I'm just grateful to you for providing the links! I only mentioned that particular gender problem because (like the odd words instead of 'dismembering') it keeps coming up and people who haven't read the earlier posts may be baffled.
As a joke, the murderer, submarine builder Peter Madsen and some of those who worked with him allegedly gave themselves and each other nazi-inspired nicknames.
One of the Swedish journalist Kim Wall girlfriends writes in an article in the American magazine Wired after she decided to seek family, friends and acquaintances with Peter Madsen to find out what happened to her girlfriend when she stepped on board his submarine and lost his life.
In the article, the friend - American May Jeong writes - that she has, among other things, spoken to several who worked with Peter Madsen before he was arrested last year in August for killing the Swedish journalist aboard the Nautilus submarine.
One of the people she talked to is Jens Falkenberg, who helped build the submarine together with Peter Madsen, and until Kim Wall's death was one of his close friends.
"It's hard for us to understand what drives a madman, because we're not mad," he says in the interview.
Pretended as if he was violent Nazi
Furthermore, he allegedly explains to the friend that Peter Madsen could, as a joke, pretend he was a violent Nazi and sometimes pretended he wanted to beat Falkenberg while he could say things like: "Shall I hit you in the kidneys?" or: 'What if I inject battery acid into your blood vessels?'.
All in all, a number of Nazis were mentioned and joked with at Peter Madsen's workshop, May Jeong writes in the article.
The staff allegedly called each other for Nazi-inspired nicknames. Peter Madsens was, according to Falkenberg 'Kaleun' - after 'Kapitänleutnant' referring to the film 'Das Boot', which is about a fictional German submarine during World War II.
When they were on the submarine, the crew apparently often spoke German, as they repeated lines from the 1981 film.
I found this a bit disturbing, from your link.Kim Walls friend has written an article in the American magazine Wired after she decided to seek family, friends and acquaintances to the killing man to find out what happened to her girlfriend when she got on board Peter Madsen submarine and lost her life.
And Yay its on real english:
https://www.wired.com/story/final-terrible-voyage-nautilus/
I wrote Madsen two letters at Vestre Prison in Copenhagen, where he was being held before trial. I FedExed the first and dropped off the second in a mailbox near the jail. I told him who I was, who Kim had been, my sadness over losing her, and my wish that he would tell me what happened. One afternoon in January, months after Id returned to New York, I went to pick up my mail and found an envelope with no return address. It was postmarked from Denmark on December 6, 2017, but that didnt register until after Id opened it and started scanning the neat, hand-written pages. It was only when I got to the word submarine that I realized Madsen had written to me from his detention cell. I remember telling myself to keep breathing as I tried to fold the pages back into the envelope. I did not succeed. The envelope was small and thin and ripped in my hands.
When I finally forced myself to look at the lettersthere were three, dated in September and NovemberI was struck by their terrifying banality. He spoke plainly about the boredom of prisonhe had few visitors and few pastimes besides writing. He described seeing Terminator 2 in prison and identifying with the character played by Linda Hamilton. He explained what he had access to (paper and pencil) and what he didnt have access to (nearly everything else). He also wrote about Kim. He wrote that he thought about Kim every day and that he could feel her spirit somehow. There was a disturbing intimacy to his words, as if he were writing to an old friend. He flattered my writing style and invited me to visit. He asked me, What are you? An explainer trying to understand? A terminator sent to terminate me? ... Without exceptionwhatever you areyou are welcome, I am all yours. He ended one of the letters by saying I will try to get this letter out to you as soon as possible, and hope that you will stay in touch as things gets easyer [sic].
I found this a bit disturbing, from your link.
Thank you for that logical_inferenceKim Walls friend has written an article in the American magazine Wired after she decided to seek family, friends and acquaintances to the killing man to find out what happened to her girlfriend when she got on board Peter Madsen submarine and lost her life.
And Yay its on real english:
https://www.wired.com/story/final-terrible-voyage-nautilus/
Agree. That is why you should better not write. Don't invite evil.
If she is wise, she'll leave it at that.
Yes. Can´t believe she wrote him, what did she expect?
Yes. Can´t believe she wrote him, what did she expect?
I told him who I was, who Kim had been, my sadness over losing her, and my wish that he would tell me what happened.
I thought May Jeong's article was one of the best I've seen published. She has together with the family set up a memorial fund for Kim Wall, and I am almost certain that she let them read before publication. I'd like to dispel a few myths here. Is in depth journalism an easy way to make a living? Of course not, real journalism doesn't pay the bills, lazily copying other people's work, never leaving your screen pays much better. Writing to Peter Madsen is not an offence, and I think his reply was interesting though completely sickening. She wanted answers, and so do we. Some were given. I am honestly a bit shocked that you would try to shame May, who like Kim Wall is doing real reporting in this thread, and I really don't understand why.
People are very different, and of course there are cases where journalists over step. In this case the journalist is one of the founders of KW memorial fund, she has met with the family and boyfriend. I sincerely doubt that she would cross those lines with them. Many people who have lost loved ones live with questions about the crime, even when the perpetrator is known. For me, the explanation "Madsen is crazy" is unsatisfactory. I want to know why he's crazy? How did the community, friends and family perceive him and affect him? And I also would like to know exactly what happened on that submarine and why. That's why I'm working on this case as a journalist.