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Tuesday, October 31, 2006
One of the ten most largest.. ecological footprint...
According to the World Wildlife Fund Sweden is among the world's worst polluters. The WWF Living Planet report indicates that 'humanity is using the planet's resources faster than they can be renewed and that populations of vertebrate species have declined by about one third since 1970.' Sweden has one of the largest 'ecological footprints' in the world. The WWF describes the term as follows:
'The footprint of a country includes all the cropland, grazing land, forest, and fishing grounds required to produce the food, fibre, and timber it consumes, to absorb the wastes emitted in generating the energy it uses, and to provide space for its infrastructure.'
Sweden leaves the eigth largest footprint per person. The United Arab Emirates tops the list, followed by the USA. They are followed by Nordic neighbours Finland. Just behind Sweden, taking up the tenth and eleventh spots, are Norway and Denmark. The size of the Swedish footprint is partly a result of our transport and energy consumption. We drive our cars a lot. 
Posted at 7:20:41 am by Sophie Cecilie
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Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Snus or more known as moist snuff.. can lead to obesity...
Snus makes you fat, researchers in Umeć have shown. Snus, or Swedish moist snuff as it is known in English, was shown in a new study to contribute to obesity. The study, by researchers from Umeć University, showed that heavy snus users had higher blood pressure and high cholesterol, and were more likely to be obese than people who did not use the oral tobacco. Heavy users were defined as people using the substance at least four times a week. But snus was still less unhealthy than smoking tobacco, according to the scientists. The findings were based on a study of 16 500 people in northern Sweden.
Factors including the subjects' education level, gender, age, level of physical activity and alcohol consumption were all taken into account. Yet even after allowances were made for these factors, the study showed that the snus users had a greater risk of so-called metabolic syndrome. The research, published in the Scandinavian Journal of Public Health, noted that rapid shifts in lifestyle habits were occurring in northern Sweden. A substantial decrease in smoking, particularly among men, has been accompanied by increased use of snus, among both men and women. One of the scientists behind the study, said that this did not mean that people should not use snus as a way of giving up smoking. That is not the conclusion they have drawn, because cigarette smoking is even less healthy than using snus.
Posted at 12:53:01 pm by Sophie Cecilie
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Tuesday, October 24, 2006
A secret bare-knuckle boxing club frequented by young upper-class Stockholm men has been uncovered. The club, which compared to that in the Brad Pitt film Fight Club, is located on a dockside fishing boat in the city centre. The combatants, who are usually amateurs, fight until one of them is 'lying lifeless and bloody on the ground.' Real life fight clubs, where participants pummel each other into submission, are now beginning to spread around the country. Police are now preparing for the first incarnation in Gothenburg on November 11.
Sweden has long enforced a ban on professional boxing, but police sources said that privately arranged bare-knuckle boxing events are entirely legal. To fight with someone who is willing is not a crime. The combatants and spectators are said to include well-known figures from the Swedish film industry, as well as estate agents, salesmen and a number of people well-known in the upper-market bars and clubs of Stockholm's Stureplan area. Unless someone actually dies as a result of these consensual fights, police are puzzled as to how to approach the issue. They cannot for example prosecute a participant for assault if the victim has agreed to expose himself to the dangers. If this should lead to someone being beaten to death then it is manslaughter. One cannot consent to being beaten to death. The perpetrator will always be prosecuted in such a case. The police's own legal unit is currently looking into how to tackle the problem. The results of the internal investigation are expected to come next week. 
Posted at 7:12:09 pm by Sophie Cecilie
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Monday, October 23, 2006
According to the police and hospital a woman was kidnapped from a night-club and was raped several times, then abandoned. She doesn't remember anything of what happened that night, but is still trying to identify the rapist/s. At the hospital they found the rape drug Rohypnol. There was also traces of Progesterex, which is a drug that is used to sterilize larger animals like horses.
These two drugs combined are used by rapists to both rape and sterilize their victims, which they foremost pick out at different night-clubs or bars. This new method is called 'date rape drug' and it is put in the victims drink. The drugs disolves very quickly and the victim is put out of condition, not able to make any resistance and also has no recollection of the rape afterwards. The rapist/s doesn't need to worry about making his victim pregnant or taking on the responsibility of fatherhood. The effect of the rape drug is permanent.. it means that the woman can never be able to get pregnant later in life. It has gone so far that it's just not enough to fysically violate by raping a woman.. she gets sterilized and there are no medical ways to reverse the damage.
The rape drug is way to easy to get hold on and how unbelievable it may sound there are webpages on the internet that describes how to use the drugs. I have no words to describe what I think about this.. Is this a society that we women want to live in... being scared to get injured and to suspect every man to be a potential rapist. Is that the society men want their daughters, wifes, sisters.. to live in? I know for sure it's not this kind of society I want to exist, but unfortunately it's what we got... So, be aware when you're out and enjoying yourself, NEVER leave your drink unwatched for a second... You could be the next victim if you aren't careful enough. Make an effort to enlight your female friends and this is not an exhortation for women only.. it also goes out to men, that truly care about us women and our well-being. Spread the word... and be safe!
Posted at 7:01:18 pm by Sophie Cecilie
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Thursday, October 19, 2006
A country with children.. high on sugar...
Swedish children are consuming sugar at incredible rates, according to a new survey. The international image of the healthy Scandinavian lifestyle has been dealt a blow after the country's National Food Administration said in a report released in September nearly 25 percent of the calories consumed by children come from soda, ice cream and other sugary snacks. The report, which focused on 2 500 4, 8 and 11-year-old kids, said those who took part in the survey by keeping daily journals ate only half the amount of fruits and vegetables recommended, with only 10 percent eating the correct amount of 400 grams per day. 'For the most part, we can say the intake of fat, sugar and salt was too great, while the consumption of fiber was too little,' said the nutritionist responsible for the study.
The study said kids drink an average of 200 millilitres of sugary fruit drink and soda daily. Also, children scarf down 150 grams of candy each week. Some 25 percent of kids drink 400 millilitres of soda weekly and eat more than 300 grams of candy. 'The investigation strengthens the ultimate need for strong support from society to promote good food eating habits with children and to stop obesity,' said the Administration's general director. Former school minister Ibrahim Baylan, a Social Democrat, said that he wants candy and soda banned in Swedish schools. Schools should be a sweets-and-soda-free zone and it should take place at all grade levels, both in primary school and high school, according to him.
I think that sounds like a great suggestion.. the question is if it's possible to ban candy and soda in schools. Take for an example smoking. When I went to school we weren't allowed to smoke in school.. that only made the smoking pupils leave the school area a few meters, so they could get a smoke. It's a tricky situation and the problem is that the adults/society have let things gone so far as it has already. But sure there must be done something about this before we get a country with kids/teenagers high on sugar.
Posted at 1:09:47 pm by Sophie Cecilie
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Saturday, October 14, 2006
Banker for the poor.. wins Nobel Peace Prize...
The Nobel Peace Prize for 2006 has been awarded to Muhammad Yunus, the founder of a micro-credit system to fight poverty in Bangladesh. Yunus shares the prize with the bank he founded in the mid-1970s, Grameen Bank. The prize was awarded by the Norwegian Nobel Committee 'for their efforts to create economic and social development from below'. 'Lasting peace can not be achieved unless large population groups find ways in which to break out of poverty. Micro-credit is one such means. Development from below also serves to advance democracy and human rights,' wrote the committee in a statement.
Through Grameen Bank, Muhammad Yunus developed micro-credit into an important instrument in the struggle against poverty. Grameen Bank has been a source of ideas and models for the many institutions in the field of micro-credit that have sprung up around the world. According to the bank's web site, Grameen has 6.61 million borrowers, 97 percent of whom are women. With 2226 branches, GB provides services in 71,371 villages in Bangladesh.
Professor Yunus studied economics at Vanderbilt University, where he was a Fulbright Scholar. He received his Ph.D. in Economics in 1969, going on to become an assistant professor of Economics at Middle Tennessee State University the same year. On returning to Bangladesh he joined the Economics Department at Chittagong University.
Posted at 10:53:27 am by Sophie Cecilie
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Thursday, October 12, 2006
A media jukebox.. at todays modern libraries...
Forget books. In an attempt to lure today's youth into Swedish libraries, librarians are turning to a new 'media jukebox'. The jukebox, loaded with downloadable music, audio books and movies is the latest attempt to modernize libraries. Downloads from libraries' Internet system hasn't been as successful as wished. Several libraries around the country are investing in a new jukebox, which was presented in late September during a library expo in southern Sweden.
It has taken a year and a half to get the system ready. The biggest problem was preventing pirating of the borrowed material. The solution was to have the media files become inactive after a certain amount of time. The audio books, for example, will become inactive and become unusable after three to four weeks, since that is the typical borrowing time. Previous attempts to make music available on the Internet were not well received. Now, with the new media box, guests just load their media player at the library. At one library an employee said.. we see our library as a meeting place and here, there is a café, restaurant and other cultural institutions in the area. It is an experience to come here. How much a media jukebox would cost to invest in is not much more expensive than buying the films and audio books.
I think this new innovation could be a good thing. I myself don't need new things to be lured to the library, but younger people may need it, especially in a modern society with computers and internet... I and many others prefer also ordinary books.. to actually have a book in your hand when you read it. Not that I don't borrow CD-books, music and movies at the library time to time, it happens too. Well, I hope the libraries through out the country may succed with their attempt to modernize and keep up with the youth culture in a changing society...
Posted at 7:44:29 am by Sophie Cecilie
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Sunday, October 08, 2006
First file sharing case.. up in court...
The first person to be prosecuted in Sweden for illegally sharing music files appeared in court last week in what is being seen as a test case for Swedish copyright law. The 44 year old man is said by the music industry body Ipfi, which brought the prosectution against him, to have made 13 000 mp3 files available illegally using the Direct Connect programme. But the prosecutor is focusing on just four songs: 'It must have been love' by Roxette, 'There must be an angel' by Eurythmics, 'Sarah' by Mauro Scocco and 'Vara vänner' by Jakob Hellman. The 44 year old man said he never downloaded as much as is claimed. Many of the songs were from CDs he bought in record shops.
As well as being the first such case to grace the Swedish courts, it could also be the last. If the man is found not guilty, or is only given a fine, then internet service providers will not be obliged to reveal suspects IP addresses in future. Only when the crime under investigation carries a custodial sentence are ISPs required to hand over data to the police. The man claims that he intended to upload just a few individual songs to be shared, but instead uploaded his whole file of songs. Nevertheless, he believes the case against him is unfair. He thinks it's wrong to find someone guilty for something that millions of people do everyday. The verdict is expected on October 18th.
Posted at 6:31:55 am by Sophie Cecilie
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Wednesday, October 04, 2006
Lost.. back on every Wednesday evening...
Yeah, finally Lost is back and this autumn season starts with episode 22 season 2. It's a bit confusing, but mostly annoying that the channel airing the programme is cutting season 2 and leaving us viewers without the three last episode before the long break during the summer and early fall. We don't get the thrilling cliffhanger that ends a season. Anyhow.. I'll be glued infront the TV tonight, to see the lifes of the surviving people on the island continue...
Not to forget to mention today.. it's the cinnamon bun day, so munch away on a delicious bun or even try to make your own cinnamon buns. Here is last years entry.. click here... where you can find recipe and other interesting reading about cinnamon.

Posted at 7:10:31 am by Sophie Cecilie
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Tuesday, October 03, 2006
YouTube.com versus Bubblare.se...
A Swedish web site where members of the public can upload their own video clips claims to be more popular than the much-hyped YouTube.. at least in Scandinavia. Traffic figures released last week show that Bubblare has up to 30 times more viewers for Scandinavian film clips than the American market leader, YouTube. Bubblare was launched in July and operates along the same lines as YouTube. The only difference is the language. Because we only show Scandinavian clips, the recognition factor much higher, said the managing director.. and also adding that it is easier to find Swedish clips on Bubblare than on YouTube.
According to Bubblare's own figures, the Moderate Party's internet campaign, Mahogany Mats, was watched 35 000 on the site, compared to just 400 times on YouTube. One of the most popular clips is the Soviet national anthem.. with Swedish text. That has been viewed 51 000 times on Bubblare and only 8 000 times on YouTube. The goal for Bubblare is to be one of Sweden's 30 most popular web sites within a year.
So, what are you waiting for.. go and check it out, click here... 
Posted at 6:27:11 pm by Sophie Cecilie
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Blog Owner » Sophie Cecilie
Yogini » Suryananda
Location » Sweden
Hobbies » Yoga, music, litterature, TV/Movies, blogging...
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All other love is like the moon,
Which grows and shrinks like flower on plain;
Like bud that blooms and withers soon;
Like passing day that ends in rain.
All other love begins in bliss,
And ends in tears and suffering:
No love can salve us all but this,
The love that rests in heaven's King.
For ever green, renewed again,
For ever full, it never pales.
It ever sweetens, free from pain,
Continues always, never fails.
'You can close your eyes to the things you don't wanna see, but you can't close your heart to the things you don't wanna feel...'
Sophie Cecilie © 2006
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