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Jan Kallberg grew up in Sweden and at an early age realized that collectivistic solutions and socialism made no sense. During the 1970s, the Leftist winds were in full blow through Western Europe with strong anti-sentiment against the United States. Jan has debated for the last thirty years in Sweden through books, articles, and speeches in defense of freedom, liberty, and the individual’s rights. He has authored eight books and was a columnist for Sweden’s largest daily newspaper, Metro, for seven years. 

During the 1980s, he traveled extensively through Soviet-occupied Eastern Europe strengthening his belief in the fundamental values that some take for granted: justice, equality and freedom of speech. He organized substantial support that was smuggled through Soviet border controls to Conservatives in occupied Estonia, providing resources for their electoral campaign, which supported the creation of Estonia’s first elected government in fifty years.   

In the late 1980s, he traveled through the Angolan Civil War where Cuban and Soviet troops were fighting a savage war against insurgents backed by Ronald Reagan. He is one of three that has travelled from the Caprivi Strip to the Zaire border in the midst of the war and one out of two that survived. 

During the peak of the terrorist Intifada against Israel in 2002, Jan lived in Netanya, the hardest hit city in Israel and stayed there eight months, and experienced what it is like to live under imminent threat of terrorist attacks.

Jan has been a Conservative activist who firmly believes in the ideas that once formed the United States of America.  Through his diverse international experiences and exposure in life the impact of any tampering these ideas given by the founding fathers.

Jan Kallberg holds a J.D./LL.M. from Juridicum Law School, Stockholm University, and