I am still shocked to this day that more nations have not looked at the Icelandic model of refusing the criminal austerity measures and taking their criminal bankers to task for creating their economic ruination in the first place. To again show how the Icelandic model works, I want to present the following very interesting article, from the website: Waking Times, at www.wakingtimes.com,entitled: "Icelanders Force Accountability For Banks, Why Can't We?" for everyone to see here for themselves. I have my own comments and thoughts to follow:
Icelanders Force Accountability for Banks – Why Can’t We?
George Lakey, Contributor
Waking Times
Ever since Iceland’s economy collapsed in 2008, the country has been
busy reinventing itself. The first step was to restore democracy through
a turbulent nonviolent struggle, then to force resignations in the
financial sector and secure a criminal conviction of their prime
minister for dereliction of duty. Now they are exploring getting a new
currency: the Canadian dollar.
If Icelanders think their traditional money has lost its legitimacy,
why not adopt the euro or the U.S. dollar?
Too much influence from the
big banks of Europe and the U.S., they believe. Better to risk
interference from the smaller and much better-regulated banks of Canada.
(Canada, like the publicly-owned state bank of North Dakota, did far
better in the 2008 crisis than most of the U.S. and Europe.)
For decades, Iceland was part of the “Nordic model” of social
democracy, with the high standards of living, free university education,
universal health care, full employment and other benefits. Like Norway
and Sweden, in the late 1980s the Icelanders flirted with neoliberalism,
but unlike their Viking cousins they went all the way. The right-wing
party privatized banks, cut regulations and lowered the corporate tax
rate. The banks, in turn, created a bubble through hysterical foreign
borrowing, and the bubble broke in September 2008. Banks failed.
Unemployment and inflation shot up, and crisis reigned.
In mid-October, the singer/songwriter Hörður Torfason stood in the
public square in the capitol of Reykjavik with an open microphone,
inviting passersby to speak. Every Saturday people gathered to speak and
protest, to the point where 2,000 people gathered outside the
parliament building on January 20. They banged pots and pans to disrupt
the meeting of parliament – the “Kitchenware Revolution,” they called
it.
The crowds grew to 10,000 — out of a total population of 320,000! —
and the increasing turbulence forced Prime Minister Geir H. Haarde to
announce that he and his cabinet would resign and new elections would be
held. Although politicians responsible for Iceland’s financial life
were resigning, the campaigners didn’t stop there; they demanded — and won — the resignation of the governing board of the Central Bank.
The social democrats came back into power and started to clean up the
mess, with help from Sweden and Norway. Iceland was hurt and people had
tough times. However, the social democrats refused to do what
capitalist wizards expected. Instead of trying to pacify international
investors, Iceland created controls on the movement of capital. Instead
of initiating an austerity program, the government expanded its social
safety net.
According to The New York Times,
“Some economists have argued that the collapse of its banks forced the
country to deal with its problems faster and aided a swifter recovery.”
Iceland’s economy is expected to grow 2.5 percent this year and next.
But the mood of the cheated Icelanders was not, “Let’s move on.”
In March, Iceland opened a criminal trial against its former prime minister. Continues the same Times article:
Mr. Haarde was charged, in effect, with doing too little to protect the country against the depredations of its bankers as they pursued wildly expansionary lending that resulted in financial disaster for the country.
Haarde was found guilty. Former executives of the failed Kaupthing Bank have also been indicted.
The movement of Icelanders that rejected a European Union-style
austerity program and instead put accountability where it belonged did
not come out of thin air. Even while some Icelanders were trying to buy
glamour through neoliberalism, others spent the years between 2000 and
2006 protesting the Karahnjukar hydropower project that the Icelandic 1 percent sponsored along with the Alcoa and Bechtel corporations.
Decades before that eco-justice campaign, Icelandic women shut down most of the nation for a day in 1975 to force passage of a civil-rights bill for women’s equality.
I see two big lessons that the rest of us can learn from the painful
Icelandic experience. First, avoid assuming that activism is a
“sometimes thing,” to be put aside after major victories are won.
Icelandic activists achieved much but then almost lost it. As Canadian
labor unions are fond of pointing out, “The struggle continues.”
Second, it is possible to take your country back from the
mismanagement of the economic elite if your campaign’s strategy
generates broad participation. Iceland mobilized no less than 3 percent
of its population in direct action. For U.S. activists, that implies
giving serious attention to campaign organizing and generating allies.
The model of just occasional “mass bashes” doesn’t cut it.
This article originally appeared at WagingNon-Violence.org, an inspirational source of ideas on non-violent solutions to political issues. Click here to support their noble efforts.
NTS Notes: For the last few years, I have been asking WHY the mainstream media all over the world avoids the issue of Iceland like a plague, and I can see why... The vast majority of the criminal banks that ruined Iceland in the first place were run by Jewish interests, and the world wide media is also run by Jewish interests. It does not take much to see that the media definitely supports their own tribe members, and will not report any information that goes against the criminal Jewish banker elite...
My only problem with this article is the thought of Iceland adopting the Canadian Dollar... I would say to the Icelanders to absolutely not go that route! The Canadian banking system is totally under Rothschild interests, and to adopt the Canadian currency would hand the nation back over to the same criminal banksters that caused their mess in the first place.
It is imperative that any nations that are actually considering selling their nations out to perpetual enslavement by accepting criminal Jewish banking austerity measures to somehow "save" their own nations' economies, take a closer look at what the good people of Iceland did to stop their own enslavement. Iceland has definitely shown the way!
More to come
NTS

1 comment:
Great tips, I like the guidelines you've laid out here...helpful!
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