Sweden's Twitter Experiment: Good Idea or Recipe for Disaster?
SodaHead News
2012/06/13 13:00:00
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For the last nine months, Sweden's official Twitter account (@Sweden) has been handed over to a new citizen each week as part of a social media experiment. But this week the experiment took a turn for the worse when 27-year-old Sonja Abrahamsson took the reigns and began tweeting about Jewish people, circumcision, nazis, and the holocaust. Yeah...
Abrahamsson wrote, "I just don't get why some people hates jews so much. Where I come from there is no jews. I guess its a religion. But why were the nazis talking about races? ... Once I asked a co-worker what a jew is. He was 'part jew,' whatever that means ... Whats the fuzz with jews. You can’t even see if a person is a jew, unless you see their penises, and even if you do, you can’t be sure!?" Needless to say, there was some outrage. But does this reflect poorly on Sweden's experiment, or does it still have value?

Abrahamsson wrote, "I just don't get why some people hates jews so much. Where I come from there is no jews. I guess its a religion. But why were the nazis talking about races? ... Once I asked a co-worker what a jew is. He was 'part jew,' whatever that means ... Whats the fuzz with jews. You can’t even see if a person is a jew, unless you see their penises, and even if you do, you can’t be sure!?" Needless to say, there was some outrage. But does this reflect poorly on Sweden's experiment, or does it still have value?























So frankly my dear I don't give a damn.
This woman was speaking her mind. Nothing wrong with that. And when your government gift wraps a way to speak your mind to a larger audience, what are you supposed to do, change who you are? Of course not, you continue to speak you mind. She's not representing Sweden, she's representing herself. If the purpose was to represent Sweden, then they could have done it just as well by themselves.
The point is, this experiment represents Sweden as a whole. you take the tweets and look at them on average. When you look at them individually, then you are taking it upon yourself to look at the individual, not the country. You can't call off an experiment such as this because of one person you disagree with. Even if the entire country disagrees with you and agrees with her, that's a successful experiment, and a big red light on how the country is turning out, since the government is obviously not in the best interest of the people of the time.
It was a good idea before, and it still is. Just let it run its course.
Hopefully Sweden won't let one fool ruin for everyone.
To me, Sonja either genuinely does not know and was curious, or was totally trolling and got a really great reaction from people half a world away from her.