is supposed to be. This unification is always in the mind of the white matry not the person opposing immigration. In the UK polish immigration was opposed, en mass, poles are white.

    SUPPOSE there are large numbers of poorly assimilated people in a country, whose culture of origin is very different than that of the host country. What does the minor coincidence of their common lack of european ancestry show, other than to prove the point, they lack such ancestry?

    White skin evolved in europe, with the peoples of europe, as with european culture -- that whiteness tracks this culture is a conincidence. (There's less-and-less european diaspora in america -- which, if imported en mass, might also enrange europeans).

    The refusal to treat large scale immigration as a cultural and economic phenomneon, to try and insult opponents of this position with a slander of racism -- this tactic doesnt work any more.

    All you are doing is driving those people to say, "OK, so its racism. We'll vote for that then." And the result is real racists are elected.

    Do you have any analysis of the issues people opposed to large scale immigartion, from non-western cultures, and who would reverse at least some of it -- do you have any arguments that engage the issues they actually raise?

    • throwawayqqq11 21 hours ago

      > The refusal to treat large scale immigration as a cultural and economic phenomneon

      > and insult opponents of this position as racist

      On the other hand, you treat the negative effects of current immigrant milieus as eternal and innert to their ancestry (dare to say: genes).

      This way, you can look at integration as if it has to happen in a single generation and also, allows you to ignore the more important part of diminishing social mobility, which effects the natives as much.

      Look at germany, where after WW2, alot of turkish "guest workers" were invited and stayed. After several generations the descendant of those immigrants are as german as you can be. They are still soft muslims, drink alcohol, engage with german bureaucracy, have a heavy turkish accent -- some of them are even candidates for the far right AfD. Please note, they migrated into an economic boom.

      Isnt that utterly ridiculous? When time proves you wrong, it reveals your narrow mindedness.

      And when you reduce immigrants to percieved negative innert properties, isnt that racist? When you broaden your scope, youll see the bigger problems are elsewhere, dont get distracted by bigotted populists, that are as clueless about problems or their solutions.

      • philipallstar 21 hours ago

        > hand, you treat the negative effects of current immigrant milieus as eternal amd innert to their ancestry (dare to say: genes).

        I don't think they did say any of this. I don't understand why people who debate against limiting immigration (and it often is only this way round) continually mis-represent the person's clear, stated concern and try and replace it. It is a completely transparent attempt, and no one is fooled. This isn't 2015 when an accusation of racism was taken seriously, because who would mis-accuse someone of such an awful thing? Well, it turned out millions of people would do that. The US President would do it[0].

        As for the genetics comment, this is ridiculous on its face as well. Race and culture are in no way tied. But culture survives for many generations, particularly when the immigrating group is large enough. This is obvious. Germans in the 1900s could move almost anywhere in the world and become the best brewers in the region, not because they have the genotype of a brewer, but because they had (and still have) an incredible brewing tradition handed down from parent to child. Culture doesn't change because you move into another country. It moves because you assimilate, make lots of native friends, and learn the language. Lots and lots of people are not doing that.

        [0] https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/kyle-rittenhouses-mothe...

        • throwawayqqq11 21 hours ago

          I think racism comes from a cognitive bias, that eg, lets you read a text without ever engaging with the broader explanation offered (social mobility, time scale of integration) but instead engange with a side remark about genes.

          GP ties negative properties to entire groups without differenciation, this is by definition racist.

          To end on a constructive upside, if GP was really concerned about eg womens rights, any kind of stateful intervention should only target that. By being racist and eg trying to associate this issue with brown skins, stateful intervention becomes sweeping. By being more precise, migration politics that targets them all becomes social politics wich only effects some.

          Can you see it now?

          • philipallstar 20 hours ago

            > By being racist and eg trying to associate this issue with brown skins

            I have only seen you associate cultural issues and non-integration from mass immigration as being race-related. I have no idea who you think you're talking about when you say people are doing this.

          • deanishe 14 hours ago

            > GP ties negative properties to entire groups without differenciation, this is by definition racist.

            Only if they're racial groups, and you're literally the only one trying to box people up by their skin colour.

      • mjburgess 21 hours ago

        > cultural and economic phenomenon

      • hackinthebochs 21 hours ago

        >On the other hand, you treat the negative effects of current immigrant milieus as eternal and innert to their ancestry

        A bad faith misrepresentation of the issue. The issue is why should existing citizens have to suffer the backwards views of the immigrant population while immigrants "assimilate over multiple generations"? Why should the host country have to absorb increased crime, feeling less safe, having their culture changed, etc for the sake of the immigrant population? Where does this supposed moral impetus come from?

        • throwawayqqq11 20 hours ago

          Congrats, you touched my time scale argument, the other commenter didnt engage with anything important. Unfortunately you didnt touch the systemic problem of social mobility, which is much more striking.

          To return the facor, the "moral impetus" comes from not elevating your culture as the only origing of truth, goodness, etc., but instead codify common basic needs, human dignity, etc. into law and sanction/integrate nased on this.

          Im not saying that immigrarion is frictionless, the same way you non-racist arent saying, some undesirable negative traits (like crime) cannot emerge in the native population without immigration. The solution to native or migrant crime is identical.

          Why you should take the hassle and hopefully adress social mobility and organize integration? Because of demographics and economic contribution -- the bigger picture yet again.

          • hackinthebochs 20 hours ago

            >To return the facor, the "moral impetus" comes from not elevating your culture as the only origing of truth, goodness, etc.

            A country doesn't need to see its culture as an objective ideal to justify protecting its citizens from non-citizens that would victimize, cause discord, or otherwise strain the social fabric and institutions. A government's first and most important mandate is to act in the interests of its citizens. What impetus does a nation have to help non-citizens at the expense of the prosperity and comfort of citizens?

            • throwawayqqq11 20 hours ago

              Immigrants economic contributions are net-positive, its not at the expense of anyone bc economies are no zero sum games. This is scientific consens.

              Protecting citizens with closed borders and potentially harming them in the long term with or protecting them with capable institutions based on individual cases? (Hope you see the racism trick question here.)

              • nec4b 19 hours ago

                >Immigrants economic contributions are net-positive

                No they are not. Studies of Danish Ministry of Finance and independent institutions say otherwise.

                https://docs.iza.org/dp8844.pdf

              • belorn 19 hours ago

                There was a study done in Sweden on the economics of immigration during the large immigration crisis of 2015, and the result was a significant net-negative of 7 800 € per person per year. Taking in a large number of refugees with significant lower education and overall wealth compared to existing populations, with a welfare and healthcare system that Sweden has, cost significant more than what it produce in increased taxes.

                There is the concept of social dumping where municipalities try to get immigrants on welfare to move to other municipalities in order to reduce costs and balance the budget, and those other municipalities are now complaining loudly that their budgets have major deficits because of this strategy. Schools also complain about this issue since a large influx of low-income citizens put an increase budget costs without any increase in tax revenue, meaning higher costs and fewer teachers per student.

                A more recent study in 2025, ordered by the government, calculated that the cost per refugee today to be around 2 500€ per year per person, while work related immigration gave a positive benefit of 4 800€ per year per person. This report however do not account for increase crime, integration initiatives, increased cost to the education system, health care and other things.

                It should also be mentioned that only about 1/3 of refugees ever becomes economical self-sufficient.

                • throwawayqqq11 10 hours ago

                  Your comment comes across as very dishonest. You provide alot of subtext without clear statements.

                  > Taking in a large number of refugees with significant lower education and overall wealth

                  Implies education and wealth is needed for the workforce. It is not. Just a strawman.

                  > healthcare system that Sweden has, cost significant more than what it produce in increased taxes

                  How profitable are swedish schools? Rhetorical question to highlight your dumb-think. Services cost money, they are not meant to produce anything else.

                  > There is the concept of social dumping

                  > Schools also complain about this issue

                  Which can also be explained with regular budget pressure from neoliberal fiscal hawks. I dont know the swedish specifics.

                  > This report however do not account for crime ...

                  Which allows you to vaguely gesture / associate yet again.

                  Unfortunately, you didnt link any studies. Searching for "economic contribution migration" on any scientific platform, comes out as unanimously net-positive.

                  Here is the OECD saying the same.

                  https://www.oecd.org/en/topics/sub-issues/economic-impact-of...

                  > It should also be mentioned that only about 1/3 of refugees ever becomes economical self-sufficient.

                  First generarion? And yet again you just glimpse at it without explanation. Whats the subtext here? Lazyness? Genetic inferiority? Without an explanation, this isnt an argument for anythig, yet tou yield it like it was. And that is dishonest. So understand better, i could use it as an argument myself, "see how bad systemetic discrimination is!?"

                  The internet abuses cognitive biases around cultural self-identity and foreign disgust and in the end, people group together, thinking they are the reasonable ones, the more educated...

                  • belorn 2 hours ago

                    You lack basic knowledge of how Sweden work and seem to construct a straw man arguments based on that lack of knowledge.

                    In Sweden everyone must by law go through basic education as children, and all education is free, including higher education. The government get no profits from schools as there is no fees for the government to collect. It is all paid through taxes. Your are using that "dumb-think" of yours, assuming that immigration from countries that does not provide basic education for all their citizens will have the same level of education as people from countries that do.

                    > Which can also be explained with regular budget pressure from neoliberal fiscal hawks. I dont know the swedish specifics.

                    You clearly do not understand how Sweden operate or how local government functions, are clearly too lazy to look it up. The budget for municipalities primarily comes from local taxes, paid by citizens that live in that region. There are a national budget posts that get distributed between municipalities, but they only cover some parts of the local budget. Regions with a lot of high income and high tax paying citizens will have more money to spend than regions with a lot of citizens that are unemployed and on welfare.

                    And naturally I can give you links to Swedish articles that also direct you to the research study and the government study, in Swedish. https://frihetsnytt.se/invandringens-pris-vad-farska-studien...

                    1/3 of refugees never becomes economical self-sufficient. That is basic statistical fact. If you don't like the statistics you can pretend that math is racism or something dishonest like that. The plain fact is that taking in refugees has costed Sweden money, and the more refugees that comes in the higher the cost is. The math doesn't say if the cost isn't morally worth it, or if refugees children or children children will some day repay the cost, or if then it is worth to pay a cost now for a possible profit in the future that we don't know. All the math say is that there is a cost per person and year from taking in refugees that will not be repaid by those refugees.

              • diath 19 hours ago

                > Immigrants economic contributions are net-positive, its not at the expense of anyone bc economies are no zero sum games.

                It's at the expense of women and their safety, for example. Between years 2010 and 2015, 60% of rapes in Sweden were perpetuated by people of foreign origin: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8330751/. That was back when foreigners made up about 20% of their population, which I think is now over 30%, extrapolating, the immigrant rape problem is likely even worse. At what point do we stop putting economic growth over the well being and safety of citizens?

              • hackinthebochs 19 hours ago

                This is just another example of Americans projecting the unique American context to the rest of the world. As the other commenter stated, immigrants aren't universally an economic benefit to the host country. The particulars of the immigrant and the context are highly relevant to outcomes.

                Aside from that, this elevation of economic concerns as paramount is a strange outgrowth of Americas unique position of economic powerhouse with shallow cultural roots. You cannot expect other countries to also see economic growth as the metric that subsumes all other concerns. Harm is multifaceted and is very much up to local sensibilities to determine what they value and how to preserve it.

    • iamnothere 20 hours ago

      It is strange, because this party’s platform seems to mirror the positions of the blackest Swede I know (Malcolm Kyeyune, a Marxist writer who is also often accused of being a right-winger). I suspect that the divisions in Sweden are much deeper than race.

  • earthnail 22 hours ago

    I lived in Stockholm for seven years. One of the biggest mistakes was not buying a boat. They‘re not as expensive as people make you believe; you can get a really nice day cruiser for around $10k, which you can sell again for $9k after a few years. Used boats have very little depreciation. Yes, you can go fancier; a nice weekender like a Nimbus 250 sets you back $60-70k, but that’s just like cars. You can get an Audi or BMW, or you start with a Kia.

    The problem with boats isn’t that they’re expensive - the Stockholm archipelago can largely be considered like a lake, not like the sea. It’s education. And I don’t mean university.

    I mean: which boat is appropriate? How do I navigate? On which cliffs can I stop, and how? How do I prepare for a nice day out? Which insurance do I choose, which parts need repair and when, what Mai tweets must I do myself vs pay someone, how much should I expect in upkeep costs, etc

    These are all very manageable things to learn, but if you’re not used and not exposed to boat culture you won’t do it.

    But the problem isn’t money. $10k isn’t free, but it’s less than most used cars, and annual upkeep is less than a car, too.

    • jamesblonde 22 hours ago

      It took me 5 years to get the boat - a 22ft daycruiser with toilet. That was 15 years ago, haven't looked back. Got a daycruiser from the UK. Drove there, bought a trailer there, drove it home. Arbitrage during the financial crisis - half the price of the same boat in Sweden at the time.

  • rwyinuse 21 hours ago

    Sweden wasn't like USA until politicians decided to make Sweden a "humanitarian superpower" by establishing the most liberal refugee policy in the world, without thinking of how they can actually integrate and offer a better future for all those refugees. I guess the real motivation may have been getting cheap labor, rest of the society be damned.

    In any case, Sweden's policies on humanitarian migration have been an utter failure, and I can't really blame Swedes for wanting to make it stricter. Obviously refugees are not the ones to be blamed here, but politicians who took in more than they could successfully integrate.

  • optionalsquid 19 hours ago

    > Slightly tangential on Swedish society, there are similarities between USA and Sweden. There's a large segment of society that is white and very blond, and there's a largish segment which is not.

    Do you have a source for that? I tried searching, but didn't find anything supporting this notion. I can find numerous sources pointing to the high prevalence of blonde hair in Sweden and other Nordic counties, but the US rarely even makes an appearance in those rankings. If anything, it seems like a point of difference rather than a similarity

  • throwawaypath 18 hours ago

    >Slightly tangential on Swedish society, there are similarities between USA and Sweden. There's a large segment of society that is white and very blond, and there's a largish segment which is not.

    There are no similarities at play here. Swedes are the native, indigenous people to Sweden. "White people" in the US are not native nor indigenous to the US.

    • josh2600 18 hours ago

      Only if you pretend the Sami's don't exist, right?

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S%C3%A1mi_people

      • throwawaypath 18 hours ago

        The existence of the Sami does not falsify the following fact: Swedes are the native, indigenous people to Sweden.

        • fc417fc802 17 hours ago

          Your confident claim here piqued my curiosity. It seems there's at least some amount of controversy about it. At least in finland it has been suggested that the sami may have been pushed north by colonization around the 14th century.

          In any case your statement clearly doesn't hold for the northern part of sweden.

          • throwawaypath 3 hours ago

            "Some amount of controversy" does not falsify the following fact: Swedes are the native, indigenous people to Sweden.

lightbulbish 4 days ago

I'm Swedish, but never heard of Örebropartiet before. I tried looking into their website and it doesn't say a lot.

Translated from Swedish wikipedia: --- Örebropartiet was founded by Markus Allard in the spring of 2014, when he was recently expelled from the Left Party and the Young Left. [...] Among the party's main issues are reduced politicians' salaries, reduced bureaucracy, civil servant responsibility, assimilation policy and the repatriation of people who do not adapt. ---

I think it is very reasonable to demand that people try to integrate when coming to a new country - learn the language, get into the culture. As a Swedish person I think this is missing from our integration politics, which is an often talked about topic in the last years.

In the end this is a political question and sadly instead of engaging in dialogue the reaction to these questions feels like it most often leads to polarization and division. Inclusion means also including people with different beliefs and respecting their opinions, even if we don't share them. Through understanding comes empathy.

Can recommend "The Righteous Mind" by moral psychologist Jonathan Haidt who discusses this in a book. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Righteous_Mind

Fun fact: we get a dopamine release when taking an opposing stance and then seeing (subjective) proof of our stance. It requires self-discipline and fighting your impulses to avoid polarization.

  • AlecSchueler 3 days ago

    > I think it is very reasonable to demand that people try to integrate when coming to a new country - learn the language, get into the culture.

    What kind of things might be involved in a mandate for people to "get into the culture?"

    • port11 2 days ago

      It’s a hot topic, but in Belgium some people are taught how to take the bus, do their taxes, and not harass women. One of my Dutch teachers led the integration course and said this stuff was really difficult to land.

      If you come from a culture of groping women, not doing is gonna be a challenge. I get it. But we’ve also built mosques and have pagan festivals and allow public servants to wear their choice of religious attire. I think it’s a balance, but nobody is ever happy with wherever you set the balance.

      When I learn the local language, I’m happier; it’s nice to talk to people. Not everyone agrees.

      Tja.

      • AlecSchueler 2 days ago

        TIL Belgians don't grope women.

        • port11 2 days ago

          Or pretend not to, at school. YMMV.

  • ndsipa_pomu 3 days ago

    I don't think it's reasonable to "demand" integration. What should happen is that the existing cultures should be open and welcoming enough so that new-comers want to take part. Also, I like the idea of immigrants bringing their culture with them (and in some cases, that may be the last representation of that culture) and welcoming people to learn about it.

    Multi-culturalism should be about championing different cultures and not forcing everyone into a cultural homogeneity.

    • port11 2 days ago

      GP literally addresses your points. I think we’re very welcoming in most of Europe, adopt others’ traditions, and are not too imposing. Just, you know, leave women alone and don’t aim fireworks at ambulances.

      Dismissing any amount of integration is chicanery. We’re pro-social creatures, and knowing the lay of the land makes your life better.

      • em-bee 2 days ago

        compared to the rest of the world europe is absolutely not welcoming. heck, even as a native german if you move from one region in germany to another you are treated as an unwelcome outsider. less so in big cities where you are more anonymous but still. if you are lucky you can find "your tribe" and your children may be accepted if they grow up there. the only places in germany where i ever felt welcome was linux user groups, and other fringe groups which as a whole had more of an outsider status.

        • dag100 23 hours ago

          > heck, even as a native german if you move from one region in germany to another you are treated as an unwelcome outsider. less so in big cities where you are more anonymous but still. if you are lucky you can find "your tribe" and your children may be accepted if they grow up there.

          This is standard for most of the world. Really, only some countries, all of them developed, are exceptions to this.

          • em-bee 22 hours ago

            not my experience. sure, wherever i go i will always be an outsider. the difference is whether i am welcome or not.

            even as a german i have not felt welcome anywhere in germany (i grew up im austria).

            i have been around the world and lived in a number of countries. i felt more welcome in china and even in the US for example than anywhere in europe

            • peterfirefly 10 hours ago

              That might be down to your personality... or the language barrier in the case of China (or you were in China before Xi or very early in his reign).

              • em-bee 4 hours ago

                unlikely. friendliness is experienced from the first moment you meet someone. my personality can hardly influence that. asians and americans are simply more polite and friendly in their approach to people they have never met. of course if you are unfriendly then that may change their approach. but if that was the measure then people should be friendly to me in europe too. but they aren't.

                and i don't know what XI has to do with that. politics doesn't affect how people interact. not that quickly anyways. i was around when the big exodus happened in the mid-10s, and after covid china opened up instead of closing down. i don't even need a visa anymore if i just want to visit china. so even by that measure china has become friendlier. but that's not the kind of friendliness i mean.

      • AlecSchueler 2 days ago

        > Just, you know, leave women alone and don’t aim fireworks at ambulances.

        Where I'm from (Northern Ireland) harassing women and attacking emergency services have been part of the culture for as long as I remember. Would you suggest that people arriving should actively take part in these behaviours?

        • belorn 2 days ago

          I remember a discussion I had with a English teacher from UK who immigrated to Sweden during the 1990s. They said that in UK, when a government employee would visit a house regarding dept or some other problem, they would bring a large police escort and then they and the neighbourhood would had a big brawl that generally ended with the police winning and then most of the participants would go to the pub. It was just how things worked. The guy were majorly surprised that in Sweden, the government employee could just knock on the door and talk to the person with no police and no brawl.

          I would assume that if attacking emergency services is the norm in Northern Ireland, so is police escorts of emergency services. That is not the norm in Sweden, through it has become the norm for certain regions where emergency services no longer feel safe going on an emergency call. The downside is that if the police is delayed, so is the emergency service, and naturally the quality of emergency service is reduce in those locations which some people say is a form of discrimination.

        • ndsipa_pomu 2 days ago

          Northern Ireland is definitely atypical. An English friend of mine moved over there a few years ago as his wife is from there and her family all live in the same area. I can't imagine him being considered as "integrated" for at least a few decades.

          (My experience with Irish/Northern Irish people is that they're very friendly and welcoming, but I've only been there a couple of times).

        • port11 2 days ago

          That’s… a tough one. Bit of a loaded question. I would say “don’t engage in anti-social behaviour regardless of the cultural milieu”, I’m sure NI has much better traditions to partake in?

          • AlecSchueler 2 days ago

            > That’s… a tough one.

            But then we're getting a bit deeper into the issue. These are things that need to be considered if you want to mandate "integration" surely.

            We now want people to integrate but we also recognise that there's a higher moral code which should supersede local customs. Is that correct? Then it seems like integration isn't the actual aim, but the shaping of people into a sort of ideal which is actually removed from local cultures.

            We're also onto picking and choosing between the "better" and worse local traditions. But who is the arbitrator for which traditions are good and which are bad?

            • port11 2 days ago

              What if the purpose of integration is merely to bring people closer to the local average, ironing out the outlier kinks and helping them feel secure in society?

              I did a bit of the integration course by choice, even though it’s not mandatory as a EU national. I found it fine, a bit boring because we grew up with most of these customs. The Flemish ‘traditions’ were all new to me, and I also realise I don’t follow them; but respect some if I’m invited to people’s houses.

              I think we’ve made a mountain out of a molehill when it comes to integration. It’s neither super forced and awful nor useless.

        • ihateolives 14 hours ago

          Would you like them to as a local? That probably is the answer to your question.

        • deaux 14 hours ago

          Did you participate in it? Did most of your friends and family?

      • ndsipa_pomu 2 days ago

        I'm not saying that people shouldn't want to integrate, I'm saying that "demanding" it is problematic. Imagine grandparents being brought over from a different country and they don't speak the language - should they be forced to attend language school? What level of language ability would be considered the minimum and does that also include reading/writing?

        By all means provide encouragement and resources so that people can adapt to their new situation, but don't demand it.

        • port11 2 days ago

          Yeah, I know. That’s why I say that no one is ever happy with where you set the limit. I think demanding A2 in language is reasonable, for example. Yes, demanding, even if it’s in a reasonably long timespan. We demand much more out of everyone born in the country, don’t we?

          • dnlzro 23 hours ago

            I think most liberals have the intuition that laws should apply equally to citizens and non-citizens, and I think that's where a lot of the discomfort comes from when we talk about immigration. A citizen who doesn't meet those demands imposed on non-citizens (e.g., language, cultural assimilation, etc.) will never be at risk of deportation, simply because they were lucky enough to be born in the country.

            However, it does seem that this Swedish party is willing to "repatriate" even Swedish-born citizens, so at least they're consistent.

            • pixel_popping 21 hours ago

              It doesn't say that at all, Swedish-born citizens means at least one of the parent IS already Swedish, they aren't citizen at birth if none of the parents are swedish and that's just normal almost everywhere in the world.

              You wouldn't expect your child to be Pakistani if you get birth over there as 2 German individuals.

              • int_19h 20 hours ago

                Jus soli is pretty much the norm in the Americas, so it's more of an Old World / New World thing.

                • pixel_popping 9 hours ago

                  Yeah but US laws are irrelevant and is just one country and 85% of the rest of the world doesn't practice this kind of norm.

            • deaux 26 minutes ago

              > I think most liberals have the intuition that laws should apply equally to citizens and non-citizens, and I think that's where a lot of the discomfort comes from when we talk about immigration. A citizen who doesn't meet those demands imposed on non-citizens (e.g., language, cultural assimilation, etc.) will never be at risk of deportation, simply because they were lucky enough to be born in the country.

              What you said makes no sense. Vanishingly few liberals believe laws should apply equally to citizens and non-citizens. If they did, they'd be for the complete abolition of visa/residency conditions altogether, simply allowing anyone to immigrate to the country. I doubt that even in the US more than 5% of people believe this. Any European country it'll be <3%.

              Any visa/residency condition is a demand not imposed on citizens. Language and cultural assimilation aren't any different from other such conditions.

          • sensanaty 6 hours ago

            A2 is a pathetically low bar. I say this as someone who had to do A2 Dutch to pass the citizenship exams, it is a pathetically low bar to pass. I have some friends who passed the citizenship exam and can barely order food at a restaurant, yet alone hold/follow conversations.

        • dijit 22 hours ago

          My Polish great-granddad didn’t have a home to return to following WWII and the Iron Curtain- they forced him to learn the language.

          Because not everyone in the UK could even hope to bend to work with Polish as a language in 1946.

        • int_19h 20 hours ago

          I think that most people arguing for integration are fine with grandparents being left to their devices. Where they get antsy is when the next generation grows up self-segregated into their own distinct culture.

        • deaux 14 hours ago

          > Imagine grandparents being brought over from a different country and they don't speak the language - should they be forced to attend language school?

          Yes.

          > does that also include reading/writing?

          Yes.

          > What level of language ability would be considered the minimum

          C1.

          • peterfirefly 10 hours ago

            > they don't speak the language - should they be forced to attend language school?

            I disagree. They should learn the language of their own accord or get kicked out.

            > C1.

            Yes! And I would expect immigrants in citizen-facing jobs in the public sector to be at C2.

            • deaux 30 minutes ago

              > I disagree. They should learn the language of their own accord or get kicked out.

              I can't agree, even though we likely have the same goals. You want to filter for people who work very hard to do their best to integrate. You don't want to filter for being good at self-studying languages. Most people just suck at self-studying through not much fault of their own, they were raised that way. It can also be incredibly useful for non-language integration purposes, as it gives them hours of direct contact hours with natives which - again, for the dedicated ones, which are the ones we want to stay - often leads to social contact and further integration.

              I get where you're coming from, but the tax dollars needed for such language schools are really negligible, and I've seen with my own eyes the benefits to integration that couldn't be had without it. It's just a good cheap investment. I'd still apply the same final bar as you would, FWIW.

    • hackinthebochs 2 days ago

      Why is the burden always on the host nation and never the immigrants?

      • defrost 2 days ago

        Always? Never?

        There are > 190 countries in the world and many of them require immigrants to meet at least the same criteria for employment and assistance as born citizens.

        • hackinthebochs 2 days ago

          Why do people pretend they don't understand context? What do you get out of posting this irrelevant pedantic response?

      • em-bee 2 days ago

        the burden should always be on the ones who are stronger to accommodate those who are weaker.

        the majority needs to welcome and support the minority.

        and it's not that there is no burden on the immigrants. they still have to learn to understand the local language, culture, rule of law, etc...

        we should learn from each other and take the good from each. the burden for that is on both sides.

        • hackinthebochs 1 day ago

          I appreciate the candid response. It shouldn't be so hard for people to just clearly state the premises that motivate their beliefs.

          >the burden should always be on the ones who are stronger to accommodate those who are weaker.

          Is this a universal principle? Does this come with any limits at all? A salient example that comes up often: classrooms tend to have a small handful of extremely disruptive students that ruin the experience for everyone else. The current thinking is to not suspend/expel these kids because they are disadvantaged or whatever. But in doing so the other kids suffer greatly, not to mention the teachers.

          How do you manage different dimensions of strength/advantage? It is the weakest in society (women, children) that bear a disproportionate burden of allowing large amounts of immigration from third-world countries. Why are the rights of women and children secondary to the rights of immigrants?

          • em-bee 19 hours ago

            clearly state the premises that motivate their beliefs

            thank you for recognizing that. i believe this helps us have a reasonable discussion about this topic. let me also add that neither my beliefs nor any premises they are based on are set in stone. they are open to be challenged provided the challenge makes a good argument or presents new evidence that i was not aware of. i have certain goals in mind or rather a vision of how our society should develop that influence my beliefs, and maybe we should talk about those too, but for now let me address your direct comment.

            Is this a universal principle? Does this come with any limits at all?

            universal, maybe, unlimited, i don't think so. it's more about balancing. on average minorities are weaker, have less strength to protect themselves or to lobby for their needs. etc. maybe accommodate is not the right word, probably support is a better way to express what i have in mind.

            but how we accommodate or support depends on the circumstances. allowing kids to disrupt the class because they are disadvantaged is not accommodating or supporting them. what we actually need to look at is why they are disadvantaged, and fix that. not an easy task. but for the classroom example specifically there actually exists a proven solution, namely montessori. without going into details montessori allows teachers to accomodate each child individually without requiring a better teacher student ratio. one montessori teacher can handle 30 children.

            but let's get back to integration in society. if you allow me to read that into your comment, your choice of example suggests that you understand accommodating as lowering our standards. (and that's why i now think accommodating was a bad word choice)

            i definitely do not believe that we should lower our standards. we should be less rigid maybe, and less punitive and more educational when standards are violated.

            but as the majority we also need to learn about these minorities, their background, their culture, why they came here, etc. we need to approach conflicts with an attempt to understand and work with them to find a way to live together.

            btw, i moved to a developing country precisely because i wanted to get a first hand experience of the culture there and understand where these people are coming from, what attracts them about europe or other developed places, and what is holding the local development back.

            It is the weakest in society (women, children) that bear a disproportionate burden of allowing large amounts of immigration from third-world countries.

            i am not comfortable with that statement. first of all what would the burden be that children have to bear here? are you talking about problems in school with classes being dominated by children that do not speak the local language? if that is it then well, the solution is to invest more money in education. train teachers, realize that it doesn't make any sense to teach children in a language that they do not understand, etc. the need for education reform has been discussed elsewhere, and that's a global problem. the challenges caused by immigrant children only make that reform even more pressing.

            as for the burden of women, again, please explain what you mean. if you are talking about violence at least in germany the majority of violence against women still comes from germans, and even though immigrants are over-proportionally represented in the statistics, most cases of violence happen at home which means that they are not cases of immigrants against german women. those cases are the absolute minority but they are grossly over-represented because local women are much more likely to report such violence than immigrant women and furthermore are the causes for violence more likely the socioeconomic status of immigrants, and their lack of integration (many young refugees come without their family and are not only not integrated locally, they are not integrated at all, so immigration itself is not the root cause) therefore i do not see that as a fair claim that women bear a disproportionate burden through immigrants. unless you mean something else, but then please share what you mean here.

            as i said, i am open to have my beliefs challenged, so feel free to question anything i say. i am here to learn and i am looking forward to an educational discussion.

            • peterfirefly 11 hours ago

              > one montessori teacher can handle 30 children.

              Montessori kids tend to have parents that produce better kids (both in the genetic sense and in terms of how they are raised).

              It's a selection effect (also on the teacher side), not because they have a magic way of turning disruptive/dangerous/criminal kids into little angels.

        • Mezzie 22 hours ago

          I think one issue with thinking this way is that who is stronger and who is weaker isn't always so easy to suss out, particularly on the margins.

          To give an example from my own life/experience, I'm an American and Canadian woman, but I'm also a disabled lesbian. I feel uncomfortable when I go places (e.g. Ikea) and see Muslim families where the men are dressed in Western clothing and the women are niqabis, because it's an outward signal to me that they follow an interpretation of religion that is sexist and homophobic and are likely to be hostile to my existing.

          There can be power overlap between the weakest members of the stronger community and the strongest members of the weaker community.

          For the record, I don't have those feelings around all people of Middle Eastern descent or people who are visibly Muslim but not displaying an adherence to a particularly conservative interpretation of their religion (e.g. a hijabi in Western clothes or a group where some of the women are hijabis/niqabis and others aren't). I do have those feelings around white people who similarly display such conservative religious leanings (Amish, Haridem, etc.). It's purely ideological, not ethnic or racial.

          The thing is, as a native, I don't have a choice to be here, whereas immigrants do. So why am I assumed to be the 'stronger' one, and why should ethnicity and religion override any other power dynamic?

          • em-bee 18 hours ago

            I feel uncomfortable when I [...] see Muslim families where the men are dressed in Western clothing and the women are niqabis, because it's an outward signal to me that they follow an interpretation of religion that is sexist and homophobic

            but that is very subjective and projects a fear that in my opinion has no basis in reality. i have felt the discomfort myself, even as a man, and i have asked myself where does this discomfort come from. my conclusion is a bit difference than yours.

            first of all it helps to look into the history of this culture. as you notice that this is not specific to muslims, but is in fact historic to our own culture as well, what the amish are doing today was the norm in the western world just a few centuries ago. we all did it, and therefore it is not an immigrant problem.

            the headscarf in particular was commonly worn by women even less than a century ago. there is nothing sexist or homophobic about it. it's culture. correlation is not causation. i'd argue that most women in the western who still wear these do it by choice, not because they are forced by their husband. for many it's a fashion statement. an outward representation of their personal belief (as an islamic or amish woman).

            if you look closer you will also find that many muslim women in the west do not cover their hair, but normally you can't see them because without the headcover you would not even know they are muslim.

            it is also worth considering that in part the intention of covering up was for the protection of women. the scary part for me is who they needed protection from. but our western society is plenty misogynistic still, we have just become better at hiding it.

            and are likely to be hostile to my existing.

            this i find completely baffling. why would they be hostile to you? i believe if you talk to these women and get to know them and learn their motivations that will help you get a better perspective, and alleviate your fears.

            The thing is, as a native, I don't have a choice to be here, whereas immigrants do

            which choice are you referring to here? the choice to not cover their head? the choice to go against their own beliefs? the choice to disagree with their husband/family? those that have the choice and and to do it, are doing it. those that don't either don't have the choice or choose not to. it's up to us to get to know them to understand the difference.

            why am I assumed to be the 'stronger' one?

            stronger in numbers. we are the majority still.

            why should ethnicity and religion override any other power dynamic?

            which other power dynamic? religion still is the strongest power dynamic in every society. even in the west. atheism is effectively a religion too. it's just another belief. trying to suppress religious expression means to remove religious freedom. do we really want that? what if it is your beliefs that are being suppressed? you would not want that. we have to allow for others to follow their beliefs even if they contradict ours. but we have to learn to get along because rejecting people for their beliefs only pushes them into extremism.

            • Mezzie 17 hours ago

              I gave the example I gave specifically: I'm well aware of the history of the head scarf, and the difference between a hijab and a niqab (as well as between the different forms of dress - I know the difference between an abaya, a chador, etc.) I also specified it is specifically when I run across families/groups where the women and men are dressed very differently: I don't feel that way when I encounter groups where men are in thobes and women are in abayas + hijab or niqab. I don't feel this way when there are outward signals that the woman is wearing the hijab primarily for cultural reasons, such as when she's keeping company with women who don't cover or when it's blended with an acceptance of Western culture.

              I really dislike the idea that my discomfort has to come from ignorance. It doesn't. I've actually spent time in the Middle East (and yes, I wore a hijab). I am aware that the idea that the niqab is compulsory is not held by the majority of Muslims and it's a particularly conservative reading to consider it compulsory. I'm also aware that some women choose to be niqabi, which is why if it's one or two in a group it doesn't bother me - that's indicative of it being a choice, and if the niqabi is accompanied by hijabis or uncovered women it signals that she accepts variance in interpretation. When it's every single one, though, that tells me that it's likely that group of people has conservative Muslim views.

              In terms of listening to people, I've also listened to ex-Muslims and queer people from Muslim backgrounds. I've found a lot of 'sit down and listen to X group' presents you with the most privileged takes from that group: You want me to listen to the Western revert, not the women from Afghanistan.

              And again, I do feel uncomfortable with white people/people of my own ethnicity who outwardly display signs of belonging to fundamentalist/conservative religious groups. I don't like fundamentalist Christians, super Orthodox Jews, etc. I'm judging them by the same standards I judge anyone else. If anything, giving them a pass feels rather like the racial version of benevolent sexism.

              I was referring to the choice on where to live. Unless they're refugees, immigrants make a choice about living in their new country and they have the option to leave/go back to a place where the culture agrees with them. I can't leave.

              > religion still is the strongest power dynamic in every society.

              Strongly disagree. I'd put class and sex up there alongside religion, personally. Those are strong power dynamics that exist even in societies where everyone is of the same religion/ethnic group.

              I don't say anything to any of these people and I do live with the discomfort, but my point is to say that in this situation someone is going to be uncomfortable. It's either going to be me, knowing that they think I shouldn't exist, or them, feeling like they can't express themselves. There is also another lens for looking at this, which is freedom of speech. They have the right to express their beliefs (non-verbally) that I'm a degenerate who's going to burn in hell, and I have the right to express my belief that their beliefs are extremely off-putting and I'd rather not be around them.

              • em-bee 16 hours ago

                my apologies for assuming ignorance. stating your actual experience does make a big difference (and just a hint that you have been in the middle east for some time would have made that obvious). it does change my understanding. you also add a lot of context now that i find very helpful, thank you for that.

                no time now to respond in detail. i'll come back to that. but it appears you have a great deal of experience to share, so i'd like to ask up front to please share more.

                just one thought that may indicate where my response might be going. being uncomfortable with other some people is something that makes me question my own feelings and beliefs first of all. why do those people make me uncomfortable, and what can i do about it? but to understand your discomfort i would really like to learn more about your experience.

                another aspect of this discussion is the question of where the future of our society is going and how we best deal with conservative elements that reject change. anyways, i'll probably need a day or so for a more thoughtful response.

                • Mezzie 5 hours ago

                  I do think context is important and I appreciate this response acknowledging it.

                  Other context: I live in Michigan, and there are actually Muslim majority towns and cities here - I don't live in one, but I do travel to/through those areas and where I live does have a Muslim population and there's nothing unusual to me about seeing a hijabi/visibly Muslim people out and about, so I'm coming from the point of view of those populations establishing places where they are the majority. And they've also used the power they've accrued on the local level to display hostility towards queer people. It's not a theoretical I'm making up in my head to enrage myself.

                  Specifically, I spent time in Jordan, which is a country that has a wide variety of people and people practicing Islam in different ways, so I'm definitely not under the illusion that all Muslims are the same or are extremists.

                  I definitely agree that we should question how and why something or someone makes us uncomfortable, and I agree that the first step should be interrogating our feelings and determining if they have a basis or if they're just knee-jerk displeasure towards change or something different. I have actually sat with these feelings for a while specifically because they're so taboo in left leaning spaces, and all I have heard is similar to what you say: That I'm bigoted, don't understand, etc. That's one reason I actually did go out of my way to learn and understand more: I wanted to interpret that criticism in good faith, and I agreed that I should know more before judging.

                  I have major theological and moral objections to central parts of all 3 of the Abrahamic faiths, even outside of the 'do you believe in God?' question.

                  Another piece of context is that I'm a 38 year old lesbian woman and I grew up in an environment where conservative religious movements were actively and openly hostile to me. I remember reading articles when I was 6 years old about how damaged and sinful I was, I remember the reactions to Matthew Shepard, etc. If anything, I've grown more comfortable with religious expression over time: when I was younger, I viewed any open display of religious faith as signaling that person was dangerous to me. I've also spent most of my life hating that I'm a lesbian and wanting, desperately, to be at least bisexual so I could be normal. I still struggle with this.

                  The question of larger society is one reason why I feel uneasy about the situation: I think the most likely path towards assimilation/acceptance for the Muslim community is doubling down on the conservatism and becoming allies with the Christian right. The fact that the Muslim community is full of people who think that my life should involve me being married to a man and unable to say no to sex/being raped repeatedly fills me with horror and makes it very hard to want more of them in my area. That's why I'm pro-assimilation: it's self-preservation.

                  If Muslims want to live in America and wear hijab, pray five times a day, observe Ramadan, etc. I don't care, but I draw the line at ideologies that perpetuate sexism and homophobia. (And again, I don't want fundie Christian immigrants or fundie Jewish immigrants either, and a white conservative Muslim family isn't any more acceptable to me.)

                  To me, when I see families/groups that are openly displaying conservative Muslim values, they are openly saying they don't want me in their society and if they had a choice, they'd get rid of me. Why wouldn't that make me uncomfortable? If you went out and about and saw people wearing 'castrate all men' shirts or a symbol that represented 'all men can be made to like cock if you ram it up their ass while they scream until you break them down', you would be comfortable with that? With those people existing in your city?

                  If you want me to live a life where I'm sexually assaulted regularly to please your God, I'm entitled to view that as a threat. If you openly express affiliation with that, I'm entitled to consider you hostile to me and not want to 'get to know you'.

            • peterfirefly 10 hours ago

              > stronger in numbers. we are the majority still.

              That won't last long among the young in Sweden, actually. Not if the current immigration policies continue, that is.

        • rwyinuse 20 hours ago

          "and it's not that there is no burden on the immigrants. they still have to learn to understand the local language, culture, rule of law, etc..."

          And there is the problem. You see, in modern Sweden (and many other European countries) it's entirely possible for migrants to live for decades without learning the language, understanding the culture, or even respecting the rule of law.

          The majority needs to welcome and support the minority AND the minority needs to do their best to integrate. Right now the latter part is badly failing in Sweden, which is the reason for extreme amount of gang violence and social inequality plaguing Sweden. It's not even fault of the Swedes or the migrants, it's a systemic problem. The migration and integration policy is broken.

      • SmirkingRevenge 20 hours ago

        The truth is, assimilation is usually a process that takes a generation or two. First generation immigrants don't assimilate very well. Many never manage to even learn the host country's language.

        Assimilation really happens at the level of their descendants, who grow up entirely within the host country, going to their schools, consuming their pop culture, etc, and think of themselves as Swedes or Americans or whatever.

        • peterfirefly 10 hours ago

          It takes a lot longer if the immigrant groups are (locally) large. They are a lot more than just locally large in Sweden. It also takes a lot longer if the state bends over backwards to accommodate the immigrants, which Sweden does.

      • arnoooooo 9 hours ago

        Do you let anyone come into your home ? If you did, you'd no longer have a home, and therefore would not be able to offer hospitality anymore. Don't you expect people who come to your home to abide by at least a few rules ?

        It's the same for a country. It's because it has borders, rules, and a strong culture that it has something to offer that immigrants might be interested in.

    • hagbard_c 23 hours ago

      > I don't think it's reasonable to "demand" integration

      Yes, it is reasonable to demand people who come into a country adapt to rules - written and to a certain extent also the unwritten, of which Sweden has many - of that country. When in Rome, act as the Romans. This adaptation will never be 100% but that is not the point, what is most important is that newcomers learn to assimilate to such a level that the natives are open and willing to maybe integrate some parts of the newcomer's culture.

      People who 'are the last representatives of [their] culture' can write a book about it while becoming part of their new culture since it is clear that their old one did not stand the test of time. They're much better off that way instead of living like cultural fossils for the likes of NPR and PBS to make documentaries about. By all means document what that extinct culture had to offer but life is for the living and culture is the commonly agreed upon set of rules how to live it.

      Multiculturalism is a pipe dream, something dreamt up by people who listened to one too many version of John Lennon's Imagine. It has been shown not to work time and time again, it makes it harder for people coming in to a new country to assimilate and integrate because there is no clear target to aim for. Culture is not a fixed thing, it evolves through time by adopting new things and getting rid of old customs. Multiculturalism does not call for cultural evolution, it calls for revolution: here's a whole new culture, now deal with it. Revolution hardly every works and when it does it tends to go badly for those on the wrong side of it.

    • throwa356262 19 hours ago

      I think it is very reasonable to demand _some_ integration: get a job, pay taxes, learn the language as best as you can, don't do crime.

      But at the same time, you should not be expected to give up your culture (as long as it is not doing something against the law).

    • sensanaty 6 hours ago

      > What should happen is that the existing cultures should be open and welcoming enough so that new-comers want to take part

      I'm an immigrant to the EU/NL (naturalized, now a citizen), and I also lived in Sweden for a short stint. If Swedes are anything, they're open and welcoming, I'd even say too open and welcoming, which is part of why these issues keep cropping up.

      Some context so I'm not immediately written off as ignorant or as carrying some kind of agenda: I grew up in Indonesia. My family is largely atheist, but we lived in Aceh (look up Qanun Aceh, it's Sharia law territory) and various other places around the country. I've been immersed in Islam, every sect of Christianity, Buddhism (I went to a Buddhist school as a kid), and Balinese Hinduism. I went to an international school with people from literally everywhere, and I'm still close with many of them, scattered across the globe as they now are. I say this to establish that I've actually lived among a wide range of people, cultures, and religions, this isn't an abstract opinion.

      This isn't unique to EU immigrant communities either, I've seen the exact same pattern in Indonesia. Many (I want to stress: many, not most, but certainly too many) immigrant groups are remarkably insular and resist integrating in any meaningful way, even multiple generations in. They don't learn the language, don't adopt the host country's customs, and make essentially zero effort to become part of the society they live in. This gets worse where there's already a large existing community of the same background, those often calcify into enclaves where you're functionally not living in the host country at all anymore.

      At a certain point, we also have to admit that some immigrants are the source of the problem.

      Where I land is this: host countries should expect integration from long-term and permanent residents, and should actively support it via language access, civic education, real investment in helping people become part of the society they're settling into, rather than leaving newcomers to sort it out alone or quietly tolerating permanent parallel communities. What that integration looks like has to be specific to the country in question, because "host culture" isn't one universal template, integrating into Aceh's legal and religious framework is a very different thing from integrating into Sweden's secular, liberal one, and I'm not pretending otherwise.

      But in both cases, multiculturalism shouldn't mean a one-way street where only the migrant's culture is expected to remain untouched and is treated as a holy thing while the host culture is expected to bend indefinitely until it, too, warps into something it never was. If you've chosen to build a life somewhere, the society you've moved to should welcome you in, but you should also be expected to actually become part of it. We shouldn't have to walk around on eggshells when we say that people should integrate, this should be the expectation for anyone looking to form a permanent life in a country they live in.

      Refugees are a different case, since they didn't choose displacement, but even there once return is no longer realistic and a person has built a long-term life in the host country, the same logic on integration eventually applies to them as well even if the urgency and framing should differ from voluntary migration.

      On a side note (and this is more of my own personal problem), I'd rather not see any kind of Sharia-like culture anywhere near me ever again, that crap is stone-age level bullshit that deserves to go extinct forever.

  • card_zero 2 days ago

    Don't we also get a dopamine release from empathy, or is it just no fun?

    • Matl 1 day ago

      Depends on if Atlas Shrugged is your Bible or not.

      • georgemcbay 1 day ago

        And for anyone who treats Atlas Shrugged as a Bible, I hope you're aware that Alan Greenspan was almost surely more of a true believer than you are, and his legacy is pretty well summarized by having to admit that his practically religious belief in Randian ideology led to the most severe global economic downturn since the Great Depression.

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R5lZPWNFizQ

        Of course after his admission modern Objectivists began to predictably denounce Greenspan (Ayn Rand's favorite boy) with various "No True Scotsman" arguments.

    • lightbulbish 1 day ago

      I’ve read a few books about dopamine/motivation/common neurotransmitters and this has never come up. In my amateurish view I think empathy is more connected to oxytocin (which afaik does release during social connections, which The book ”The molecule of more” covers a bit).

  • raffael_de 23 hours ago

    I not just agree ... I can't even fathom how one can not agree with your comment.

  • Aachen 22 hours ago

    > Translated from Swedish Wikipedia [...] I think it is very reasonable

    When I looked into this party when news broke a few days ago, I was surprised to find that the English article was comparatively longer and included the more appalling statements. Seems worrying that their narrative on the native version appears to be working

  • framapotari 4 hours ago

    > Inclusion means also including people with different beliefs and respecting their opinions, even if we don't share them.

    Does this apply to immigrants?

seethishat 1 day ago

I pay for and use Mullvad VPN. I believe they value everyone's privacy and I believe they are competent technologists.

I don't care about politics. I will continue to buy and use Mullvad VPN.

  • deejaaymac 1 day ago

    Agreed. I use mullvad because I believe they are the best off the shelf choice. If I stopped using things because of the owners opinions, then I'd live in a cave.

  • devindotcom 1 day ago

    you value privacy, but you don't think privacy is a political topic? VPNs, encryption, and other privacy tools are regularly under attack or protected by legislation and policy that is actively debated and lobbied for.

    I think that you do care about politics, you just don't care about this particular topic or policy. That's your prerogative of course, but don't pretend you are wholly above the fray. I suspect if a company's founder had donated millions to a party aiming to mandate backdoored encryption you would suddenly find yourself to be a very political person.

    • yunnpp 23 hours ago

      And what does that have to do with the guy leaning right? He runs a VPN. If you care about privacy, that should be sufficient to support it, his other opinions aside.

spockz 1 day ago

Is it so hard to imagine that someone willing to take such a principled stance on privacy that they start a company to provide a privacy focused vpn company that they also hold other extreme views?

It takes a certain kind of personality to become a founder especially more do for such a strongly principled company and adhere to it.

  • distracted_boy 23 hours ago

    This comment reminds me of Sweden < 2015, where any critique of immigration labeled you as a supporter of the Swedish Democrats (SD) and possibly a Nazi.

  • bigyabai 20 hours ago

    Mullvad's principle was that they protected speech. It wasn't a political imperative, and they enjoyed business from all sides of the political aisle perusing this product.

    Now the apolitical appeal is fading. It's not hard to understand why VPNs, one of the most commodified businesses on the internet, struggle to find customers without that kind of niche reputation that Mullvad once had.

  • rwyinuse 20 hours ago

    What counts as an "extreme view" is relative. If my country had seen such a surge in gang violence as Sweden has, I too would support mass deportations of migrants with a criminal record, and much harsher migration policy. It's not that extreme of a stance considering how bad the situation has got in Sweden. I don't want to live in a society where teenagers are regularly hired as hitmen and shootings & explosions are a weekly, if not daily thing.

    • olelele 7 hours ago

      For real tho, I think the current crime wave has more to do with power struggles in the drug market than anything else.

      Sweden has had terrible integration policies coupled w segregating all immigrants in the suburbs.

      The drug consumption of everyday Swedes is fueling the crime wave. Cocaine consumption is at an all time high. The former prime ministers son was caught w coke at home. But only the marginalized are penalized for it and forced to work supplying the rich inner city kids who get off the hook..

  • cedws 20 hours ago

    Can it really be called "extreme" anymore? Europe is swinging strongly towards being anti-migration at the moment. Other parts of the world like Japan are also going through such swings. Many countries never opened their borders to begin with. This political party sounds like it's closer to the average than people would like to admit.

    • bigyabai 20 hours ago

      They're so populist, in fact, that they require CEOs to donate them millions of dollars to constitute the backbone of their party. Oh wait, that's what political interest groups do.

devindotcom 1 day ago

I understand Mullvad has historically been a leader in privacy among the big VPN options. What are some other equally affordable and user friendly options that you all have been satisfied with? Think for someone who saw Mullvad advertised during the Super Bowl but looking to leave because of this news.

  • cassianoleal 1 day ago

    I've been quite satisfied with AirVPN [0].

    [0] https://airvpn.org/

    • khriss 22 hours ago

      +1 on AirVPN. They are amongst the handful of companies which successfully resisted the war on torrenting (targeting VPNs that allowed persistent ports) and still allow for port reservation.

      Mullvad, like most other VPNs gave in in the end and removed port reservations.

      • microgpt 22 hours ago

        I wonder how AirVPN doesn't run out of ports since you reserve a static port number across all nodes (which is also a fingerprint). They seem to be almost all allocated. Do they just plan to never have more than 64512 customers?

        • khriss 21 hours ago

          I believe the ports reservation is tied to a specific node, not globally. The config is via a Wireguard config file you download.

  • Insanity 1 day ago

    I haven’t used Mullvad, so can’t say how it compares to ProtonVPN but I’m happy with Proton.

    It is super easy to set up, even on Linux and iOS devices.

    • newtonianrules 1 day ago

      Does Proton keep logs? I’ve heard good things.

      • greyb 1 day ago

        They don't keep logs but they've been transparent that if they ever receive a lawful court order to intercept new communications, they must comply. I honestly don't think this is unique to any VPN provider. Even if a VPN provider refuses to comply, authorities can simply backdoor or facilitate lawful interception however they'd like.

    • sudonem 1 day ago

      It’s worth noting that Proton’s CEO is also known to be a supporter of right-wing causes.

      There is no ethical consumption under capitalism. I keep along the effort, but it just continues to be impossible.

      • Insanity 1 day ago

        Could be, I don't follow the CEOs closely lol. Any source on this?

      • dgellow 1 day ago

        Do you have any source on that? Whenever that’s brought up and I look into it the claims are far from credible, with little evidence of wrong doing

        • sudonem 1 day ago

          Yeah - answered below. As I mentioned, a lot of the tweets and Reddit posts have been deleted so it’s hard to track down now. It was a bit of a shitstorm on Mastodon some months ago though.

      • thewebguyd 23 hours ago

        I also think that there's significant overlap in the venn diagram of "I want to provide a privacy service" and "I hold some right wing views." If you're launching a no-logs VPN service, you probably have some distrust of institutions, lean closer toward techno-libertarian views which are increasingly getting absorbed into the right, have some form of belief in a free market, which is also starting to become a center/center-right view as the left is seeking a post-capitalist society that may or may not have a free market. The modern left is also unfortunately inching closer and closer to wanting nanny state style policies, so it's not surprising to see right wing views among privacy tech CEOs.

        • microgpt 22 hours ago

          For left wing VPNs there's riseup, but it's not the same category of product as Mullvad, it's a free giveaway that you have to request access to, and intended for your personal use only - no excessive bandwidth like torrenting.

      • int_19h 20 hours ago

        I don't think it's a coincidence that supporters of positions that are broadly considered extremist in their respective countries are also the ones who end up running services like private VPN and email.

    • Tistron 23 hours ago

      I've used both, and for me mullvad has worked a lot better. They seem more focused on VPN as core to what they do and don't leak data when reconnecting to a different server, and with proton I often experience that my connection stops working if my laptop gas been closed for some time, and the only way to make it work again is to reconnect to a new server. And then it leaks connections for a few seconds.

    • elorant 23 hours ago

      Do they have a CLI?

  • wasfgwp 23 hours ago

    By any chance are you using any Apple products and are you a supporter of Donald Trump? Because if the answer is yes and no singling out Mullvad seems be rather hypocritical?

    Based on his actions Tim Apple openly is an ardent supporter of Trump. So effectively everyone here who has a MacBook was supporting a company run by by a pro MAGA ceo...

    Of course greed and corruption might be considered a mitigating factor by some people (instead of seemingly doing it purely due to one's personal convictions and without any coercion which is presumably the case here

    • notahacker 23 hours ago

      Without wishing to defend Tim Cook at all, there is a difference between a corporation donating to an incumbent government that seems unusually receptive to bribes (including to be left alone) and an individual CEO being the main financial backer of a local fringe far right party he wants to make a national force, presumably because of his enthusiastic support for their policies which include the 'remigration' of citizens deemed excessively brown...

      • anukin 20 hours ago

        Where is the part that remigration would only happen to excessively brown people? I read the party leaders speeches etc but could not find it.

    • the_gastropod 22 hours ago

      You’re doing the “we should improve society somewhat” meme guy thing. People are allowed to do better without being perfect.

  • solid_fuel 21 hours ago

    What is the general consensus on NordVPN? They are frequent sponsors on youtube but I haven't heard much substantial about them either way.

    • netsharc 21 hours ago

      I think they're relying on the fact that "Nord" sounds like "Nordic", so consumers think "they must be a Swedish company, I hear some Swedish techies are hardcore on freedom, e.g. the PirateBay is Swedish!".

      In reality they're based in Panama, and their parent company is Dutch: https://support.nordvpn.com/hc/en-us/articles/19441152966161...

tomburgs 8 hours ago

Admittedly I had never heard of this party before, but after looking into them calling them far-right seems to be quite a leap.

If you didn't know, Sweden used to be extremely welcoming to asylum seekers and refugees about a decade ago. What they got out of it were gangs, their youth being exploited to enact crimes (due to leniency towards minors), and neighborhoods that even the police doesn't dare drive through. Having a party that calls for integration and adaption to Swedish values, and at worst remigration, seems rather tame. Especially so if you just take a look across Øresund and see what's happening in Denmark.

  • Parae 8 hours ago

    You're confusing causation and correlation. There are no links between asylum seekers, refugees and gangs, and crimes.

    What leads to crime is not welcoming refugees, it's leaving people on the back in a state of precariousness.

    • akimbostrawman 8 hours ago

      >There are no links between asylum seekers, refugees and gangs, and crimes.

      Criminal statistics and per capita would disagree

      • Parae 4 hours ago

        It is a consensus among sociological studies. Statistics are not studies. It means nothing.

    • leereeves 8 hours ago

      > leaving people on the back in a state of precariousness.

      What do you mean? Don't they benefit from Sweden's generous educational and welfare systems in addition to extra support for migrants?

      • Parae 4 hours ago

        Have you ever tried to seek for basic rights and support for migrants in EU ? I help lot's of immigrants in France. I'm always told that France is very generous and that it's easy to have healthcare, easy to go to a doctor for free.

        Yet, in my experience, it's horribly difficult and expensive.

dumdellidum 10 hours ago

Everyone hating, I hope you check every company you use to make sure their political stance align with yours.

No AWS or Google Cloud if you're pro-abortion, for example:

"Together, Amazon, AT&T, Citigroup, Coca-Cola, Comcast, CVS, General Motors, Google, T-Mobile, Walgreens, Walmart, Wells Fargo and Verizon have spent at least $15.2 million to support anti-abortion politicians, according to publicly available political spending disclosures." from https://truthout.org/articles/companies-like-amazon-and-cvs-...

Shortness8 1 day ago

Some commentary here: https://korben.info/en/mullvad-cofounder-funding-far-right.h...

Daniel Berntsson is still involved with Mullvad and part-owns Mullvad's parent company with his co-founder.

  • reassess_blind 19 hours ago

    That article calls the party far-right, which for US based readers will imply they have the same ideology and policies as the US “far-right” concepts.

    Is that actually the case? I’m not familiar with this party, and it’s difficult to get a grasp on whether they are Nazi-level pure evil, or an otherwise reasonable party with stricter views on immigration policy.

yaris 1 day ago

I try to turn it other way in my head, like if Mullvad got to know somehow political views of some of their customers and say "We don't like what you say, so we decide to end our business with you. We don't want our infra to be used to spread opinions like yours."

  • piva00 1 day ago

    They could do it, some people would align with that stance, and some wouldn't. Exactly how it plays out being a customer: now we've discovered he supports a far-right party here in Sweden, I can choose to not support the CEO with my money and let others know about their political leaning to decide by themselves if they want to support him and his business aware that their money might got to far-right parties.

    I don't see any issue with your flipped argument, it's the same thing, no?

    • yaris 1 day ago

      I imagine that if a company really denied a customer due to disagreement on some views there would be similar flood of comments like "my views is my problem, I pay you money you must do business with me". Maybe I'm wrong though

      • omnimus 1 day ago

        Companies can absolutely refuse a customer and many do. Companies will often have public rules about not doing business with weapons manufacturers or tobacco producers.

        They also can refuse business due to political stance. They can even give different prices to different customers.

        • dijit 22 hours ago

          As long as its not a protected class, by the letter of the law you’re right, but we’re not discussing law: we’re discussing human response.

          If you were kicked off of a VPN provider (or, even a site) for financially supporting a non-proscribed political organisation: how would you talk about it.

      • jzb 1 day ago

        There's an enormous imbalance between company and customer that you're ignoring, not to mention the difference between a private person and a company's very public personas who own said business.

        If a company was sniffing around to learn my political views, that would be a bit intrusive, wouldn't it? I wouldn't expect the same level of anonymity if I were the CEO of a company like Mullvad. There's also a disparity between "I'm taking my business elsewhere, good luck without my $10 a month!" (or whatever Mullvad costs...) and "we've decided to not allow you to use this service".

        How large a disparity is depends a lot on whether a company has a lock on a market. Generally, if a vendor in a crowded market decided to turn away customers who are XYZ voters (as an example) I'd be more apt to just comment on that as a business strategy than as a "how dare they, they must accept all customers!" Like, if you are one of 20 VPN providers and you think you can be successful by turning away customers.. well, OK. Good luck with that.

        If it's a provider with a monopoly that's a bit different. I live in an area with only one choice of provider for electricity. So I don't think they should be allowed to refuse service to anybody who is paying their bill, even people I vehemently disagree with.

  • jzb 1 day ago

    If the far-right parties they're supporting are similar to MAGA in the U.S., what they're doing is taking customer money and funneling it into a political effort to do just what you're describing - just in a different way. "We don't like groups X, Y, and Z, so we're going to fund a political effort to take their rights away by using government."

    As I understand it, the Örebro party pushes for deporting immigrants and has a "Sweden belongs to the Swedes" policy that includes deportation for even those born in Sweden if their parents were born in, e.g., Somalia. So basically, "we don't like certain people, so we want to use customer money to force them out of our country". That really doesn't paint Mullvad as the victim, here.

  • teddyh 1 day ago

    You’re not taking it far enough. What if Mullvad has someone you disagree with as a customer, and does nothing about it. Does this mean that Mullvad is supporting them? Does this mean that you have to stop supporting Mullvad? What about Mullvad’s landlord? The company that provides them their electricity? Their internet provider? Their internet provider’s internet provider? Should you boycott the entire internet because Mullvad has not been given the BGP death penalty?

    • aoshifo 23 hours ago

      What are you trying to say with this? This is absurd.

      The outrage has nothing to do with Mullvad itself supporting people with certain opinions or not.

      The problem I and many others have, is that if the founder takes our money and gives it to causes that I (edit: or rather we) find reprehensible, we don't want to give them our money anymore. Simple as that.

      I will not try to stop you from using Mullvad by any other means than my arguments. Hopefully you understand now where we are coming from and agree. If not, just do your thing.

      • teddyh 7 hours ago

        You’re absurd. There have been many moral outrages about companies simply having some undesirables as customers/users, like Twitter and Cloudflare, where the companies are shunned and accused of “supporting” said customers/users.

        > the founder takes our money and gives it

        No, you give your money to Mullvad, who uses it to pay expenses, including salaries to people who do work for Mullvad, and profits to shareholders. It has then long stopped being “your” money, and you can’t reasonably be upset at what happens after that, unless you want to apply the same reasoning I demonstrated, at which point you have a lot of boycotts to adhere to.

    • solid_fuel 23 hours ago

      It's almost like there's a difference between selling services to someone and directly donating to a political party.

      • teddyh 6 hours ago

        There is. But Mullvad has not donated to a political party, now, has it?

  • iAMkenough 22 hours ago

    When it comes to publishing anti-human, genocidal rhetoric, I hope they would say "we don't want your blood money."

    Flipping that back around, I'm glad I'm not a Mullvad customer that would say "I'm okay with a portion of the money I give you being used to call for genocide."

mortarion 4 days ago

Örebropartiet is not a extremist far-right party. All their policies is extreme far-left except immigration.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96rebro_Party

  • whalesalad 4 days ago

    Wild. I spent about 3 months living in Örebro while on contract with a company based there.

  • gpm 4 days ago

    This sounds very much far right and not left at all to me

    > Markus Allard takes inspiration from marxist ideology[32] and unites the "productive" classes of society against the "Transferiat", with the "Transferiat" being a term coined by Allard to describe the classes of society that lives off of transfers that are a net negative for society such as those who, despite having an ability to work, live off of social welfare benefits, as well as those who work "made-up services"[33] that the party deems serve no societal function, such as bureaucrats, consultants, public sector communications specialists, strategists and HR-specialists.

    It's practically a copy and paste of the ideology behind "doge".

    • ShinyLeftPad 4 days ago

      By your logic USSR was far right.

      • gpm 4 days ago

        No, I'm fairly sure you could not find a quote like that about the USSR.

        • ShinyLeftPad 4 days ago

          You would be wrong. The people you described were called "тунеядцы" in USSR. With a possible exception of bureaucrats who existed as a result of centralized government but were also called "a barrier for the working class" by Lenin etc.

          I also highly doubt USSR would accommodate people who move in and don't bother to integrate into the culture and speak Russian. Ask people from entire countries where Moscow did Russification, and those people didn't even move in from outside they already lived there.

          • int_19h 20 hours ago

            > I also highly doubt USSR would accommodate people who move in and don't bother to integrate into the culture and speak Russian

            USSR was schizophrenic in that regard. Early on, it had https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korenizatsiia, which was quite literally about de-russifying the local elites and promoting local languages. Then Stalin did a hard 180 on that, like he did on so many other things (e.g. re-criminalizing abortion and homosexuality, or reintroducing paid high school). I don't think it's unreasonable to argue that under Stalin, the USSR truly switched from being a left totalitarian dictatorship to right totalitarian.

        • pigpop 4 days ago

          The trial of Joseph Brodsky is a fascinating insight into the workings of the USSR https://www.nytimes.com/1972/10/01/archives/the-trial-of-jos...

          They had strong opinions of what was deemed "socially useful" work and were not above abolishing those pursuits they deemed to be useless.

          All able-bodied people were expected to work (in approved roles) and you would be provided a job if you couldn't find one but if you refused to work they would deem you a "social parasite" and prosecute you if you didn't reform your behavior.

          Somehow, people seem to forget that Marxism is an ideology of workers.

          • jalapenoj 4 days ago

            >Somehow, people seem to forget that Marxism is an ideology of workers.

            Not really, Marx and company were nobles, lawyers, etc. The ideology concerns provoking a civil war and taking over, workers rights is just the rhetoric to cause the revolution. The worker’s paradise never materializes because it’s not actually about that.

            • pigpop 4 days ago

              This is true but the ideology was packaged and sold as a movement for the working class. My observation had more to do with the modern interpretation of it as somehow being a license to not work, which appears comical when compared with how it was instituted.

              Not all of the component parts of the ideology are necessarily false due to their introduction and popularization by Marx. Personally, I find his writings obtuse and his beliefs abhorrent. There is, however, merit in the idea that the state should benefit its people, a large percentage of which are the productive working class, but it shouldn't be ruled by the working class. The state is its people and their culture, it shouldn't oppose their interests or subjugate and exploit them for the advancement of ideals alien to them.

              • int_19h 20 hours ago

                > but it shouldn't be ruled by the working class

                Why not, though?

                I mean, if you subscribe to democracy, the only way this would not be true is if said democracy was somehow subverted into a caste system where only some people are de facto eligible to be elected.

            • stogot 3 days ago

              Whoever downvotd you is unaware that the USSR tried a seven day work week. It was not about workers.

    • mortarion 4 days ago

      Marxism, communism and socialism are all extreme far-left ideologies.

      Being anti-immigration doesn't automatically swing the party to the right. As written on Wikipedia, "left-conservative" is probably the best label.

      The Swedish far-left loves to, for instance, brand the governing party in Denmark as far-right, but they are actually also left-conservative.

      It is possible (shocker) to be liberal and progressive, whilst also being pro-assimilation, pro-deportation, anti-immigration.

      • gpm 4 days ago

        > Marxism, communism and socialism are all extreme far-left ideologies.

        Yes, but the behavior in that quote, cutting social services, is none of the above. Using language associated with far left movements while promoting far right policies leaves you as a far right party.

        > Being anti-immigration doesn't automatically swing the party to the right

        Literally nothing in the quote I quoted is about immigration (though they hit that checkbox as well and it absolutely does swing you to the right).

        • ShinyLeftPad 4 days ago

          > cutting social services

          By providing free healthcare and dental care or at least reducing out of pocket costs?

      • rationalist 4 days ago

        In the U.S., before Trump was elected, immigration control and deportating illegal immigrants were things that Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama ("left" politicians) campaigned on.

        • rationalist 3 days ago

          I guess emotions/politics are more important than facts?

          A very quick search yielded this short clip of Hillary Clinton:

          https://youtube.com/shorts/Zsq32nNjNoE (no endorsement of overlays/etc intended, just the first result in the search)

      • int_19h 20 hours ago

        I find it amusing that westerners are only now discovering that left wing politicians can be not just authoritarian but socially conservative as hell.

        USSR notably banned abortions for 20 years under Stalin, and homosexual intercourse for most of its existence.

        • handedness 18 hours ago

          Just wait until people hear about that Che fellow!

    • irthomasthomas 4 days ago

      Sounds like a branch of the Technocracy movement which Musks grandfather helped found.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joshua_N._Haldeman

      "The technocracy movement proposed replacing partisan politicians and business people with scientists and engineers who had the technical expertise to manage the economy"

      • jauntywundrkind 3 days ago

        Whoa whoa whoa. I don't think it's at all fair trying to throw Technocracy under the bus. The guilt by association doesn't look great! But Technocracy was interesting. It had some hopes & values, and it wanted people thinking and working materially, scientifically, having a perception of the world better than just money. It had some real neat idea. Wild & absurd? Yes that too. But I don't enjoy the casual drive by shoot down!

        • irthomasthomas 3 days ago

          Weird, I didn't think I was throwing technocracy under the bus. What makes you say that?

    • iamnothere 3 days ago

      This is just a rephrasing of the lumpenproletariat, coupled with the professional-managerial class. You could also refer to the latter as a modern version of the lumpenbourgeoisie (although this term is applied rather broadly). It sounds more like pro-labor, pro-work, anti-lumpen Marxism. In no way “right-wing” unless you want to call North Korea “right-wing”, which is a very ultra-left thing to do (what orthodox Marxists call left deviationism).

    • Saline9515 3 days ago

      This is actually very far left, just not the current wealthy-urban-lgbtq far left. USSR marxists and Maoists held the same views, where the individual's main function was to work and refusal to work or low productivity required either reformation (aka often, Gulag) or hunger.

      "Those how do not work, do not eat" - Mao

      Interestingly, psychoanalysis in the USSR was aimed at helping the patient to go back to work, for instance.

      • NoGravitas 3 hours ago

        That's not a quote from Mao, it's from the second epistle to the Thessalonians, attributed to Paul and Timothy.

        > For even when we were with you, we gave you this command: If any one will not work, let him not eat.

        > 2 Thessalonians 3:10

  • josefritzishere 4 days ago

    Seems more complicated than that, in reading the wiki.

teravor 21 hours ago

mullvad's mistake was to respond. it's all universally performative, the only reason it elicits reactions (1000+ comments here) when the view of a megacorp don't is because people anticipate the ability to elicit a response from a smaller company like mullvad.

rule number one: ignore any and all political controversies, don't respond in any way. deviation is nearly always punished. unless it's part of some PR campaign with a side-risk of backfire.

  • bigyabai 21 hours ago

    Mullvad did not respond, as far as I'm aware. One of the owners has chimed in with their opinion, but I have not seen any official acknowledgement from Mullvad, the business entity.

  • deaux 14 hours ago

    > mullvad's mistake was to respond. it's all universally performative, the only reason it elicits reactions (1000+ comments here) when the view of a megacorp don't is because people anticipate the ability to elicit a response from a smaller company like mullvad.

    You're underestimating the large influence of paid actors/FUD here. It's no coincidence that in this very thread, normally supposedly intelligent people conveniently forget that about half the companies they buy stuff from have blatant MAGA-like CEOs. HN didn't suddenly suffer from a 20 point IQ drop.

unsupp0rted 1 day ago

I’m not Swedish. Does Mullvad do what it says on the tin? That’s all that matters.

The CEO’s extracurricular activities are none of my business.

  • leokennis 1 day ago

    Let's draw this to its ultimate conclusion.

    Would you subscribe to an excellent VPN service, if it was run by [insert universally abhorred brutal dictator from history here]?

    • yaris 1 day ago

      A thought experiment:

      Let's think of the other extreme as well: exactly the same excellent VPN service, is run by an almost-the-best-person-in-the-world who has just one small quirk that makes them not 100% perfect for you (they pat kittens not as often as you'd like them to do). Obviously there is a border between your extreme and mine, which border defines "use" and "no use" cases for you. And now: wherever this border is - should it be the same for everyone?

      • leokennis 1 day ago

        I agree there might be a more or les arbitrary border, and it will probably be in different places for different people.

        However the original statement:

        > The CEO’s extracurricular activities are none of my business.

        Basically says that no border should exist, and it makes no difference at all who provided the service as long as the service itself is excellent.

        That is a fundamentally different argument that I very much disagree with.

      • loloquwowndueo 1 day ago

        Every time you use a kitten to support flawed logic, a kitten dies.

      • Dylan16807 1 day ago

        Just like everything else in life, different people have different borders and that's fine.

        I don't understand the point of this thought experiment. Are you trying to disqualify the idea of boundaries because they're imperfect (which is a very flawed argument) or are you going somewhere else I can't figure out at all?

    • iamnothere 1 day ago

      Next iteration of this smear article: “Mullvad is basically HitlerVPN”

      • rationalist 1 day ago

        Someone doesn't want people using the best VPN available, hmm...

        • microgpt 1 day ago

          Why can't we have a VPN run by normal people?

          • iamnothere 1 day ago

            Because normal people don’t want to deal with the headaches. Your choices are weird people or intelligence cutouts. (Or abandoning any attempt at privacy in an attempt to be ideologically pure.) Sorry, but those are the options.

          • unsupp0rted 1 day ago

            Because there are almost no normal people. Everybody's a jerk in private, to somebody, sometime. Everybody's got opinions that half the population doesn't like.

    • belorn 1 day ago

      We can easier look at conclusion people make about banks and stock options. Will people invest money into index fonds and pension fonds if those fonds invest money into companies that produce and sell weapons to abhorred brutal dictators? What about buying stocks from telecommunication producers who operate in abhorred brutal dictatorships and who helps those dictators to control their population?

      • Aachen 21 hours ago

        That's different. Loads of animals will be unhappy if they see others being given something they're not. We have a lottery which 3 million people (in the tiny Netherlands) are subscribed to only because you win as a street, and you won't want to miss out if your street wins right? Can't see your neighbors have more than you for no good reason!

        The feelings of missing out and unfairness are deeply ingrained and stock markets give you stuff. At Mullvad, you buy something instead. If that's a life-essential product you can't otherwise get then the situations would be comparable. There's loads of VPN providers though, maybe not all as good but I would also be considering my options if I were a customer and hear this sort of thing (I'm not a customer of any VPN service). For stock markets and banks, on the other hand: whatcha gonna do, just not have a pension and work until you know roughly how much longer you'll live and that your savings will last till death? Assuming you earn enough to put money to the side in the first place, virtually all options are going to end up being partially invested in things you disagree with. A bank account is a legal requirement here (there's also agreements between the government and some banks to provide basic accounts so you can't be excluded from society like that). I find it much harder to fault people for wanting essentials; the situations are not the same

        • belorn 19 hours ago

          There are special ethical investment funds with policies like no military manufacturers, no fossil fuel producers, and so on. They will generally pay less, have higher management costs, but they do exists. You do have a choose in which funds and stock options you buy, including which pension funds you invest in.

          A bank account is not a legal requirement in Sweden, which I know for a fact since I know a person in Sweden who do not have one. The agreements between the government and some banks is that banks must accept customers who ask for a bank account. They can't however force a person to go into a contract with a private bank against their will.

          I will give you that it is a more significant choice to choose which companies one want to invest ones savings on, in contrast to spending a few bucks on a vpn. I would however argue that the moral impact from the amount of money invested in funds and pension plans are more important then the choice of a VPN, thus hold a bigger ethical question.

  • dlgeek 23 hours ago

    He's not just the CEO, he's a co-owner... Meaning that the profits from the business acrue to him... and therefore enable this party.

    So, it's a question of "am I ok paying for this service, knowing that a portion of that money will flow to this political party and how do I feel about the results of that funding?"

    • sunaookami 22 hours ago

      How do you feel about providing value to Hacker News, a plattform made by Y Combinator funding several startups, many of them destroying our society and benefiting from mass surveillance? You can do this argument with every company.

      • jackb4040 22 hours ago

        I'm not paying to use HN. I'm jaded and opposed to techno-optimism, so if anything by just expressing my honest opinions here I'm wearing away at those startups' power by challenging their most critical base of supporters.

        • justicehunter 22 hours ago

          I'm not opposed to techno-optimisim and I absolutely love hearing opposing views here!

  • drngdds 22 hours ago

    You are responsible for the consequences of your actions

  • icase 22 hours ago

    holy shit a sane person

    all this “cancel mullvad!” nonsense is 2020 cringe all over again

bingoMen 3 hours ago

No one is free until everyone is free. Daniel Berntsson is acting against freedom, he has chosen to vote for and support a party that protects only the /freedom/ of a small part of the world and seeks to “defend” it at any cost—through racism, stereotyping, and the criminalization of people fleeing exploitation and war. Europe is rich only because every corner of the world is exploited by Europe and the US. Now the tables have turned, and they want to protect what they have stolen.

skjoldr 19 hours ago

This discussion is completely and irrevocably poisoned by the lack of general understanding of the distinctions between citizens, non-citizen permanent residents, legal immigrants, illegal immigrants, asylum seekers, economic immigrants, and war refugees under temporary EU protection (Ukrainians). Especially the differences between the situations in the US and the EU. This whole comment section is, sadly, full of people writing pure nonsense. Please educate yourselves on this big and important topic before posting.

  • reassess_blind 19 hours ago

    Given your understanding on these topics, can you give your opinion on whether this party (in particular their immigration stance) is as far-right extremist as the articles claim?

  • kfreds 10 hours ago

    I disagree. This thread contains tons of empathetic people who seem to understand each other, and disagree with each other. It's a breath of fresh air. Sure, there are also some angry posters who don't seem to lean into curiosity, but together we can make them the minority.

999900000999 19 hours ago

Once I meet a Swedish girl whose parents were from XYZ.

She went on a rant on how new refugees from XYZ were ruining everything.

That’s the immigration debate in most of the world. The moment a new immigrant gets their citizenship they often feel they’re the last good one and all pathways need to be shutdown.

I’ll switch to a different vpn. It’s one thing to donate a nominal amount as a private citizen. It’s a whole different matter to be the primary source of funding.

tremorscript 4 hours ago

Oh no :-( but why the far right? You can sponsor sensible politics and politicians so that we get more of those.

I am a very happy customer since the service is extremely very good, the vpn problem was solved and I am so sorry but the smallest amount that I pay even if it is 0.01 cent cannot go to support the far right(or the far left).

Sorry.

But now the problem is to find a decent vpn service that is not private equity or malware.

cloudie78 6 hours ago

A question to everyone who’s cancelling their subscription over this because “my money ends up financing politics I disagree with”

How many hands does the money need to pass through before it’s considered okay?

stefanfisk 1 day ago

To be fair, Örebropartiet can also be called an extreme left party. It’s complicated…

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96rebro_Party

  • hootz 1 day ago

    I don't see how, given their answers to simple questions as described in the "2026 run up to the elections" section, this party could ever be considered a leftist party.

    • wongarsu 1 day ago

      They are very pro education. But that's basically the only thing, all the other answers are enthusiastic right wing answers

      • jarek83 1 day ago

        How populist party can root for education? Educated people wouldn't go in populist direction. Of course, it the education stays unbent to their views

        • wongarsu 1 day ago

          They are far too small to have any chance of influencing education. The simpler explanation would be that there is a strong nationalist current. Think "our people are the best, let's make them even better and throw out the others"

        • shimman 1 day ago

          Why wouldn't educated people be swept up by populism? They're human like the rest of us. Maybe you should stop thinking that having an education makes you a moral person, it just means you have an education.

          • jarek83 23 hours ago

            I just assume that once people start seeing how the dots connect in some areas, they will be able to quickly see that the populists' dots are all over the place. I believe the educated populist are only the ones that try to drive move, not participate in one.

        • mrguyorama 1 day ago

          Because populists can say they are "For" something and just not do it. Their supporters largely won't check the results.

          Same reason why US republicans say they are the party of fiscal responsibility despite being directly responsible for most of the debt of the US

        • ignoramous 23 hours ago

          > Educated people wouldn't go in populist direction.

          Depends on "education".

    • dtj1123 22 hours ago

      Maybe the issue is that mapping political ideologies onto a 1-D line doesn't work if you have more than two distinct ideologies.

  • catheter 1 day ago

    It doesn't seem that complicated to be honest with you. That is how they self identify but none of their policies seem particularly left wing. At least not from that Wikipedia page. Extremely left wing dental care is the best I will give them.

    • flohofwoe 1 day ago

      > Extremely left wing dental care is the best I will give them.

      Free dental care is considered "extemely left wing" now? That's just bizarre tbh.

      If a country would decide to use tax money to provide health care services for free to everybody that's not much different than using tax money to maintain an infrastructure network that's free to use (like roads), or free police and firefighting services - and I think none of those examples are considered particularly 'left-wing'.

      • catheter 1 day ago

        I was being facetious. Unfortunately enlightened horseshoe centrists didn't want to hear.

      • microgpt 1 day ago

        They're all left-wing

        • flohofwoe 1 day ago

          Lol, so Hitler was 'left wing' because he built the Reichsautobahn, got it...

          • calgoo 1 day ago

            Just like Franco in Spain created the social healthcare system, but they still executed "reds" in the street.

      • bluescrn 1 day ago

        > Free dental care is considered "extemely left wing" now? That's just bizarre tbh.

        No more bizarre than the idea of free speech being ceded to the right.

        Apparently even air conditioning is now a left vs right culture war issue...

    • graemep 1 day ago

      What about more social housing, reductions in working hours, and opposition to privatisation? Sounds left wing to me.

      They have been called Marxist-Lenninist by more mainstream politicians: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96rebro_Party#2021_bus_rap...

      • dodslaser 1 day ago

        Maybe we could meet in the middle and call them a nationalist socialist workers party.

        • hagbard_c 1 day ago

          You could, just as long as you keep it at that. The term actually does describe a valid political ideology: socialism combined with nationalism instead of the more common socialism combined with globalism, i.e. internationalist socialism ('workers of the world, unite' etc.). The association with Nazism makes it close to impossible to use the term in a 'neutral' way but in itself it just describes a nationalist movement which espouses socialist ideas.

          • dodslaser 23 hours ago

            Yeah, and their leader just happens to be a man disgruntled with the inefficiency and bureaucracy of democracy, mostly famous for his intense emotional political speeches, who blames most if not all of society's problems on his political opponents and/or ethnic minorities.

            • hagbard_c 19 hours ago

              You're talking about the leader of the NSDAP while I was talking about a political ideology which aims to implement socialism at a national scale. These are not the same things and the concept I describe does not have 'a leader' just like e.g. market capitalism does not have 'a leader'.

              • dodslaser 13 hours ago

                I'm talking about the leader of the Örebro party.

          • int_19h 20 hours ago

            It's impossible to use in a neutral way because all such parties are inevitably authoritarian brand of socialist, and any time you have authoritarian nationalism, crimes against humanity follow.

            The point you're trying to make here is the difference between Hitler and the Strasser brothers, which is valid, but irrelevant in this context - if the latter had won, the pile of bodies they'd produce would still be immense.

            • hagbard_c 19 hours ago

              Socialism and authoritarianism go hand in glove so that is not the difficulty here. It is also not the combination of authoritarianism and nationalism which leads to crimes against humanity, for that any form of authoritarianism - nationalist, internationalist, religious, secular - is sufficient. Nor am I in any way relating to Hitler or Strasser, what I am referring to is an ideology which aims at implementing socialism at a national level, within the context of a nation state, without the aim of implementing socialism outside of the national borders. For that you do not need to refer to Hitler or Strasser or anyone related to the German party which ended up under the control of Hitler.

              This is what I meant when I said it is close to impossible to use the term in a 'neutral' way, the nearly inevitable association with what happened in and around Germany when the NSDAP came into power.

  • flohofwoe 1 day ago

    Sounds like the logical evolution of left/right-populism into 'absolutist-populism' ;)

  • mrtksn 1 day ago

    That's typical for extremist parties, AKA Horseshoe theory. IRL Erdogan's party went so far to the right that they started actually adopting very socialist/communist policies. The party names is AKP which stands for "justice and development party" but many people are calling it "Allahs Communist Party" since in Turkish communist is written with K and they are islamists doing communist stuff.

  • belorn 1 day ago

    To add to the context. The founder of the was the chairman for the youth organization of Vänsterpartiet (English name: The left party), the furthest left party in the Swedish parliament, and he recruited members primarily from the same organization when he was kicked out. The reason he got kicked out was that he was seen praising the Revolutionary Front, a far-left extremist political and militant network in Sweden.

    It should be added that the area where they are active is in the local government of Örebro Municipality, a place with a total population of 160,143 people. Looking at the political leanings of parties for a small local government with the lens of national parties might not give a very clear picture. Their strategy is also directed toward local voters, not national voters, through a strategy called the 12% line.

  • KaiserPro 1 day ago

    Does it matter if they are left or right?

    The point is, they want to round up lawful citizens and turf them out of the country because they have the audacity to be slightly foreign, or worse born to someone foreign.

    that is the issue, not how much tax/spend big/little government.

    • epistasis 1 day ago

      Exactly, the problem is not left/right it's the authoritarianism, which is again a huge threat to the world after being held mostly in check in Western democracies for many years.

      People tend to forget about the "Last Man" part of Fukuyama's "The End of History and the Last Man", but we are definitely in the phase of the Last Man seeking conflict and fighting against our hard-won freedoms.

    • throwawaypath 23 hours ago

      >The point is, they want to round up lawful citizens and turf them out of the country

      The US isn't the only country in the world. Sweden does not have birthright citizenship. Many (most?) of those to be remigrated are not Swedish citizens.

      • KaiserPro 22 hours ago

        > Many (most?) of those to be remigrated are not Swedish citizens.

        You say tomAtoe, I say pogrom, lets call the whole thing off

        In europe, when was the last time a mass ejection of normal people, who've not committed crimes, beneficial? When did it end well for either the ejectee, or the remaining domestic population?

    • distracted_boy 23 hours ago

      That's not at all what they want. It's comments like yours that create unnecessary controversy, based on nothing but lies.

      • csb6 22 hours ago

        > In a podcast segment about immigration and deportations Allard stated his opinion and said that "They will also be forced to leave, even if they are born in Sweden, because they have no natural connection to Sweden. They are not Swedish."

        Seems pretty cut and dry

      • KaiserPro 22 hours ago

        > create unnecessary controversy, based on nothing but lies.

        given how much Sweden likes to preen it's past about being right and just, the WWII neutrality and taking all of denmarks jews over night, to then have shit like "They will also be forced to leave, even if they are born in Sweden" seems pretty opposed to what sweden likes to think it's self as.

        Now if my quote is lies, I will retract it, but the source is here: https://x.com/AllardKlipp/status/2060109271635771457

        • distracted_boy 21 hours ago

          Wait wait, that's the clipped video people are basing this controversy on? Repatriation grants and was considered Nazi ideology 10 years ago, look what our politicians are discussing now. What Allard said during that clipped video is not far from what normal citizens are already talking about today.

    • tumetab1 21 hours ago

      Most people agree that immigration over X% amount is undesirable.

      Many governments ignored people's will for many years.

      Some new political parties want to fix that, is reasonable enough.

    • stefanfisk 11 hours ago

      I matters because a lot of people will only read the headline and then get a skewed view of the political landscape.

      I did not post my comment to defend him or the party. All I wanted was for people to understand the situation a bit better than they would by just reading the title and post content.

cryo32 1 day ago

Well guess I won’t be renewing my subscription this month then.

Any other verified sources?

  • Risse 1 day ago

    Somewhat of a verification, here's Mullvad's response to the post on Mastodon: https://mastodon.online/@mullvadnet/116822244689326681

    • cryo32 1 day ago

      Thanks. Also fuck.

    • ethbr1 1 day ago

      (Mullvad reply content copied here)

      >> Mullvad is a political company fighting for free speech, free information and privacy, with two equal co-founders, co-owners and co-CEOs who fundamentally disagree on many issues. Daniel's donation to a political party is private and not part of Mullvad's mission. We protect the right to express and access views we disagree with. We welcome anyone sharing these core values, whatever their other opinions. We are happy to refund others who don't, where we can.

      To be fair... I'm not sure how you could take any other position as a privacy-first VPN. By technical nature, you have to believe pretty hard in 'people's business is their own business and not mine.'

      I'd rather have a founder who believes whatever, but supports others rights to disagree vehemently, than one who agrees with what I believe but is less flexible on allowing others choice.

  • microgpt 1 day ago

    Will you be creating a VPN?

    • cryo32 20 hours ago

      Yes. With blackjack and hookers.

khurs 1 day ago

A big question I suppose is what Mozilla are going to do in reaction?

As Mozilla VPN is white labelled Mulvad I think

  • subarctic 22 hours ago

    They already ousted their own ceo over a political contribution so I'd imagine they'd do something here too, sadly

graemep 1 day ago

The party in question seems to be an anti-immigration strongly secularist left wing party with Marxist roots. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96rebro_Party

I am not sure "far right" is an accurate label. Maybe populist? Its a mix that would probably get a lot of support in other European countries.

lukewarm707 1 day ago

I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.

  • hootz 1 day ago

    There are some things that I won't ever defend your right of saying them, to be honest.

    • teekert 1 day ago

      Agree. This is more of a "ST Voyager 'Nothing Human'"-case.

    • qtk8 1 day ago

      But does this swedish Party say any things like that?

      • Ghoelian 1 day ago

        Yes. They want to get rid of immigrants for example.

        • ahartmetz 1 day ago

          That is like saying that the judicial system wants (all) people to go to prison. It leaves out the rather crucial "which people".

        • Dylan16807 1 day ago

          Mass deportation like that is a terrible and destructive idea but that's well short of being unspeakable.

          • denismenace 20 hours ago

            Mass deportation is terrible and destructive, but mass immigration is all good and has 0 negative consequences

  • teekert 1 day ago

    We need to add something to this nice rule about using services that are good from people we don't (fully) agree with.

    I'm not personally inclined to be so strict about this, but there are people with objections against the Proton CEO who once agreed with Trump on twitter, or DHH (there is this one blogpost about his extreme views). Etc.

  • jzb 1 day ago

    A right to say something is not the same as the right to say (and do) something without being called out on it.

    He has the right to do what he’s doing. Other people have the right to react and say “That sucks, it’s against my values, I no longer trust you or want to do business with you.”

    • dijit 21 hours ago

      but if Mullvad did that to you, you would (rightly) be angry. Hence the irony.

  • yw3410 1 day ago

    Okay - but that doesn't mean I'm not going to weigh up what you say when I'm choosing a business to support; especially if it's not in a professional context.

  • devindotcom 1 day ago

    brave! but fortunately you are safe because no one is challenging his right to say it.

  • sph 5 hours ago

    I wish there were more people like you in the world. Have a great day.

  • asdewqqwer 22 minutes ago

    People always conflate this statement. Only government can take "right" from people. Just opposing people don't make them lose their right. Otherwise it is taking away the right to say against what you say.

mrtksn 4 days ago

I am surprised that people are surprised, all these services are by people for people who are marginalized. Therefore, they are either far-right or far-left. When its business, its more likely to be a far-right since they are more business-oriented. The far left folks usually make a repo and give it away or try to organize some collective effort.

  • greggoB 4 days ago

    > for people who are marginalized. Therefore, they are either far-right or far-left.

    There are many types of marginalised groups, and many other reasons to want to use VPNs. Putting everything on a left-right political axis seems more than a tad reductive.

    • mrtksn 4 days ago

      Sure but far left and far right is a crude default way to generalize, the left folks will be especially annoyed by this but its still useful when the specifics don't matter.

jaykru 4 days ago

The party in question: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96rebro_Party. Doesn't sound extremist far-right to me. Many of its positions would be considered center-left or even far left in much of the world.

  • padjo 2 days ago

    "They will also be forced to leave, even if they are born in Sweden, because they have no natural connection to Sweden. They are not Swedish"

    For all the stuff about free dentists this sounds pretty right wing to me.

    • addedGone 1 day ago

      What's wrong about it? You expect me to be a jap citizen if I just over-stay there and have my children born there?

      • Dylan16807 1 day ago

        You? No, not for that alone.

        But if your kids spend the first dozen years of their life in a country, they should get to stay in that country.

        • hagbard_c 22 hours ago

          IF those children live according to the laws of the land, speak the language of the land, don't espouse views which directly go against the culture of the land and ended up becoming self-supporting there certainly is a good case to be made for them to be allowed to stay in the land.

          If they don't speak the language because their parents actively kept them from integrating into the land's culture which they (the parents) consider to be bad in some way, they (the children) violated the laws of the land and have well-filled rap sheets, they go out of their way to voice their dislike of the culture which allowed their parents in and they live on welfare because working is for 'svenner' they are very much invited to leave on the first ship or train of plane whether they like it or not.

          • padjo 10 hours ago

            So the US should kick out the Amish?

        • TFNA 22 hours ago

          Few countries have jus soli citizenship. Even many countries regarded as relatively open and welcoming would not permit locally born minors to stay indefinitely if their non-citizen or non-PR parents lose grounds for residency.

          • Dylan16807 18 hours ago

            Jus soli is all about birth, so I'm not calling for that. I'm saying if a country is your home from your first memories until some time in your teens then regardless of legal status you are from that country and it's bad to kick you out.

            • TFNA 9 hours ago

              So what you’re asking for is even more generous than jus soli, and obviously that’s not realistic.

              • Dylan16807 9 hours ago

                No, I'm asking for something significantly less generous.

                Instead of being in the country the day you're born, it's being in the country for something like 90% of your life from birth until somewhere in your teens.

                • TFNA 6 hours ago

                  Yes, “somewhere in your teens” includes people who are still minors, and again, if their parents have no grounds for residence, it is typical even of more open countries that their children don’t either.

                  • Dylan16807 19 minutes ago

                    > “somewhere in your teens” includes people who are still minors

                    It does!

                    Versus jus soli which includes people that are only days old...

                    > again, if their parents have no grounds for residence, it is typical

                    Again I'm talking about what I find moral, not what's typical.

                    And if you have no grounds for residence you're usually not staying there for over a decade. If someone does stay and raise a child for well over a decade, despite lack of grounds, there's a point where that child shouldn't be forced "back" to a "homeland" that isn't their actual home.

                    Also if it's more convincing we could stick to a threshold of 18 for right now. That would still do most of the job.

  • Aachen 21 hours ago

    Where in the world is calling refugees parasites considered a neutral statement? Legit curious where this "much of the world" would be since I can't imagine this of an average person

Molitor5901 1 day ago

Aren't far-right parties opposed to government control and censorship? Ideally a provider should be politically neutral, but I'm wondering if it's preferable to have one that is opposed to government control and censorship.

  • pseudalopex 1 day ago

    > Aren't far-right parties opposed to government control and censorship?

    Not more consistently than other parties.

  • lmc 21 hours ago

    > Aren't far-right parties opposed to government control and censorship?

    They say they are, but their behaviour once they get into power suggests otherwise.

freediddy 4 days ago

Did anyone actually look into the "far-right" party that this purports to be?

The Örebro Party (Swedish: Örebropartiet, ÖP) is a local populist political party in Örebro, Sweden, led by Markus Allard. It holds seats in the Örebro municipal and regional assemblies, focusing on local populist policies such as reducing politicians' salaries, stricter migration, and free dental care.

Sweden has undergone a horrible transformation in the last several years where gang warfare and especially bombings have skyrocketed. Most of the new gang violence in the last several years is from migrants from North Africa and the Middle East, after Sweden implemented a generous immigration policy.

https://nct-cbnw.com/an-explosion-a-day-in-sweden-what-is-go...

There's nothing to indicate that this party is "far right" at all. It's a populist-based party but the stance on immigration is definitely linearly correlated to the violence that was brought in by immigration. Lowering politicians' salaries and free dental care doesn't sound very far right to me.

fsmedberg 4 days ago

Swede here. That's not even close to accurate. Örebropartiet is not extremist, but I would absolutely label them radical populist left-economic-leaning nationalists. Please do some research and make up your own mind. They're a tiny local party active in Örebro municipality where their founder and leader loudly points out clearly wasteful use of government funds, or more or less corrupt decisions made by leading party figures in other parties on local matters. The party leader is known for ridiculing competing parties party members on debates.

Where the Örebropartiet (Örebro Party) usually are called extremist is in questions regarding immigration. They are of the opinion that people that move to Sweden should not integrate but also assimilate, and quickly, find a job. For some people, this might sound extreme, but I would argue that more than half of the Swedish population (and its parties) nowadays share this view, similar to how Japanese people and society broadly want people that move their to assimilate.

  • Capricorn2481 4 days ago

    > similar to how Japanese people and society broadly want people that move their to assimilate

    And it's super racist there too, I can assure you. My father in law is Korean but lived in Japan his whole life. There's no way to describe what he experienced except racism. People just hated him for being Korean.

    I have no respect for people that concern troll about some vague cultural purity to disguise their prejudices.

    • ShinyLeftPad 4 days ago

      A friend of mine who is a non Japanese Asian lived in Japan and when asked said there's no racism. There's mild cases but if you are careful to follow the customs and speak the language, you are generally accepted as a Japanese in daily life.

      • Capricorn2481 4 days ago

        > A friend of mine who is a non Japanese Asian lived in Japan and when asked said there's no racism

        Well I'm convinced.

        • ShinyLeftPad 4 days ago

          :shrug: same back to you?

          • Capricorn2481 4 days ago

            No, there's a fundamental difference between what we both wrote. There's a difference between saying "I know someone who has experienced racism" and "My friend says there's no racism in X country." One is a personal experience, the other invalidates the experiences of everyone else. They are not two sides of the same coin like you are implying. If you take the phrase "There is no racism in Japan" at face value, you are either pushing an agenda or falling for someone else's.

            "We just want assimilation" is the palatable marketing term for "We would be fine arresting people at their immigration hearings if they are brown enough." Just look at the U.S.

            • ShinyLeftPad 4 days ago

              Rewrite my comment to say "my friend experienced no racism". Not more than in his home country at least.

              What you said is the same. One is according to what your relative said another is according to what my friend said.

              I don't think it's crazy to expect assimilation. We are fascinated with different countries and cultures and we generally consider it's a good idea they exist and are different. Diversity is strength. But they can only be different if they have their own culture and traditions. Would everyone be so fascinated with Japan or Korea if it was not for their culture? Would they be the same without high trust society that is made possible by it?

              • Frondo 3 days ago

                > I don't think it's crazy to expect assimilation.

                What's that mean to you? In my city, immigrants work, run businesses, pay taxes, have kids and send them to local schools, ride the bus, complain about the weather, practice their religion. I guess the only thing they don't do is complain as loudly about the government as (many of) the rest of us. What more could they be doing to assimilate?

                • ShinyLeftPad 3 days ago

                  Probably nothing. Looks good to me, they speak your language, have jobs (don't abuse welfare), pay taxes, live legally. Reading about the party it seemed that they want to kick out people far from what you described (which can be still wrong, idk, but I'm not sure it's so outrageous I would boycott a business over its owner's preference). If they campaign to kick out people who are like what you described then I would think harder.

                  • Frondo 3 days ago

                    One note: I didn't say anything about the language they speak, and what language other people speak is none of my business.

                    • ShinyLeftPad 3 days ago

                      How do you know they complain about the weather, if they don't speak your language?

    • iamnothere 3 days ago

      Racism != rightism. It is even possible to be both Communist and racist. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racism_in_the_Soviet_Union

      Racism is one of those things that unfortunately crosses political and social boundaries. Some groups just hide it better than others by enforcing anti-racism as a group norm.

      • Capricorn2481 3 days ago

        Racism definitely crosses all boundaries, but deporting people on the grounds they are not culturally aligned is what we'd call a positionally right policy. That does not mean left wing parties can't do it. It means it lies right on the political spectrum.

        That's not a subjective opinion I made, that is just a textbook definition of what we consider authoritative right. Left and right mean things, and they don't mean what traditionally progressive or conservative parties happen to be doing at that time.

        • iamnothere 3 days ago

          Left and right refers to where the Girondins and the Montagnards/Jacobins sat in the French revolutionary assembly. We’ve bastardized this into imaginary delineations of political positioning and for some reason we keep bolting on arbitrary positions as Girondin or Jacobin.

          I don’t care what textbook you are looking at, I’m looking at (or maybe writing) a different one. Left and right do not actually “mean things” if you intend for “meaning” to be universally or even widely agreed upon. I suppose for you “meaning” may only be relevant if a certain group or class agrees upon the meaning, but the rest of us will continue to say and believe what we want!

          • Capricorn2481 3 days ago

            You are being needlessly contradictory, in a pointlessly academic way. I can assure you nobody thinks of left or right as the French revolutionary assembly, any more than we think of "Wednesday" as the day of the Norse god Odin, or "a sandwich" as the Earl of Sandwich's gambling snack. The Etymological origin doesn't determine current meaning.

            > but the rest of us will continue to say and believe what we want

            Who is we? These definitions are mostly settled, and where they aren't, there are fuzzy differences, not huge gaps of disagreement. It's a shared language of understanding where people lie on a quadrant of politics. It's socially useful to have that language when posing political theory. Again, this does not mean political parties are permanently stuck to their quadrant. What do you think Republicans mean when they call themselves right wing? Nothing?

            > I suppose for you “meaning” may only be relevant if a certain group or class agrees upon the meaning

            What? You seem to be stuck on an idea that I am making some kind of partisan statement by saying a certain policy is left or right wing. That is not a value statement on whether it's good or bad. I don't know why you are so heated about this.

            • iamnothere 3 days ago

              There is no shared language anymore, and I’m tired of pretending that there is. The 20th century notion of left and right, which was itself a fantasy, has been turned into a tool of propaganda. It does nothing but muddy the waters.

              “Right-wing” politicians are arguing for nationalization in some cases and wielding industrial policy like they’re FDR. We may see price controls and even capital controls before long. The oil market interventions alone would make Stalin blush. Meanwhile they are jumping on regulation in other places, such as AI “safety”, and have floated hate speech bans (to combat antisemitism).

              “Left-wing” pols (admittedly in the face of immense hate from their base) are coming out for free market solutions gently guided by the government and deregulation so we can build faster. Outside the US, you have bizarro world Labour policies in the UK (they seem to be aiming to absorb the Tories), China’s roaring Communist economy that’s the global hotbed of economic activity, etc.

              The traditional categories still seem to hold in Latin America, for some reason. But that’s it.

              What exactly does the left-right distraction provide except for an easily abused method for enforcing a (tenuous, completely malleable) group orthodoxy? These days it seems like people just use it as shorthand for “enemy”. Any heterodox position is automatically of the other wing, preventing adaptation to real-world circumstances. Some positions (like a land value tax) are somehow both left and right wing depending on who you ask. It’s infuriating.

              • Capricorn2481 3 days ago

                You are taking me to say left means Democrat and right means Conservative, and acting like it's a gotcha when they criss cross. I already said all of this was possible.

                > “Right-wing” politicians are arguing for nationalization in some cases and wielding industrial policy like they’re FDR

                Nationalization is a policy lying on the left. State ownership of industry is the textbook left pole

                > The oil market interventions alone would make Stalin blush

                Price controls on markets are authoritarian left

                > are coming out for free market solutions gently guided by the government and deregulation so we can build faster

                Economic right, mildly libertarian

                > What exactly does the left-right distraction provide except for an easily abused method for enforcing a (tenuous, completely malleable) group orthodoxy?

                No, they provide categorization to resist group orthodoxy. People are going to categorize, that is human nature. Without these, the only way to categorize a policy is what the parties happen to be doing at the time. That causes a group orthodoxy. There are people describing themselves as "more left" or "more right" as a shorthand to reject group orthodoxy. There are people describing a policy as left or right, regardless of which party is doing it. You're not sparing anything by resisting policy categorization, you are making things less specific and more likely to default to broad buckets.

                That doesn't mean you can't talk about the policies in specifics, it means they lie on a very flexible and descriptive map.

                • iamnothere 2 days ago

                  That isn’t at all useful. If a party adopts a few platform items that are “left” and some that are “right” (as all parties do), what good is it to point out that X party has adopted Y-wing stance on this issue? The only purpose that this could serve is to give ultras (left or right) ammunition to enforce orthodoxy to these “standard” categories. Meanwhile in the real world, as I mentioned, all parties and candidates adopt mixed platforms, and if you care at all about pragmatism and responding to real conditions, those positions should be evaluated individually on their merits rather than slapping on a left or right label.

                  This tendency to force everything into a black or white frame is what gives us politicians who run without platforms, on party label alone, and who then adopt unpopular or harmful positions when in office.

                  At some point we decided that platforms don’t matter, and if platforms exist, they must be orthodox. This is a problem!

  • Aachen 21 hours ago

    > Swede here. That's not even close to accurate. Örebropartiet is not extremist, but I would absolutely label them radical populist left-economic-leaning nationalists. Please do some research and make up your own mind.

    This sounds like you expect very few people to do this. I can't speak for others but this was exactly the first thing I did upon hearing about it, and

    > Where the Örebropartiet (Örebro Party) usually are called extremist is in questions regarding immigration.

    is exactly the conclusion I came to, based on their statements about "parasites". Not the integration aspect indeed...

aleda145 1 day ago

Örebropartiet is like the weirdest party in Sweden. It's named after "Örebro", a Swedish city with 125k population. The party's founder, Markus Allard, used to be far left politician before turning far right.

Their party program is all over the place. They stand for free dental care, direct democracy and deporting immigrants.

Marcus is also known for profanity and foul language in council meetings.

An oddity in Swedish politics is that if a local party manages to get 12% of the votes in a constituency they are eligible for getting a seat in parliament, and can skip the regular 4% popular vote rule.

Örebropartiet actually has a chance to get into national government next election (Fall 2026) since their local support is quite strong. Times are weird

  • hnarn 1 day ago

    > Markus Allard, used to be far left politician before turning far right.

    Less weird than you might think, Mussolini was one of the most prominent socialists in Italy before turning fascist.

wongarsu 1 day ago

The wikipedia article about the party is pretty interesting [1]. "The party has also been described as both right-wing populist and left-wing populist as well as left-conservative"

The party was founded after the founder was thrown out of the Left party for liking a far-left extremist group on Facebook and not backing down from that. Since then the party has evolved to also include goals traditionally attributed to the right, like large scale remigration and a stricter immigration policy.

The party also seems inconsequentially small, even at the municipal and regional level. They have 0 seats at the national level

1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96rebro_Party

pu_pe 1 day ago

Any suggestions for a VPN service with similar security standards as Mullvad?

sph 14 hours ago

I am anti-racist, son of immigrants, son of a mixed race couple, yet what scares me is the mobbing of people against other that have a different opinion than yours, as seen in this thread.

Plenty saying they cannot in good conscience support Mullvad, while directly and indirectly giving money to people like Bezos, Musk or Cook, among others, or supporting politicians from both aisles, who have the power to do much worse at a greater scale. I call this hypocrisy, and it is widespread in social media driven mob mentality. Intolerance about intolerants turns you an intolerant.

I like Mullvad the company, and I know that people might support politics I find despicable. Such is life outside of silly internet echo chambers.

  • kfreds 10 hours ago

    > what scares me is the mobbing of people against other that have a different opinion than yours, as seen in this thread.

    I am dismayed by the anti-intellectual climate in the world as well, but HN is an oasis of empathy and curiosity compared to other platforms. Look at the people I've engaged with. Many of them vehemently disagree with Daniel, and with my position. They understand it, compliment Mullvad, and say they unfortunately have to leave. That's the way political discourse should work.

    > Plenty saying they cannot in good conscience support Mullvad, while directly and indirectly giving money to people like Bezos, Musk or Cook, among others, or supporting politicians from both aisles, who have the power to do much worse at a greater scale. I call this hypocrisy, and it is widespread in social media driven mob mentality.

    Good point. We should probably be more open about how much good Mullvad has done over the years. I've been so focused on just doing stuff, and not telling people about it.

    > I like Mullvad the company, and I know that people might support politics I find despicable. Such is life outside of silly internet echo chambers.

    Thank you.

justicehunter 21 hours ago

Does not feel good to support such a cause. Will cancel mine and give ivpn a go. It really is a shame, I was happy with mullvad and their mission. I just wouldn't sleep well if I kept using it

  • kfreds 10 hours ago

    I'm sorry to hear that. Thank you for the compliment. Good luck.

throwawaypath 16 hours ago

There's nothing wrong with promoting or protecting the interests of native or indigenous people over those of immigrants or foreigners. This is not a far-right fringe belief, though some are trying to paint it so.

  • SOLAR_FIELDS 16 hours ago

    Where do you have documentation of this party even doing this thing? The Wikipedia entry linked elsewhere does not talk about this perspective at all

blitzar 5 hours ago

Frankly I am suspicious of anyone throwing money into politics; left / centre / right.

Small scale donors dont even get off without drawing my ire - finding out someone you know donated to a politician / party is like finding out they sent money to a nigerian prince to unlock their share of the inheritance.

olelele 7 hours ago

The Örebro Party seems similar to Bundnis Sara Wagenknecht in Germany. They are a splinter group of mostly older Linke who are anti immigrant. There is also this super weird fringe on the legit extreme left here, the Anti-deutsche antifa who are pro-Israel and islamophobic.

steinvakt2 1 day ago

A headline and 20 comments and no mention of what this party actually stands for. Only simple labels such as "far-right". Ehh. The Republican Party in America is EXTREMELY far right by Swedish standards. So maybe one should base this on the actual substance rather than labels?

ar_lan 4 days ago

This is a bizarre thread.

People are surprised that a privacy-oriented businessman is right-wing is very strange.

"Millions" in the title is also misleading in this context - it's millions in Swedish Kronor, which is roughly $500K USD. A lot, but the title seems intentionally misleading.

I've also never really understood the cycle of boycotting things because you don't like how an individual spends their own money. Almost every company will employ people who have values you severely disagree with, and put money toward those causes. And turning to Proton as the alternative is... a choice?

orliesaurus 1 day ago

does it change your trust in the company?

For some people, the answer is obviously yes. For others, they'll judge Mullvad purely by its track record, audits, and technical design.

Honestly, you could say the same about the CEO of ANDURIL in the US - the Oculus guy...but he just cares about the US and wants to make money by making weapon systems etc.

Is he a bad person? Is he a patriot? Who knows, I ain't gonna play the ultimate judge game - but he did release a cool gameboy clone which is literally the closest I will ever get to his work... [1]

[1] https://modretro.com

  • hootz 1 day ago

    Yes, not only trust but my willingness to contribute money towards his paycheck. I don't want my money to end up in far-right parties.

  • exitb 1 day ago

    It's not only about trust, but also about not wanting to give money to an entity that will pass it on to a political party you don't want to support.

  • pluc 1 day ago

    Look at Zuck and Musk. Their platforms are still used by millions. It's only "us" that care about the pedigree of our tech founders, most people couldn't care less.

    • microgpt 1 day ago

      There has to be some reason that so many projects are started by right wing people. Something in their personality that makes them both RW and willing to start lots of projects.

      • orliesaurus 1 day ago

        I would argue that right-wing people are now the left-wing people from like 30-40 years ago.

        • microgpt 1 day ago

          Don't think so. When did left wing people want remigration?

      • eudamoniac 1 day ago

        Right wing thought patterns tend toward believing in oneself; predicating the worth of the individual on their objective behavior or output; valuing individual achievements; and also believing that effort is likely to result in those achievements.

        Left wing thought patterns are biased toward less agency, e.g. the individual is a product of the system; systemic discrimination holds people back; one's trauma or neurodivergency is a valid anchor that makes achievements very difficult; failing to achieve is okay and doesn't reduce one's intrinsic value.

        • microgpt 1 day ago

          I'm aware that left wing patterns position individuals as moulded by systems but I'm not aware of any that explicitly deny the power of the individual to try weird stuff, especially in a low-barrier-to-entry industry like software. I guess maybe the overall level of that is somewhat lower and maybe low enough that it doesn't really happen?

          • eudamoniac 21 hours ago

            I think it's just that rightists value personal success more and also think it's more attainable from their own efforts, so they make these efforts more often. Or it may be inverted, that privilege/success leads to right wing beliefs.

    • loloquwowndueo 1 day ago

      I commend your correct use of “couldn’t care less”. It’s so rare to see people get this one right these days.

      • orliesaurus 1 day ago

        really? how would/did you see others use it?

        • mos_basik 1 day ago

          they mean it's pretty common to see the less-correct "could care less"

          • loloquwowndueo 1 day ago

            I’d say entirely incorrect. It means exactly the opposite. I don’t buy the “it’s popular usage now so that makes it right” argument - it’s like saying 4 now equals 5 because more people use 4 to mean 5.

  • toyg 1 day ago

    In some ways I would say it could even increase trust: if the guy is a privacy absolutist, ultra-libertarian, "my business is not the state's business" type, his VPN products are likely to be pretty good.

    On the other hand, he might have other strong right-wing views that users don't agree with, and which might take precedence in one's set of priorities. If I like football and they like football, but they also want to kill me because of <other reason>, I don't think I'd want to give them my money.

NoImmatureAdHom 22 hours ago

I get that this is in the news (or at least the nerd news), but really...do y'all canvass the companies you buy things from, figure out on net who the people who work for them support in politics, ask whether that's what you like, and move your business around based on that?

It seems crazy to me. Part and parcel of having a pluralistic society is that we treat each other the same in public-facing parts of life without regard for stuff like sex, political positions, etc.

You gonna refuse to accept mail from the postman who supports something you don't like? What about the ice cream shop?

  • Aachen 21 hours ago

    I don't know the verb canvassing (I'm not a native speaker) but assuming you mean something like vetting each company I buy from: that seems impossible. One can only do so much. Seems important to do what you can, though. I could understand the viewpoint that this person's earned money is theirs to spend; I can also understand people that don't want to fund this and are happy to have heard of it (even if the damage has been done now)

    The argument, if I've understood it correctly, sounds a bit like the common pattern of asking someone who tries to buy ethical products whether they're impeccable/perfect themselves. Like asking someone who is in favor of a local wind turbine whether they've ever flown or such. You can only do so much as an average individual

    • deaux 13 hours ago

      It's different. There are things you can reasonably vet, and things you reasonably can't vet. For example, "is the diamond in the wedding ring I'm buying lab grown". "Is the fish I'm buying endangered". In many countries, "what kind of conditions did the chicken who laid these eggs live in". "Is this shirt I'm buying made to last or going to fall apart after a few washes".

      Whether $0.01 of every $1 you spend to a company goes to someone who donates to far-right views, is absolutely impossible to vet and this news changes nothing about it. Would every $1 given to ExpressVPN lead to less $ ending up with someone who promotes such views? The truth is, we have absolutely no clue, we can't know, and there are so many factors in play here that this news doesn't move the needle. Pretending otherwise is performative behavior to make one feel better about themselves.

brachkow 19 hours ago

Mullvad does more for internet privacy than any other company. There are a lot of people saying that they will not use Mullvad anymore. What are they going to do? Support ExpressVPN or some spyware VPN with unknown owners? To achieve what – reduce the roster of companies fighting for a free internet to 0?

Remember, currently individuals elected by you, from parties ranging from goodest to kindest, are voting for passport internet and chat control, with little to no well-funded opposition.

I dislike that Mozilla is spending their money sponsoring random political organizations while asking for money here and there. I dislike that EFF is sometimes busy with American politics more than internet freedoms, and I dislike that Alexandra Elbakyan believes in some kind of esoteric stalinism.

But despite all that, I still support all of them! Because they are doing good things that nobody else does.

There is a "what kind of American are you" meme that is usually applied to people who have zero tolerance for people with different political views. Of course, it applies only to evil people???

No! If you think that "canceling" organizations on the matter that their leadership is kinda suspected of maybe supporting something that doesn't 100% align with your last ballot is a good deed, this meme is actually about you!

  • deaux 14 hours ago

    > Mullvad does more for internet privacy than any other company. There are a lot of people saying that they will not use Mullvad anymore. What are they going to do? Support ExpressVPN or some spyware VPN with unknown owners? To achieve what – reduce the roster of companies fighting for a free internet to 0?

    Exactly. This blatantly obvious fact being conveniently ignored by hundreds of comments here, is not organic.

msk2k 1 day ago

Companies funding far-left parties seem to be much bigger problem.

  • microgpt 1 day ago

    Which companies fund Deutsche Wohnen Enteignen? Let me know so I can boycott them

    • artisinal 1 day ago

      Steven Schuurman (Elastic) has given millions to left parties in Germany and The Netherlands.

      • microgpt 1 day ago

        Which ones? What are their policies?

        • Aachen 21 hours ago

          Dutch person living in Germany. I'm not aware of a party in NL/DE labeled left whose values don't boil down to that everyone (and future generations) should have a chance to live a good life, with different ways of getting there. I, too, would be curious what GP considers problematic about funding them the way that I find it problematic for any individual to fund this party/person who calls refugees parasites

arjie 1 day ago

I wonder, if you model political positions as nations, whether trading benefits you all or whether autarky leads to long term relevance.

dmantis 1 day ago

Such a convenient time frame with all think-of-the-children bs wave to point fingers at the one of the best VPN services our there with spotless reputation and raise a hysteria with duplicated stream of posts, isn't it?

Surely just a coincidence.

  • deaux 13 hours ago

    Sad that I had to scroll down so far to see someone pointing this out. This is the least organic comment section I've ever seen on HN. Also very convenient that the manner of moderation has kept this on the front page for most of 3 days, quite unheard of.

MadSkull 15 hours ago

The real far right are talking about melting down immigrants and using them to fill pot holes.

This guy is your best blocker to this and will surely restore balance.

hashstring 10 hours ago

So, where are we moving? Proton? Need some good recommendations!

pipes 1 day ago

This "far right" slur on any party that is anti immigration makes me immediately suspect this party probably isn't far right.

It's a shame, because real racist extremists/nazis benefit from this lumping together of legitimate concern about immigration and actual Nazis.

  • anukin 20 hours ago

    It’s a far left party based on what I read online. Their only right wing stance seems to be on immigration

rwyinuse 21 hours ago

The party seems to have some bizarre policies, but on migration can't really blame them considering how badly Sweden has failed to integrate humanitarian migrants. There is so much gang violence, so many people of migrant background marginalized and living on welfare without any hope of a better future.

I will gladly continue buying from Mullvad. There is nothing wrong with forced deportations. Without them anyone can come, claim asylum, and stay indefinitely if their country of origin doesn't want them back. That is simply idiotic waste of tax payer's money, and in case of criminals, also a hazard to public safety. Pretty much every Western European country does forced deportations, especially those of criminals.

ulfw 7 hours ago

It is getting almost impossible to consume media or use tech products without supporting a nazi sympathizer or supporter or downright nazi himself nowadays

dzonga 20 hours ago

lack of nuance in human affairs - is what ends up killing these conversations & making them explosive.

duncangh 1 day ago

Why doesn’t Apple just make a built in iOS native vpn that can be toggled (effectively) from the swipe down menu control and is paid monthly or part of iCloud

  • srik 1 day ago

    I doubt they’ll go beyond the currently bundled Safari iCloud Private Relay, which I quite appreciate actually.

    • VortexLain 1 day ago

      And which they disable in any country with significant internet censorship, where having a VPN actually matters.

      • srik 23 hours ago

        I believe their motivation leans towards tackling advertising based exploitation.

pyuser583 1 day ago

Aren’t Swedish political parties mostly publicly funded?

  • belorn 1 day ago

    Parties get goverment funding based on election result, with a minimum floor of 2.5% votes in national elections. This party is way too small for that, and is primarily focused on local election.

    • pyuser583 16 hours ago

      Ok so it’s basically a political startup.

      It sounds like once the party gets actual influence, its real funding will be determined by the Swedish people.

      Doesn’t this make the situation less harmful, or at least fundamentally different from say Elon Musk?

      • belorn 7 hours ago

        Calling it a political startup is not that unfair.

        I would add that in practice it is even less significant that one may think. Parties for local government has an incentive to make loud declaration of national policy in order to present themselves as more legitimate compared to national political parties. However, local government do not have any actually power to implement such policies. Local government decide things like "should we build a new public bath house", or "should we create a local investigation if the that one large road through the city should a speed limit or 30 instead of 40". In terms of practical immigration policy, what a local government control is things like encouraging access to housing, specific integration initiatives that is local to that region, and other details for when immigrants arrive to that specific municipality. In this case we are talking about a municipality the size of 160 000 people.

        Thus this funding may increase the probability that they will get more than the 5 seats out of 65 that exist in Örebro County Council, which they got from a total of 7000 votes in the latest election. If they manage to get 12% of the 160 000 votes, they will also get one bonus seat in the parliament which is a special rule in the Swedish election system. That single seat out of 350 could in theory do some harm if the election results happens to also be very close between the two blocks of left and right wing parties.

NoImmatureAdHom 22 hours ago

Mullvad does an excellent job, and I support them.

  • kfreds 9 hours ago

    Thank you.

culi 1 day ago

The Örebro Party (Örebropartiet) split from the socialist Left Party in 2014.

Some of its key issues include lowered wages for politicians, ending the tax payer funding of various sculptures, monuments and art, large scale remigration, a stricter immigration policy, and free dental care.

> While Allard has described himself as a Communist, and a Marxist, at its founding in March 2014 he defined the Örebro Party as "broad left". At that time the party considered itself a "local party that wants to carry on the labour movement's ideals", and "not interested in administrating the current society".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96rebro_Party

mattrighetti 1 day ago

I use Mullvad because it physically prevents anyone from logging my data.

What a co-owner does with his personal money in a local Swedish municipal election has zero impact on the code protecting my traffic.

Did a quick research - calling a party that campaigns for a 30-hour work week and socialist dental care 'far-right' just because they have a strict immigration policy shows how carelessly people throw labels around these days.

  • microgpt 1 day ago

    How does it physically prevent Mullvad from logging your data?

    • mattrighetti 1 day ago

      They're known to run everything in RAM, nothing gets stored. You pull the plug and everything is gone.

      Of course, you have to trust the company on that.

      • microgpt 1 day ago

        So nothing prevents them

        • mattrighetti 1 day ago

          By that logic, nothing prevents your ISP, your OS, or your hardware manufacturer from logging you either. Ultimate trust is an illusion in tech.

          • microgpt 1 day ago

            Correct and we know several of these parties do log you.

      • solid_fuel 21 hours ago

        > I use Mullvad because it physically prevents anyone from logging my data.

        > They're known to run everything in RAM, nothing gets stored. You pull the plug and everything is gone.

        > Of course, you have to trust the company on that.

        So nothing actually physically prevents them from logging your data, and this entire series of statements from you mean nothing because it still boils down to "you have to trust the company". A statement which is true for every VPN provider.

        • mattrighetti 21 hours ago

          The trust in Mullvad was put to a test two years ago when Swedish police raided their headquarters with a warrant to seize customer data. They left with absolutely nothing because the data didn't exist to be seized.

          Furthermore, Mullvad doesn't even keep an email address or a credit card on file. You sign up with a random number and can pay with cash in an envelope. If a company doesn't know who you are, uses only RAM servers, open-sources their code, and successfully clears a police raid, it's no longer just a matter of blind trust

    • nout 22 hours ago

      One option is to use Obscura, so then you at least spread the trust to two parties (one of which is Mullvad). Not great, but better.

      • dongcarl 19 hours ago

        Thanks for the shoutout!

  • ailun 1 day ago

    Remigration is more than a strict immigration policy. And calling legal immigrants parasites is going too far.

    • peterfirefly 9 hours ago

      Why? It is perfectly possible to be a legal immigrant and a parasite. It's even possible to be a completely homegrown native and a parasite. Wouldn't you call essentially all career criminals parasites?

      • ailun 3 hours ago

        Look into dehumanizing language used by political leadership over history and where it tends to lead. Especially when paired with extremist, evil policies like remigration.

CheeryBaker 21 hours ago

Fredrik,

I just wanted you to know that while I dont support Daniels views, I believe you guys at Mullvad are doing the right thing.

I despise cancel culture, but I understand people want to "vote with their wallet" . I will be staying a Mullvad customer.

lompad 1 day ago

Damn. Well, if that gets confirmed I'm going to get my company off mullvad.

  • amarant 1 day ago

    It's confirmed. And the party in question is quite extreme, at least by Swedish standards.

    • yaris 1 day ago

      According to polls[0] the party gets ~20% votes in their region. IMHO 20% of voters can't be "extreme" [0] https://www.svt.se/nyheter/lokalt/orebro/orebropartiet-nast-... (swedish)

      • microgpt 1 day ago

        > IMHO 20% of voters can't be "extreme"

        Was the NSDAP "extreme"? They got 43.9%

        • yaris 1 day ago

          They got 43.9% in what Wikipedia marks as "semi-free yet questionable election". Also more correct question IMHO would be "was the NSDAP extreme in 1933?" and the answer is probably "no as much as by today's standards".

          • graemep 1 day ago

            They were definitely extreme by the standards of the time. Their aim was explicitly to completely revolutionise European politics, culture, religion.... everything. One comment I heard recent (on The Rest is History podcast, I think Tom Holland said it) they were the most radical movement in European history.

            Their ideology implied at the very least getting rid of whole populations. They wanted to reset to an imagined ancient culture and rewrote history to justify it. Mostly imagined, anyway - Sparta was the one real example they looked to.

            • ahartmetz 1 day ago

              They were extreme by the standards of the time, but the Overton window at the time did go further to the extremes, so they were considered less extreme than they would be today.

          • microgpt 1 day ago

            What you're actually asking is whether people knew they were extreme. But this makes your overall point circular: we can't say a party is extreme if the majority of people don't call it screens.

    • Gud 1 day ago

      They are not “extreme”.

bill_mcgonigle 1 day ago

Left/right doesn't matter much for a no-logs VPN.

Up/Down (authoritarian/libertarian) is what matters there.

If he has high allegiance to the extant power structure then promises should be questioned.

If he is for radical decentralization and antiwar then I'm more likely to trust promises made about privacy and autonomy.

Then there's international confusion about left/right. Scandinavia is known as a good place to run a business because businesses regulation is much lighter than places like the US which are heavily regulated. In the US business regulation is "left wing" in Scandinavia it's "right wing".

We'd use a 14-dimensional vector for political positioning if we wanted to be studious but most folks are just looking for a friend/enemy distinction. Even many of the comments here looking to dump a well-regarded service if either "tastes great" or "less filling" is confirmed. The false dialectic as means of control and all that jazz.

ktosobcy 4 days ago

I'm still amused that so many people got brainwashed into thinking that VPNs give privacy :D

  • gib444 3 days ago

    If my house isn't a fortress I should just leave my doors open :D

    I'm so clever, everyone else is stupid

    • ktosobcy 1 day ago

      Nah. But for the supposed "privacy" you swap one "dumb pipe" for another pipe, which you have no clue about its operations beyond "trust me bro". Of course they may behave with good intentions and actually keep their promises but that's a rather huge IF.

      And then quite often people will still use their regular tracking-browser to access tracking-websites xD

eudamoniac 22 hours ago

Why are leftists so histrionic? If we had a thread made every time an executive espoused far left opinions we'd overload the HN servers. Why is an executive being far right even news?

  • iamnothere 21 hours ago

    Because their puppeteers know exactly what buttons to push when they need a good smear campaign. (And because lumpens despise the pro-labor left.)

  • sph 5 hours ago

    I am leftist [1]. It’s not a coincidence that leftist groups in the world always devolve to infighting and splintering, while right-wing parties have no issue getting their radical ideas through because they don’t spend all their energy deciding who is part of the ingroup and who should be cancelled for wrongthink.

    1: this is why I don’t usually label myself as such, as I am aware that the world is more complex than red and blue thinking.

tamimio 1 day ago

Welp, that vanishes my support for mullvad, despite I did recommend it to many of my friends who doesn’t want/can setup their own.

Im not against people having different political opinions, I personally agree with things from each side and disagree with them both too on other matters, plus having my own third option that doesn’t fit any side. But I am certainly against a company marketing itself as a “defender of personal and human rights and freedom”, yet they are sponsoring a party that obviously doesn’t hold these values, this company will report individuals in the future to deport them maybe, 5 years later they are reporting others for disagreeing with whatever agenda that party is having, it’s always a slippery slope, never think it will end at xyz and that’s it.

Goddammit it’s like companies are ALWAYS destined to turn to evil one way or another, it’s just how long it will take is the question. It’s a reminder that you should always host your own, trust nobody, none.

  • kfreds 9 hours ago

    > But I am certainly against a company marketing itself as a “defender of personal and human rights and freedom”, yet they are sponsoring a party that obviously doesn’t hold these values

    No. Daniel made this donation privately. I own and lead the company too. Both I and several of my colleagues don't like that Daniel made this donation. You are misrepresenting the facts.

    > this company will report individuals in the future to deport them maybe, 5 years later they are reporting others for disagreeing with whatever agenda that party is having, it’s always a slippery slope, never think it will end at xyz and that’s it.

    You can choose to believe that, but it doesn't make it true.

    > Goddammit it’s like companies are ALWAYS destined to turn to evil one way or another, it’s just how long it will take is the question. It’s a reminder that you should always host your own, trust nobody, none.

    I'm sorry you hold this world-view.

henior 1 day ago

This is like the third duplicate I saw in a week

tekla 1 day ago

Already had this topic discussed several times this week.

gigatexal 1 day ago

I used Mullvad before this because they passed a bunch of tests and legally denied claims to user data. I don’t have the reference but it was on HN.

So who do people recommend now?

basisword 4 days ago

What's going on? Proton faced a similar scandal recently. I think in their case sponsored a video by a far right vlogger. After that I saw people recommending Mullvad as an alternative.

  • bl4kers 3 days ago

    Tweet from Proton's CEO last year: "10 years ago, Republicans were the party of big business and Dems stood for the little guys, but today the tables have completely turned."

    He repeatedly said his statement was politically neutral.

rdos 1 day ago

[flagged]

  • tomhow 1 day ago

    OK, but please don't post low-substance comments on HN. Telling us you “don't care” about a topic achieves nothing other than instigating a generic tangent, which is against the guidelines. Please take a moment to read the guidelines and make an effort to observe them if you want to participate here. https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

thendrill 1 day ago

I love how we pretend to live in a free democratic society where everyone is free to make up their own mind and vote for what they believe...

...as long as they don't have opinions that differ from ours, in that case we might punch em in the face...

  • misnome 1 day ago

    > "punch em in the face"

    Very weird interpretation of "voluntarily choose to not continue supporting them financially"

    Presumably you want everyone to be forcibly compelled to finance the political parties they disagree with? And you would define this as a democratic society?

    • thendrill 1 day ago

      Punishing a company because someone does something in their free time with their own money ....

      • krapp 1 day ago

        That's how markets work. People have the right to choose to do business, or not, based on whatever criteria they value.

      • flohofwoe 1 day ago

        Not doing business with a company (for any reason btw) is not 'punishment'. Nobody is taking away anything from the company or any people involved with that company.

      • gpvos 1 day ago

        The guy owns half the company, so a significant part of the money I'm paying is involved. Yes, it is quite ethical to decide based on matters like that. It's not an employee or minor shareholder.

  • grim_io 1 day ago

    What's wrong with choosing who you give your money to?

    Is that somehow undemocratic?

    Is anyone censoring the guy?

  • calcifer 1 day ago

    You have freedom of speech to advocate for your politics. The rest of us have the freedom of association to not want to be involved with you in any way.

    These are not contradictory - they are both essential freedoms.

  • yde_java 1 day ago

    Haters will now say that the far right will destroy exactly that: "our" democracy. The Western morality is a joke, and many HN readers comment like an infant. I feel ashamed.

  • loloquwowndueo 1 day ago

    So far in this thread you’re the only one mentioning punching anyone in the face.

  • colinhb 1 day ago

    For most people, the concern is the money, not the voting. People don't want wealthy people reshaping politics to fit their interests through their wealth. They can vote for whomever they want.

    • yaris 1 day ago

      This sounds a bit irrational. Where does "wealthy" start? Mullvad co-CEO donated ~ $500K, would him donating $100K have the same effect? What about $10K? What if a Mullvad _employee_ donated $500K?

      • gpvos 1 day ago

        A company shouldn't be able to fire an employee over their opinion,[0] so that wouldn't matter to me. For a major owner, the donation amount starts to matter to me around $5-10K, but YMMV.

        [0] I suppose unless they have a very influential position and it's about a matter that contradicts main company goals

      • colinhb 1 day ago

        What about work in units of median annual household disposable income, which are at least somewhat responsive to the distribution of money?

        What % do you think a reasonable voter should accept a person donating to a political campaign before it causes concern about the donor's influence vs the median household's voice?

        Off the top of my head, I'd guess 500k USD is about 1000% / 10x median annual household disposable income in SE, which I think would give the median voter pause.

        For what it's worth (my own view): I think about 10% (~5k USD) is obviously acceptable, and I expect most anyone would agree that donations at that level are fine. I think your proposed 1000% is obviously unacceptable, and I expect most people would agree with me on that as well.

        I'm not sure exactly where the level is that opinion would flip, but I feel pretty confident about those boundaries.

  • flohofwoe 1 day ago

    > in that case we might punch em in the face

    Nobody is calling for violence though?

    In a free democratic society nobody is forced to do business with anybody they don't agree with, and free speech means they can talk about their decision without fearing repercussion.

  • bobusumisu 1 day ago

    And everyone is free to chose not to buy products from people who have opinions that differs fundamentally from their own?

    And some opinions cannot be tolerated in a democratic society. An obvious example is anti-liberal/anti-democratic opinions as they threaten the system itself. You cannot have a free democratic society if a majority removes the freedoms of a minority.

  • Nursie 1 day ago

    Everyone is free to make up their mind and vote for what they believe.

    And if I disagree strongly enough then I am free to take my business elsewhere. Especially if the money I hand over might go to support speech and parties I fundamentally disagree with.

    Freedom swings both ways, and freedom of speech doesn't mean freedom from people thinking you're an asshole and not wanting anything to do with you. That's their freedom.

mhitza 4 days ago

Any of the Swedes in here can corroborate the claims in the article about this right wing group? Especially about the extreme anti-immigration statements and put that in full translation and context?

Also what this group leader has done in Örebro to contextualize this quote

> ”I hope they will do similar things on the national level as in Örebro”, writes Daniel Berntsson to Flamman.

  • fsmedberg 4 days ago

    The claims in the social media post is pure bullshit. The party is a tiny (read: one person elected) radical populist left-economic-leaning nationalists. They have gained popularity for pointing out wasteful use of Örebro's municipalities resources, and their leader's fondness of lengthy ridiculing other parties politicians in lengthy debates, that he often publish on Instagram and YouTube.

    • mhitza 4 days ago

      Thank you for providing context.

      Are his public stances on immigration precisely stated as remigration, or does he describe a thing such as remigration without explicitly naming it as such?

      About his quote from wikipedia "They will also be forced to leave, even if they are born in Sweden, because they have no natural connection to Sweden. They are not Swedish." which links to this video tweet https://x.com/AllardKlipp/status/2060109271635771457 can you give full context/translation?

      • yaris 4 days ago

        He says what is quoted when talking about criminals with immigrant roots. "Those [criminals] - they should get out, even if they were born in Sweden, because they do not have a connection to Sweden. They received a swedish passport but they have not become swedish [as belonging to swedish culture]. They are not interested [in becoming swedish] and here I'm ready to go on corpses...". Overall his stance on immigration (taken from this video) is not as extreme as one can imagine reading HN comments. It is extreme but not to the extent that he's ready to push out anyone whos granddad was not Andersson.

        • nargek 3 days ago

          It is an extreme point of view, it's just that far right is booming everywhere.

        • yw3410 20 hours ago

          This is an extremely far right stance. It's essentially advocating systemic discrimination against ethnic minorities.

          Ask yourself the following questions.

          1. Who decides whether you don't belong into Swedish culture?

          2. Do the requirements change?

          3. How many generations removed before your rights aren't conditional?

    • Pazzaz 3 days ago

      > read: one person elected

      No, they have 8 people elected: 3 in the region, 5 in the municipality.

      They got 4,46 % of the votes in the region, and 7,92 % in the municipality. And who knows, maybe they'll use that 5 million SEK to get more seats in this years election.

  • ninjin 4 days ago

    Tried to find something from the party itself, but found nothing on their homepage other than that they plan to publish a party programme "gradually, starting some time during the summer of 2026".

    https://www.orebropartiet.se/var-politik/

thisislife2 12 hours ago

Interesting. My friends and I were recently discussing the rise of right-wing parties and leaders around the world, and we observed that many of these controversial elected leaders also have an "Anarchist" trait. These leaders have enacted policies that deliberately cause a lot of social and / or economic upheaval - bordering on anarchy - which have ultimately resulted in mass transfer of wealth from the lower classes to the rich, and widened the gap between the poor and the rich. And, unsurprisingly, many of these right-wing parties and leaders are backed billionaires (and now trillionaires). Factor in the role of BigTech and their social media platforms, that have aided their rise, it does seem like even these corporate leaders who aren't necessarily enamoured by such political ideologies still feel the need to tacitly support them because they recognise that it provides them more opportunities for capitalistic exploitation ...

_blk 19 hours ago

But that Bill Gates [Foundation] is a larger sponsor to WHO than all nations short of the US (at least prior to the currently elected govt) wouldn't dare making the news this far left into the interwebs... Just sayin' - figured I'd invest a few karma points into self reflection ;) love y'all

hagbard_c 1 day ago

Oh yes, sure, the party started by avowed Marxist Markus Allard is 'far-right'. For those who can read (or know how to translate) Swedish here's an article [1] on marxist.se - well-known hidey hole for far-right extremists - on how the expulsion of Markus Allard from the communist party (they call themselves 'the left party' but they're one of several communist parties in Sweden) is an 'attack on the left'.

Allard is a traditional leftie, someone who thinks in terms of class struggle and power to the people. He also happens to be rather outspoken about the failure of Swedish parties on all sides to handle the problems related to the excessive migration Sweden and Europe have been dealing with for the last few decades. This has put a target on his back for the everyone-I-don't-agree-with-is-Hitler crowd so his party is of course 'far-right'. Well, if that is what 'far-right' means it doesn't seem all that problematic so I wonder why people always complain so much about the claimed rise of the 'far-right'. See what that leads to, you obsessive labellers of those who dare to question the desired narrative? When everything is far-right the term has lost its meaning just as claims of 'racism' or '*-phobia' have lost theirs.

[1] https://marxist.se/uteslutningen-av-allard-en-attack-mot-van...

TZubiri 1 day ago

The mechanism of VPN is pooling together many users and making them indistinguishable to the outside, providing plausible deniability. Outsiders can see a user belongs to the pool, but they can't tell if they are 'good' or 'bad'.

It's a similar mechanism that cryptocurrency, or money laundering uses. It's very possible for 'good' users to be recruited into the pool for no other reason than to provide plausible deniability for the 'bad' members. If I wanted to run an ilegal operation like cybercrime or drugs, I would probably use a VPN and a crypto pool, and try to get legitimate users to desire using VPNs for reasons like gaming latency, or avoiding taxes on 1K/month income.

It's well known that Mullvad provides lower than market prices when compared to competitors, and that they offer stricter no logs policies. Yeah, maybe they are providing a basic privacy right, or maybe they are providing shelter for criminals. Tradeoff old as time. But with prices possibly being subsidized, it makes sense that their incentive model is not to collect fees for usage, but to provide a wide enough user pool such that the anonimity is more effective.

What's interesting is that both far-right free-market anarchist users and far-left Not for profit Free Software socialists appear to be shocked that their anonimity pools contains them both. Kind of like how the lights went up at the club at 6 am and you realize who you've been smooching in the dark.

  • culi 1 day ago

    > far-right free-market anarchist

    There's no such thing as rightwing anarchism. In the entire history of anarchism, it's always been a strictly and explicitly leftwing movement.

    • TZubiri 23 hours ago

      I know what type of anarchism you are referring to, spray paint a circled A, live in a farm, free love anarchy.

      but what about free market capitalism, anarcho capitalism, the austrian economic school, the chicago boys, Milton Friedman, Javier Milei..

      • culi 21 hours ago

        You just named the fathers of neoliberalism.

        Perhaps you can start here if you're actually interested in anarchism: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_anarchism

        Anarchism is David Graeber, mutual aid, Makhnovshchina, The Conquest of Bread, Zapatistas, Rojava, James C Scott, the Mexican Revolution, the IWW, etc.

        You will not find "anarcho-capitalism" on the Anarchist Library because it has absolutely nothing to do with the Anarchist tradition. It's a total neologism and misnomer.

        https://theanarchistlibrary.org/special/index

        Anarchism has always been explicitly and critically opposed to capitalism and capitalists (literally often assassinating them) and market-driven hierarchies

      • iamnothere 21 hours ago

        Other forms of anarchism are not real anarchism, because he said so.

        • culi 16 hours ago

          Neoliberals mentioned above have never even attempted to call themselves "anarchist". Anarchists have been explicitly and diametrically opposed to neoliberals since their inception.

          This whole thread is a bizarre conversation. It's like, saying I will list out some progressives and I include Margret Thatcher in that list. Thatcher never even attempted to call herself a progressive.

          • iamnothere 15 hours ago

            I agree that the neoliberals listed are not anarchists, but individualist anarchists and ancaps certainly are some form of anarchist. Not according to the left-anarchist definition, sure, but a broader “anarchist” label certainly fits in the sense of abolishing the state, and if those people use the label to refer to themselves, then it doesn’t make sense to just say “no you can’t do that”. To do so makes discussion impossible.

            Left-anarchism is more prominent and more developed, sure.

            • culi 13 hours ago

              Abolishing the state isn't the definition of anarchism. If it were, then Marxists would also be anarchists.

              • iamnothere 5 hours ago

                You’re dancing around the issue. Some groups you disagree with use the word “anarchist” to refer to themselves. They fit with the colloquial term for anarchism and ordinary people are going to refer to them by that term. Like it or not, they are now some kind of anarchist just based on how language is used.

                Nobody except left-anarchists accept the narrowly politicized definition of the term “anarchy”. Attempting to impose this definition against consensus is decidedly non-anarchist.

                You should stick with bespoke terms like mutualism and syndicalism that have a distinct meaning.

                (It is annoying how humans do this with language, especially when it’s forced, but I guess that’s just how it goes.)

  • jeffbee 1 day ago

    You're ignoring the other main economic foundation of VPNs: the service is in fact run by the cops, at a loss.

honeybadger1 1 day ago

Sigh, people that bring politics to the forefront with everything are so miserable.

easytiger 1 day ago

Far right? It's run by a literal marxist communist.

  • microgpt 1 day ago

    What does he or she want to do with immigrants?

    • easytiger 1 day ago

      Lol. Not all communists are Marxists on immigration

      • microgpt 1 day ago

        What did Marx write about immigration?

  • rightbyte 21 hours ago

    People change. Mossulini was a socialist in his youth.

    • peterfirefly 9 hours ago

      And then he became a Socialist with power. Seems to me he remained a Socialist.

PunchyHamster 1 day ago

> The Örebro Party (Swedish: Örebropartiet, ÖP) is a political party in Sweden. The party was initially only a local party in Örebro, Sweden. Markus Allard is the party leader. According to Allard the party cannot be placed anywhere on the traditional left-right spectrum. Some of its key issues include lowered wages for politicians, ending the tax payer funding of various sculptures, monuments and art, large scale remigration, a stricter immigration policy, and free dental care.[3][4]

I see no problems

  • raffael_de 23 hours ago

    me neither ... Mullvad is fantastic.

OrvalWintermute 23 hours ago

Seems to be intentionally defamatory

From the Wikipedia article on the Orebro party

“ Split from the left

The initiative to found the Örebro Party was taken in early 2014 by Markus Allard, who is also the first party leader. Allard had previously held positions as substitute member of the Örebro municipal council and district chairman of the Young Left in Örebro; in December 2013 he was expelled from the Left Party and its youth wing Young Left for "liking" the Revolutionary Front, a militant revolutionary socialist and anti-fascist organization, on Facebook and refusing to disavow it when questioned.[6] Allard has stated that the real reason for his expulsion was that he was perceived as a threat to the established party bureaucracy.[7][8]

While Allard has described himself as a Communist,[9] and a Marxist,[8][10] at its founding in March 2014 he defined the Örebro Party as "broad left".[9] At that time the party considered itself a "local party that wants to carry on the labour movement's ideals", and "not interested in administrating the current society".[11]”

Colours:

Red Black

This sounds like a socialist, anarchist or Ancap group that believes in borders

elzbardico 4 days ago

Now, the usual cry from blue sky spoiled rich kid fascists that are unable to understand that some people live in the real world, with real problems and because of that have ideas different from them.

jrflowers 21 hours ago

> takes inspiration from marxist ideology[42] and unites the "productive" classes of society against the "Transferiat", with the "Transferiat" being a term coined by Allard to describe the classes of society that lives off transfers that are a net negative for society

lmao This is like the song Tequila by The Champs but instead of a long instrumental it’s John Galt’s speech and instead of “Tequila!” it’s “Marxism!”

https://youtube.com/watch?v=U_JFLb1IItM

It is amazing that if you say “Marxist” after any possible combination of words some people will go “oh wow that is leftism”

Utter gibberish, like a picture of Ayn Rand wearing an ironic Hugo Chavez shirt.

negergreger 22 hours ago

Nice to see some tech leadership with strong moral fibre. I'll definitely renew with mullvad too in the future.

bakies 22 hours ago

guess I'll cancel my tailscale mullvad sub

daneel_w 1 day ago

To the people using Mullvad I have two sincere and unpopular questions: do you actively scrutinize and examine the key people of every service and product you use, or is it just a reflexive change of footing whenever you happen upon news like this? Also, do you really switch, or is it just a heat of moment kind of thing and an opportunity to profess yourself?

  • bix6 1 day ago

    If alternatives exist some of us are willing to make changes to not support the worst of the worst when their behavior is revealed.

    I used to like Musk, now I see Tesla and am disgusted. Maybe he was always like this but the personal line for me was the salutes. I’m sure many others have lines as well.

    • daneel_w 1 day ago

      How do you know the political party of the story is "the worst of the worst"? You don't.

      • bix6 21 hours ago

        I don’t know anything about this tbh I was just answering your general question through my own lens. When someone does something newsworthy and I read about, I adjust, depending on my ethics and whether they align. In general I don’t seem to align with the far right since that mostly seems to be about Supremacy and exclusion and hate. I don’t have interest in those things so I move my support away from things like that.

  • fzeroracer 1 day ago

    Generally speaking, if the mission of a company is privacy and then the actions of the c-suite or founders indicates that they are more than willing to compromise on that, then yes. Why shouldnt you scrutinize people whose product is not aligned with their goals?

    And yes I do actively switch products. I left the Windows ecosystem for Linux and I will leave Mullvad for whatever else pops up. So it goes.

  • nananana9 1 day ago

    > do you actively scrutinize and examine the key people of every service and product you use

    No.

    > is it just a reflexive change of footing whenever you happen upon news like this

    Yes.

    > do you really switch

    Yes.

    What is the implication here? That because I did not know that a percentage of the money I give a company went towards supporting a party whose I that I find disgusting, I should keep supporting them now that I do know?

  • tencentshill 1 day ago

    It gives me an excuse to really examine why I started using their product or service and take the time to research alternatives. If the alternative is better, great. If not, what am I willing to lose? Money, convenience, reliability? These are questions you don't want a happy paying customer asking.

  • corford 23 hours ago

    >do you actively scrutinize and examine the key people of every service and product you use

    Yes

    >or it just a reflexive change of footing whenever you happen upon news like this?

    No (only when my personal screening didn't already flag it)

    >do you really switch

    Yes, where it's feasible

    • dnlzro 23 hours ago

      > Yes, where it's feasible

      I think that's what a lot of people in this thread are missing. There are alternatives to Mullvad, so it's pretty easy to take your money elsewhere if you're unhappy with where it's being spent right now.

      The counter-reaction to the reaction is so dumb. If you think it's silly to boycott a company because of a co-founders political donations, fine. But it's just as silly to try to argue people into not boycotting. Live and let live.

      • deaux 13 hours ago

        There are no alternatives to Mullvad where you _know_ that all of the founders have "better" beliefs than this guy. If you have one, share it.

        What proves the point is that someone suggested moving to Proton, whose founder (not even co-founder AFAIK) is outwardly pro-MAGA. And comments calling that out are the ones that get downvoted. This shows people are just pretending to care.

        It's not silly to boycott companies in general, but this specific case it's silly. Not because of the reason, but because boycotting only makes sense if it's very likely that an alternative is going to be better in the specific factor that instigates the boycott. In this case, it's not likely, you have no clue whether an alternative is going to have more or less $0.0x of your $1 going to people supporting far-right parties.

        Especially when VPN companies are known to be some of the dodgiest tech companies in general. Mullvad is one of the most transparent ones.

        • dnlzro 7 hours ago

          Your point is relevant, but it’s not the whole story.

          A rational actor will act on available information. It’s entirely possible that someone unhappy with Mullvad switches to an alternative that is even worse (on whatever dimensions they care about), and they just don’t know it. The question is whether they could’ve expected that outcome on a balance of probabilities.

          I feel like the default assumption for a company in the privacy space is that they are close to politically neutral (0). Certainly skewing libertarian, but probably not more right (+1) than left (-1). So, if you see that your money is explicitly being siphoned to right-wing political parties (>0), and you don’t like that, it’s rational to switch to an alternative (expected value = 0).

          Also, “very likely” to be better isn’t necessary, because switching costs are minimal.

          Also also, saying that Proton’s founder is “outwardly MAGA” is really oversimplifying things. I’m not sure what your viewpoint actually is — maybe you’re just expressing someone else’s — but I’d encourage you to read: https://medium.com/@ovenplayer/does-proton-really-support-tr...

          • deaux 45 minutes ago

            > I feel like the default assumption for a company in the privacy space is that they are close to politically neutral (0).

            That assumption here is wrong, because VPN companies in particular are known to be a lot dodgier than average. Maybe if we were talking bakeries, then I'd agree.

            > Also also, saying that Proton’s founder is “outwardly MAGA” is really oversimplifying things. I’m not sure what your viewpoint actually is — maybe you’re just expressing someone else’s — but I’d encourage you to read: https://medium.com/@ovenplayer/does-proton-really-support-tr...

            One can make very similar arguments for this specific case. Saying that the party in question is far-right is simplifying things. On top of that, a co-founder making a private donation to a party (two layers: 1. private 2. party) is less directly related to the company than a founder directly tweeting an ideological point (1. public 2. direct).

            Honestly, the party sounds insane, I wouldn't be caught dead supporting them and would hope that any Swede reading alone avoids them with a ten-foot pole. But the response in this comment section is absurdly exaggerated compared to what any of the Big Tech corps that get talked about daily on here, and whose

            I don't believe it's organic at all. Recently there's the biggest push in history of "think of the children" online surveillance, with remote attestation and mandatory identity coupling being rolled out at scale. Mullvad is known to be one of the top privacy-preserving VPN providers in the West, with a large userbase on HN, and now you get this very disproportionately negative reaction to what is realistically a meaningless issue: "$0.01 of every $1 spent on Mullvad might end up with someone who donates to a radical party, if even that" - just like, almost certainly, every other $1 you spend elsewhere does.

  • have_faith 23 hours ago

    There's nothing wrong with acting on new information as and when it surfaces in your life without obsessively staying up to date with every entity you engage with. That's the reasonable, pragmatic approach to trying to do the right thing without overwhelming yourself with the burden of being perfect.

    It's not a gotcha if you're inconsistent from an outsiders perspective, we're all doing the best we can with what little insight we have into reality.

    • deaux 13 hours ago

      > There's nothing wrong with acting on new information as and when it surfaces in your life without obsessively staying up to date with every entity you engage with.

      So you're saying the majority of the people here who say they're leaving Mullvad, have:

      1. Not heard of Bezos' funding of the Trump family, or don't use Amazon at all 2. Not heard of Zuckerberg/Meta's [insert countless despicable things here], or don't have Facebook/Instagram/Whatsapp installed at all 3. Not heard of OpenAIs free pass on the Trump administration using their models for war purposes without limitations, or don't use OpenAI at all 4. And so forth?

      Clearly, no. Because it has nothing to do with coming across information without obsessively staying up to date with every entity. The same people have come across much of the above information, yet continue not to act on it, despite most of them being magnitudes worse than this case.

  • carlosjobim 21 hours ago

    When it's about boycotting a product like Bud Light or Mullvad, there are so many equal offers from competitors that it isn't difficult to boycott and switch to another product.

    Maybe companies in those kind of markets will simply bite the bullet and start marketing their products as for one side or for the other in politics instead of trying to be for everybody. Then they can lock-in strong goodwill from "their side", and stand on more certain footing. Or maybe most customers do not care as much as online activists.

  • tumetab1 21 hours ago

    You expect to discuss ideas with a mob? :)

    It's like the meme of nuclear energy help with climate change and the answer is "I don't want to solutions, I want to abolish capitalism!"

decide1000 1 day ago

If this is real I will stop my monthly subscriptions.

himata4113 1 day ago

I think this is more nuanced than this article or mullvad themselves present it as. What you give to mullvad as a form of payment will end up in the pockets of the funding members which allows them to make relatively large political donations, but it's also not as deep as presented. What gets seemingly glossed over how involved large companies are in pushing parties like orebro into relevancy.

As a basic example, youtube started pushing a LOT of anti-immigrant videos. I never watched them since after few minutes it's obvious that it is clear ragebait, but I keep getting them recommended without showing any interest in them and they're all clocking in anywhere from 300k to millions of views.

There is virtually no way to resist the temptation of being anti-immigrant/racist/whatnot when you see abusive behavior exploiting the good will of the european union especially when there is state level abuse to extract additional funding from the shared support pool. This being extremely unpopular gives motivation to keep all of this under wraps as much as possible which only fuels the fire when "information" is made available on social media platforms where you benefit from blowing this out of proportion and then if you try to question it you are labeled which naturally breeds resentment.

--

Scrolled for few minutes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f6-zhxpNsVQ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARKZMX4iGZ0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PmlI4ICp-OI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sX-IKLSFH_I

fakeBeerDrinker 21 hours ago

This is great news. New Mullvad subscriber here!

simultsop 22 hours ago

It is a trend now, loby your way to lawmaking. Then set the laws as you need. No surprises.

jubilee33 1 day ago

Mullvad has always been a bit suspect with regard to their settings or lack their of, however what are you trying to insinuate? That founders are not political? That one "wing" of some hypothetical bird is in some way disconnected from its mirror wing? Regardless making something such as a VPN is and has been commoditiezed in current year to such an extent that whatever may be your motives, you can only do good by encouraging the userbase to not pay for said services.