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Unaware to what could have caused the scrum, he retreated to a nearby cafe. When his phone rang, it was a Swedish reporter asking why his car was at the centre of a large-scale terrorism alert operation in Copenhagen, as wires snaking up from under the chassis over the door had set off their suspicions. "I rushed off to the police and explained that it was an invention," Zethraeus said. "The bomb squad smiled a bit and weren't particularly upset, but the police were quite tense."
He noted that he had driven his car around with the odd contraption for about a month back home in Sweden, without causing any misunderstandings with law enforcement. "It's an invention and not meant to be perceived as a terror threat," Zethraeus said of his invention, an environmental system which he had hoped to patent in the not-too.distant future. "But I guess that's gone up in smoke, as there's been so much attention due to this."
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And while the Swedish inventor said he was sincerely sorry for scaring the Danes, he also said he wished they'd run his licence plates through the register and called him first so he could explain. "It wouldn't have taken more than a few minutes in such an important case," he said. "I'm sorry that people were frightened, that's not what I wanted, I just wanted to save the world from environmental destruction."
2 comments:
Intelligent people outgrow the "save the world" syndrome when in their early 20s. You have grey in your beard. Ergo...
yeah..since it has been confirmed to work by researchers at Lund University (at low efficiency though) why should he outgrow it?
Can you say terrorist hype?
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