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Showing posts with label Finnish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Finnish. Show all posts

1 September 2025

Greta Thunberg and Renaz Ebrahimi in Search of Publicity

Swedish Greta Thunberg and her friends suffered a terrible setback just as they were about to once again set off to be turned back from Gaza. The gods of the winds, it seems, stirred up a strong gale over the Mediterranean, forcing the brave adventurers to return to their port of departure.

Thunberg and her companions have nevertheless decided to continue their journey once the wind dies down, setting sail for the much-suffering Gaza. Their intention there is to break the illegal blockade of Gaza and deliver essential aid to its civilians.

It remains to be seen how Greta’s brave warriors will fare: will they succeed in forcing Israel to do what neither Hamas nor Iran has achieved through violence, and what not even the UN itself managed through diplomacy? What is certain, in any case, is that today’s storm and their eventual arrival will provide them with very welcome publicity, which will surely flatter their egos.

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One of the participants on this expedition is Renaz Ebrahimi, a Finnish public figure. Her most successful performance to date took place during a Finnish TV broadcast (at 13:57), where she acted with Oscar-worthy rage after astronomer and science writer Esko Valtaoja unfortunately said: “For example, now this notorious N-word. It’s quite a different matter if it’s used by some member of parliament who talks – pardon me – about jumping little neekeri men, than if it’s Pippi Longstocking’s father, who happens to be the neekeri king.”

By way of background for my international readers: as recently as the 1990s, the Finnish word neekeri simply meant a dark-skinned person, without carrying the same connotation as the American word nigger. Of course, today that association has been forcibly imported from America, but even now, the older generation often uses the term without any negative intent.

So, it remains to be seen whether Renaz Ebrahimi will succeed in gaining as much publicity from her trip to Gaza as she did after the TV broadcast I linked above. What is already certain, however, is that she, Greta, and the other brave travelers will be diverted away from the coast of Gaza—most likely to an Israeli port, as happened on the previous occasion.

Previous thoughts on the same topic:
Greta Thunberg in Search of a Greater Thrill
Eco-Fascist Blackmail: Threats of Sabotage Loom Over the World Ski Championships
Impact of Diversity in Films

27 August 2025

Attitudes Toward Immigrants Are a Problem in Schools

In recent decades, it has long been known that humanitarian immigration has had harmful effects on Western societies. For example, the link between immigration and increased gang, drug, and sexual crime is quite clear (example, another).

Less has been said about other impacts of people from developing countries on Western nations. In Finland’s case, however, this is one of the reasons why, according to PISA tests, the country’s school system is no longer anywhere near the best in the world.

The matter was written about by a local Helsinki newspaper, which interviewed Ulla Talvensaari, who has worked as a primary school teacher for 25 years. To understand her views, my esteemed reader must know that in many Helsinki schools, the proportion of pupils with an immigrant background can exceed half of the student body.

According to the experienced teacher, insufficient Finnish language instruction for pupils with an immigrant background threatens to weaken the entire education system, from primary school to vocational studies. This is reflected in the fact that “today only the sharpest quarter of pupils can manage tasks that, at the start of my career around the turn of the millennium, were routine for the majority.”

This has led to a situation where “secondary school teachers wonder why children with such weak skills have been allowed to pass through primary school to higher levels. In vocational studies, people then question secondary school assessments. Eventually, in vocational schools, standards are lowered and incompetence becomes a burden for working life.”

Schools also do not take immigrant pupils’ lack of competence seriously, but instead “it is now difficult for a teacher to hold anyone back a grade or to give conditional passes. Many teachers end up lowering standards just to get everyone through the system.” In this way, they avoid being branded as racists for prolonging immigrant pupils’ time at school.

Thus, the teacher raises the question: “Is it really equality if there are huge gaps in skill levels within classrooms? We used to talk about the Gaussian curve. Most pupils were average, with only a small number being particularly weak or highly gifted. Now the middle group has almost disappeared, and classrooms consist mostly of extremes—either capable pupils or those with major learning challenges.”

As one way to improve the situation, the teacher also calls for more parental responsibility. In her view, “we [Finns] should demand that immigrant parents also practice Finnish regularly at home with their children.”

One can only hope that this teacher will be listened to both in Finland and elsewhere in Europe, and that society will abandon woke dogmas and instead uphold children’s right to learn at school—including those with immigrant backgrounds. This should remain the case even if their learning takes longer than that of the native population’s children.

10 March 2025

A Couple of Exceptionally Important Matters

Good morning, dear readers. I have two extremely important things to share with you today.

The first important matter is an announcement. As you know, I have been writing a Finnish-language parallel blog, with content highly similar to this English-language one, although the posts have mostly been separate.

However, I have now decided that, moving forward, I will primarily write about topics related to Finland in Finnish and international topics in English. Of course, for good reason, I may still publish the same articles in both languages or, for example, write about domestic politics in English if I find it appropriate. However, as a general rule, I will follow the approach I just described.

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My second important matter concerns the recently uncovered cheating by Norwegian ski jumpers. This is significant because Norway has long been both a true superpower in winter sports and a nation with an unblemished reputation. This was especially true after the Finnish cross-country team was caught using doping a couple of decades ago.

However, the recently exposed ski jumping suit fraud demonstrates that Norwegians are not inherently any cleaner than anyone else. It also reinforces my belief that their cross-country skiers used banned substances to enhance their performance in the early 2000s, just like many others did.

That being said, this does not mean that the Norwegian athletes did not deserve the flood of medals their male skiers claimed at the World Championships in Trondheim, which concluded yesterday. Nor does it diminish the achievements of Johannes Klæbo, the dominant skier of this era.

Of course, one can always speculate that the winner of the interval-start race in the classic technique would most likely have been Iivo Niskanen—had he been able to compete in the World Championships. Unfortunately for us Finns, medals at major competitions are awarded among those who participate, and in that field, Klæbo was superior to everyone else every single time. That was truly amazing!

Previous thoughts on the same topic:
Preview of the Trondheim World Ski Championships
The Relationship Between the Professor and Teemu Selänne