Swedism: Sexist Pastry Forced to Change Its Name

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
February 23, 2015

This is what true oppression looks like.
This is what true oppression looks like.

A Swedish pastry has been forced to change its name because it was demeaning to the value of women.

Men in Sweden, being obsessed with machismo and patriarchy, and constantly on the look out for ways to make women feel like they have no value, like they are nothing more than a smaller version of a bigger afternoon snack.

The Local:

The almond paste-filled cream bun stirred up emotions Friday after a bakery in southern Sweden aimed its miniature version of the popular calorie bomb at women, calling the sized-down delight “the girl semla”.

Critics immediately took to social networks to express their outrage, calling it “disgusting” and “sexist”.

“I think this is a good example of how you, without any real intention, still manage to oppress women,” a person who spotted the offending bun in the bakery’s shop window told Swedish daily Sydsvenskan.

The head of the bakery, Ida Kristensson, first tried to defend the choice of name for the miniature bun, but finally gave in to the criticism.

“The name was never meant to encourage or apply guilt (on women), which in itself would have been contradictory seeing we’re running a bakery. But of course I take your well-founded criticism to heart and I apologise. As of tomorrow, our tiny semla will be named ‘the mini semla’,” she wrote on Facebook late Friday evening.

The battle for women’s freedoms goes far beyond pastries, and it will continue to rage until they finally have true freedom.