Sweden, Now More Dangerous than Baghdad! By Richard Miller (Londonistan)
Sweden, once a beacon of peace and charm, a land where cobblestone streets and quaint towns painted a picture of safety and trust, now finds itself grappling with a heartbreaking transformation. In an essay reflecting on a Revolver News article from February 2025 titled "Diversity Update: Once Safe and Charming Sweden Is Now More Dangerous Than Baghdad," the sorrowful shift in this Nordic nation's identity unfolds with a heavy heart. What was once a homogenous society, celebrated for its serene landscapes and tight-knit communities, has, in the span of a generation, descended into a place where fear and violence cast long shadows over its former tranquillity.
The piece paints a grim picture, one that's hard to reconcile with the Sweden of old. Stockholm, the vibrant capital, now echoes with the sounds of explosions—32 bombings by the end of January 2025 alone, a statistic that stings the soul of anyone who remembers its quieter days. Shootings punctuate the weeks, a rhythm of unrest that feels alien to a country once known for its calm. The article points to neighborhoods like Rinkeby and Rosengård, now dubbed "no-go zones," where firefighters and paramedics dare not enter without police escorts, and where car burnings and riots have become tragically routine. It's a loss that cuts deep, not just for Swedes but for anyone who saw this nation as a model of stability.
At the heart of this narrative lies a profound sadness over what's been attributed to unchecked migration, a policy born perhaps of goodwill but now mourned for its unintended consequences. The Revolver News writer argues that Sweden's embrace of diversity—two million newcomers from the Middle East and Africa over two decades—has unravelled the fabric of its high-trust society. The statistics are chilling: a 300 percent rise in violent crime and a 1,472 percent surge in rapes since the shift toward multiculturalism began forty years ago. One in four girls, it's claimed, will face sexual assault before age 20—a number that lands like a punch to the gut, a betrayal of the innocence Sweden once promised its children.
There's a palpable grief in the voices echoed here, from a man who moved to Sweden in 1987 and recalls a near-paradise, to those who grew up playing carefree in villages outside Stockholm. These are not just statistics but stories of a lost way of life. The article suggests that the influx of people unwilling to assimilate has turned thriving cities into war zones, a comparison to Baghdad that feels both hyperbolic and yet hauntingly apt when bombs and gunfire dominate the headlines. It's a lament for a culture that prided itself on cohesion, now fractured by divisions it struggles to bridge.
This account doesn't shy away from the pain of those who feel betrayed by a dream gone awry. The "Diversity Is Our Strength" mantra, once held up as a noble ideal, is here cast as a cruel irony, a promise that delivered not unity but chaos. The Swedish Greens and Social Democrats, who championed open doors, are seen by the writer as architects of this downfall, their legacy a nation where estate agents now list "no bombings" as a selling point—a detail so absurd it's tragic. For those who loved the old Sweden, this is a wound that festers, a sense of loss for a homeland they can scarcely recognize.
Yet beneath the anger and blame lies a deeper sorrow, a yearning for what might have been. This isn't just about policy failures or crime rates; it's about a people mourning the erosion of their sanctuary. Sweden's story, as told here, is a cautionary tale wrapped in grief, a reminder of how quickly peace can slip through a nation's fingers because of mass immigration. A charming, safe Sweden that now exists only in memory, destroyed by diversity.
"The globalists have peddled a lot of lies. Off the top of our heads is the climate change hoax and COVID sham. But one of the deadliest and life-altering of all their fraudulent initiatives is the "Diversity Is Our Strength" scam.
Turns out, diversity isn't just a bad idea—it's downright deadly. It's a nuclear bomb to tradition, stability, and any culture that isn't based on Islam.
Just look at Stockholm. Once a peaceful, charming, and thriving city—is now a war zone. Thanks to unchecked migration, parts of Sweden are more dangerous than Baghdad. Bombings are a regular occurrence, and someone is murdered every 28 hours.
{snip}
Now, thanks to yet another failed left-wing globalist agenda, there's full-blown panic in Sweden as the country goes from calm, safe, and peaceful—to a literal hellhole of violence and filth.
Explosions in Stockholm have become so frequent the city's estate agents are listing 'no bombings' in their 'pro' columns when advertising properties for neighbourhoods buyers might be unfamiliar with.
Already this month there have been more than 30 bomb attacks including a blast in which an elderly man lost his leg. Last year, a 20-year-old recently graduated teacher was killed in an explosion.
As the property adverts demonstrate, the horror has started to blend into the background. It has become so normal for Swedes to learn that an apartment complex or shopfront has been blown to bits that some attacks barely make the news.
"People get tired of it," Swedish academic and researcher Goran Adamson told the Express. "You cannot take it in because if you did, you would go crazy. [But] the situation is much worse than people seem to realise."
At this point, the criminal leaders running Sweden's new war zone aren't even in the country—they're calling the shots from Turkey and Iraq. The Express.co piece goes on:
"Most of [the leaders] do not even live in Sweden," Khoshnood added. "They live in Turkey or Iraq but were born in Sweden or came there at a very young age. But since the Swedish police are after them they have decided to be based in Iraq, for example. The individuals being arrested by the police are the footsoldiers and are from 14-19 years of age."
Khoshnood said that, while drug trafficking and turf wars account for a large proportion of the violence that has transformed Sweden, it was also the case that criminal 'honour' or respect was a driving force in bloody conflicts.
"In the city of Gothenburg has witnessed one of the bloodiest wars between two criminal networks in the same area that all started with the girlfriend of one leader who went to the other.
"[Afterwards] all hell broke loose and 15 years later we are still witnessing a war between these two gangs. The leaders who started it are both dead, but the conflict goes on."
According to Goran Adamson, the reason Sweden has become a murder hotspot with brazen teen killers and bombings over gang territory is because it has naively let itself become a playground for criminals from around the world.
"This has been escalating and it has been allowed to escalate because Sweden has been a magnet for criminals from the Middle East and parts of Eastern Europe," he said."
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