What is wrong with the people in Sweden? Natives or immigrants for decades, it seems they all have adopted the same strategy of silence.
Something absurd happens? They stay silent.
Are they treated like second-class citizens in their own city? Silent.
Is someone blocking their sidewalk or bike lane for a âprivate eventâ? Silent.
Is a bridge lift closed without any explanation? Silent.
Has the community sauna been broken for two weeks and no one is fixing it? No reaction.
Only resigned acceptance and moving on.
How can anything change in a society where no one speaks up, where fear or apathy are the norm? When you say nothing, you accept everything. You become part of the problem.
đđ The Swedish Summer â long, bright⌠and closed
In many places around the world, summer means life. Terraces fill up, parks come alive, and opening hours expand.
In Sweden? Summer means pause.
Just when the days are long and people are finally free⌠everything closes.
âSommarĂśppettiderâ â that means reduced hours: libraries, sports centers, pools, public transport. As if summer is a problem, not an opportunity.
đ Reducing hours exactly when people are on vacation is hard to understand. Then we wonder why people donât exercise or choose McDonaldâs. But if nothing is open, what options do you have?
đŤ The âSummer Ticketâ â an expensive bureaucratic joke
Want to explore the region by public transport in summer? You have the âSommarbiljettâ. But:
Itâs not valid for 3 months, only for 2.5 months (June 15 â August 15).
You canât buy it for the whole period. Only in 30-day segments.
If you get your first ticket on June 15, it only covers until August 15.
From August 15 to August 31? Too bad.
Price: 860 SEK â basically a normal GĂśteborg monthly price extended to the whole region. Nothing âsummer specialâ about it.
If you want people to stay in the country during summer, to discover nature, you make the ticket:
- free or low cost
- flexible â one week, two weeks, a month
But no, here you make it expensive, limited, and inconsistent.
đââď¸đ§đż Jubileumsparken â the symbol of paradox
The most promoted summer spot in GĂśteborg. Theoretically: sauna, fresh and saltwater pools, green spaces.
In practice?
â¨ď¸ The sauna is almost always broken. No repair deadline.
đ Pools are opaque, full of algae â you canât see even 15 cm down.
Rules? Completely ignored. It says no jumping in, but people jump like crazy. Watch out not to get hit on the head.
Swimming? Forget it â itâs just splashing around, not a real pool.
Ecological doesnât mean unmaintained. But here, thatâs exactly what it means.
đ§łâ Tourism? Only in theory
GĂśteborg, a city with sea, forests, wide parks, history. And yet tourists are rare. Why?
Because:
- Thereâs no nightlife â the city âdiesâ at 9â10 PM, even in July.
- No friendly guidance or atmosphere.
- Attractions? Two train tours and thatâs it.
No one visits a city where nothing is offered â not out of hostility, but due to inaction and lack of vision.
â¨ď¸ Public facilities? Broken, closed, ignored
This applies generally. Pools, sports centers, saunas. A defect can last weeks.
No one demands explanations. No one offers any. Just an A4 sheet: âtemporarily closed.â
The truth? No urgency because thereâs no pressure from the people. And everyone is silent.
đˇđ Letâs recap:
đˇ Bike lanes blocked â in a city proud of cycling.
đ Reduced summer hours â when people have time and light, they find closed doors.
đ ď¸ Saunas broken for weeks â no announcements, no worries.
đ âEcologicalâ pools closed or dirty â canât see, canât swim.
đŤ Ignored restrictions â no supervision, no accountability.
đ Childish tourist attractions â a train and some flyers.
đ¤đ§ But perhaps the worst: silence
Why are people silent in Sweden?
đ§ 1. Conflict-avoidance culture
Theyâre told from childhood: âDonât complain, donât attract attention.â Criticism is seen as a threat, not something helpful.
đśâđŤď¸ 2. Cold individualism
If it doesnât affect you directly, you donât care. People live in their bubbles. Time is âtoo precious for involvement.â
đ§ 3. Fear of standing out / jantelagen
Donât stand out, donât disturb. Donât think youâre special. Even when youâre right, stay quiet.
đ¤ 4. Lack of real civic engagement
People donât feel that change is in their hands anymore. They wait for âsomeone else to do something.â
đŞ 5. Social self-sabotage
Many know something is wrong but choose to stay silent, endure, anesthetize themselves. Itâs easier than being angry and clear-headed.
đŻ Conclusion?
Sweden seems to want to remain closed in on itself. Even in summer. Even to its own residents. Even to those who might want to discover it.
Not out of ill will. But out of lack of reaction, courage, and societal pressure.
Everything becomes a simulacrum: programs âfor the citizenâs good,â but only on paper.
And summer paradoxically becomes the closed season.
PS
đ¸đŞ In Sweden, the retirement age has recently increased: from 65 to 67 years. In a country where youth unemployment sometimes hits 30%, and general unemployment is nearly 10%. And, unlike France, no one protests. No one says a word. Everyone stays silent, perhaps hoping they will die before retirement.
The official explanation? âSo people feel active, engaged, like they still matter.â But you can be active if you want â not if itâs imposed. When it becomes mandatory, itâs no longer for you. Itâs for âthem.â Itâs against you.
PPS
The issues raised in this article â every single one â I tried to post, one by one, in the largest Facebook groups of the city or neighborhood. Not only were they not approved, but they were dismissed as âundesirable.â Even though all I did was expose a reality that those very group admins should be addressing for the communityâs good.
Apparently, being honest and truthful isnât enough when the truth disturbs. Maybe the peace and âprettyâ image of the city matter more than an honest conversation. But without voice and courage, change will never come.