Posts Tagged ‘Lunch’

Solving The Wrong Problem

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Worrying himself sick every night over the household’s finances, he decided that the correct and responsible thing to do would be to talk to his bank.

The bank’s friendly customer representative brought out a spreadsheet and started entering information about his earnings and spending.

“This is what you have to do”, she said. “You have to stop taking the kids to movies, start bring lunch to work, wear out those shoes you’ve got on and I would recommend you to get rid of the car and start walking or taking the bus.” That way she estimated that he would be in good shape in five years or so, depending on course on the economy.

His correct reply would have been, “What I need to stop doing is paying 12-25% interest on everything from my mortgage to my overdraft. The consumer price indexing of everything is costing me several times more than occasional movie trips with the kids and new shoes once in a while. It basically has meant that everything I have worked for in the last 10-15 years has only left me with more debt”.

Instead he sat silent. The customer representative continued, “Well, we’ll arrange this for you with our great selection of financial products. Tell me, isn’t it time you saw one of our insurance and pension advisors?”.

Related posts:

  1. It Came To The Point Where I Saw No Sense In Continuing To Pay
  2. A Good Story, A Bad Bet And Things Gone Wrong
  3. Icelanders’ Sense Of Debt

The Day of Relaxation

Saturday, December 26th, 2009

Today is the Second Day of Christmas. After eating to excess on December 24 and 25, many families just have leftovers for lunch, enjoy their new things and relax on December 26.

A Curious Nation’s Meeting

Thursday, October 15th, 2009
Much is being made of an intended Nation’s Meeting which is due to be held at Laugardalsholl on November 14.
The stated intent of the meeting is “to raise up the national discussion, above the daily arguments and arguments on single issues and cast our eyes to the future, built upon the common values of the nation. The goal of the national meeting is to energize the wisdom of the population and make it accessible for everyone who is interested in providing to the rebuilding of Icelandic society and economy.”
Invitational letters have been sent to 1.200 Icelanders, who have been picked randomly from the National Registry. Additionally the representatives of 300 institutions and organizations have been invited.
The whole day will be spent in groups of nine and a special method will be used to ensure everyone’s participation in the discussion. Results and ideas will be collected by a powerful processing group.
The group behind the meeting calls itself the Anthill, but the name refers to the loads that individuals find hard to move themselves and need to be moved in unison.  The group contains people with diverse  opinions and backgrounds but first and foremost are burning with desire to point the way forward to a brighter future for Iceland. The group is volunteering its work, and the  meeting and its results will be “owned” by the nation.
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In the press releases little mention is made of who is behind the Anthill, or who is paying for the whole shebangs. Those who arrive by plane will be reimbursed. Coffee, lunch and dinner is served and then there is the small matter of renting the venue, printing and delivering of the invitations etc.
I hate to be the one who’s pooping at the party but this whole thing seems queer. Is this just a glorified Herbalife-meeting, a Dale Carnegie session on steroids, a hug-fest or what? A relative who got an invitational card mentioned that it had the feel of a religious gathering.
At the time of writing, more than 2.300 people have signed up for the Nation’s Meeting on Facebook and most of the media have published its press releases. It is amazing how eager people are to sign up for something like this without apparantly knowing the following:
a) Who is behind the Anthill?
b) How is the whole thing being paid for? Who is paying? Why?
c) What will be done with the information gathered? How is the material gathered supposed to be “owned” by the nation?
d) What is the follow through going to be like afterwards?
e) Who is going to speak on the behalf of this gathering afterwards? How?
f) How is the Nation’s meeting going to implement and spread the wisdom gathered?
g) Who elects them to do so?
h) If an idea is voiced at the gathering, could someone else use it to his/hers gain?
i) Does the Anthill have employees? What happens with the donations it is gathering? Who is able to distribute its funds?
j) What is Mobilitius? Why is the Nation’s Meeting presented by Mobilitus? Who is behind it?
The people behind the Anthill are Gudjon Mar Gudmundsson, Maria Ellingssen, Halla Tomasdottir, Larus Ymir Oskarsson, Bjarni Snaebjorn Jonsson, Gunnar Jonatansson and curiously enough Svandis Svavarsdottir, minister of environmental affairs.
At first sight it seems like a gathering of people who like to talk but not listen. And that this gathering will mostly benefit the Anthill’s founders CV’s. Maybe get them onto a TED stage or two?
But hey, maybe I’m just too cynical? Personally I think the public discussion in Iceland is healthier than it has been since I can remember.

Much is being made of an intended Nation’s Meeting which is due to be held at Laugardalsholl on November 14.

The stated intent of the meeting is “to raise up the national discussion, above the daily arguments and arguments on single issues and cast our eyes to the future, built upon the common values of the nation. The goal of the national meeting is to energize the wisdom of the population and make it accessible for everyone who is interested in providing to the rebuilding of Icelandic society and economy.”

Invitational letters have been sent to 1.200 Icelanders, who have been picked randomly from the National Registry. Additionally the representatives of 300 institutions and organizations have been invited.

The whole day will be spent in groups of nine and a special method will be used to ensure everyone’s participation in the discussion. Results and ideas will be collected by a powerful processing group.

The group behind the meeting calls itself the Anthill, but the name refers to the loads that individuals find hard to move themselves and need to be moved in unison.  The group contains people with diverse  opinions and backgrounds but first and foremost are burning with desire to point the way forward to a brighter future for Iceland. The group is volunteering its work, and the  meeting and its results will be “owned” by the nation.

????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

In the press releases little mention is made of who is behind the Anthill, or who is paying for the whole shebangs. Those who arrive by plane will be reimbursed. Coffee, lunch and dinner is served and then there is the small matter of renting the venue, printing and delivering of the invitations etc.

I hate to be the one who’s pooping at the party but this whole thing seems queer. Is this just a glorified Herbalife-meeting, a Dale Carnegie session on steroids, a hug-fest or what? A relative who got an invitational card mentioned that it had the feel of a religious gathering.

At the time of writing, more than 2.300 people have signed up for the Nation’s Meeting on Facebook and most of the media have published its press releases. It is amazing how eager people are to sign up for something like this without apparantly knowing the following:

a) Who is behind the Anthill?

b) How is the whole thing being paid for? Who is paying? Why?

c) What will be done with the information gathered? How is the material gathered supposed to be “owned” by the nation?

d) What is the follow through going to be like afterwards?

e) Who is going to speak on the behalf of this gathering afterwards? How?

f) How is the Nation’s meeting going to implement and spread the wisdom gathered?

g) Who elects them to do so?

h) If an idea is voiced at the gathering, could someone else use it to his/hers gain?

i) Does the Anthill have employees? What happens with the donations it is gathering? Who is able to distribute its funds?

j) What is Mobilitius? Why is the Nation’s Meeting presented by Mobilitus? Who is behind it?

The people behind the Anthill are Gudjon Mar Gudmundsson, Maria Ellingssen, Halla Tomasdottir, Larus Ymir Oskarsson, Bjarni Snaebjorn Jonsson, Gunnar Jonatansson and curiously enough Svandis Svavarsdottir, minister of environmental affairs.

At first sight it seems like a gathering of people who like to talk but do they like to listen? And that this gathering will mostly benefit the Anthill’s founders CV’s. Maybe get them onto a TED stage or two?

But hey, maybe I’m just too cynical?

What was the Saucepan revolution about?

Monday, March 30th, 2009

This winter has been eventful here in Iceland to say the least. The recession activated a new force in our country, a force of activism, a powerful hunger for justice, and the longing to understand how things could go so utterly wrong.

In early October of last year, in the immediate after math of a total financial collapse, hundreds of individuals in Iceland had had enough. Something had to be done. I could not stand the idea of watching my country slowly sinking into complete failure without at least doing something. I had heard that a man named Hörður Torfason had already started protesting at Austurvöllur, a small park in the center of Reykjavík. So I went there and talked to him, this was in the first week after the collapse and I stood there during lunch with a couple of old ladies and a few elderly men. We could not have been more than 10 at that point, a crowd that turned into thousands a few weeks later. This moment was a turning point for activism in Iceland. Without knowing, hundreds of other people, many who had never been involved in activism before, had the same feeling as I did. This was our change of making a difference, although most of us were complete strangers with different opinions on many issues, we could all agree that the current coalition of the Independents Party and Social Democrats had lost all trust and could not continue.

The Saucepan revolution was a success. Bankers who thought they could just carry on like nothing had happened were forced to resign, and politicians resigned, an event uncommon in our history. In the end the coalition was forced out of power. After months of protesting and hard work from many brave people, we had made a real difference. Let me remind you, we did this without any violence at all. Almost no one got injured, except a few dozen protestors with pepper spray in their eyes and a policeman who had to be taken to an emergency room when a rock hit his head; fortunately he had his helmet on. I don’t count a few walls covered in dairy products or the occasional broken window as violence, nor should anyone.

We now have elections coming up in a few weeks and the war is on. For me, and I suspect many others, the biggest victory was to get the Independents Party out of power, at long last. They have been in power for the last 18 years and desperately need a breake after bankrupting our country with unfiltered libertarianism straight from their friend, Milton Friedman. Mr. Friedman visited Iceland on many occasions and was personal friends with some of the most powerful people inside the Party. They were even going to make Iceland the financial capital of the world, a nation of 300 thousand people, just imagine.

After being knocked out, barely standing on their feet, the Independents Party is starting the campaign to get back into power. The message is being sent out, apparently the protests were planned by the Left-Green Party and the Social Democrats. It was all just a big conspiracy to get them out of power. The sad thing is that many people take the bait, but the truth is, no one planned the revolution, it happened because a lot of people got angry and felt betrayed. We wanted justice, but the Independents Party will never acknowledge that. It happened because of their failed policies.

One of the more popular myths is that no one protested in front of the headquarters of Baugur Group, a company which the right-wing has been trying hard to connect to the left for years. Again, to divide us up and against each other. The fact is that no one got a free card in what happened, there was a protest in front of the Baugur headquarters at least once and in many of Baugur owned companies like Bónus. No one was spared.

The Independents Party is a strange beast. It has most of its philosophy from the US’s Republican Party and wants nothing more than to make Iceland a part of the United States, the 51st State, if you will. Their complete financial policy was built on the neo conservative policies of Ronald Reagan and his like. It’s no wonder Davíð Oddsson, their old leader and former chairman of the Central Bank, has been called the last neo-con in Europe. Iceland was no longer a nordic welfare state, but an American ultra-capitalist experiment gone horribly wrong.

Another popular meme is that all of the people protesting were just leftist communist hippies who were being controlled by the left and told what to do. As you can see, these people don’t even bother coming up with their own lies. They are partially right though. Most of the people were left leaning. But it wasn’t because of some invisible communist hand directing people to protest against the Capitalists. Let’s quote Hannes H. Gissurason (the Karl Rove of Iceland), a staunch defender of the Party and a close friend to both Davíð Oddson, former PM Geir Haarde and Milton Friedman: “Voters of the Independents Party are very loyal to their leader [..] they don’t think much about politics and are rather apolitical. These are people who like to profit during the day and barbecue in the evening”. He then added that leftists liked to argue and solve problems by reading poems and have meetings. No wonder we didn’t see any Independents Party voters down at Austurvöllur this winter. They were all busy, cleaning barbecue sauce from their faces.

By Andri Sigurðsson

Eva Joly Signs Agreement with Iceland's Government to Investigate Banks' Collapse

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Judge and investigator Eva Joly has signed a special agreement with Iceland’s government to assist the special prosecutor in investigating the banks' collapse. The agreement was announced at a press conference attended by Mme Joly, Minister of Justice Ragna Árnadóttir and Ólafur Þ. Hauksson, appointed Special Prosecutor investigating the Icelandic banks’ collapse.