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First Iceland, then the World

Michael Collins

The public is angry. Why should the public pay for the bankers mistakes. Iceland blogger Halldor Sigurdsson

Who cleans up the mess when ignorant, greedy bankers rack up massive debt then go broke? The people of Iceland made a strong statement Saturday. The sins of big bankers and government regulators shouldn’t fall on the citizens. By a 93% to 2% margin, they voted down a proposal requiring them to cover bad debt incurred by one of the nation’s oldest and largest banks. Covering the debt would have cost Iceland’s 317,000 citizens around $17,000 each.

Iceland’s national referendum was the first opportunity for the people of any nation to vote directly on who pays when the financial elite fail.

As citizens voted, Iceland’s Prime Minister was dismissing the importance of the vote and promising to negotiate a payment scheme obligating citizen subsidies for bad debt created by Iceland’s beyond-bad bankers.

Icelanders are struggling with a collapsed economy. Businesses are failing at a startling rate, unemployment is soaring, and the prospects for the future are simply not there. Yet the British and Dutch governments demand that their swindled citizens receive compensation from beleaguered Icelanders. Where were the British and Dutch central banks and politicians while their citizens were being fleeced? Aren’t the rulers of these countries aware that the failed Icelandic bank was owned by wealth investors, not the citizens?

Iceland’s size and the very dire circumstances offer a focused preview for citizens around the world. The banks make bad deal after bad deal. When they’re about to fail, the government steps in with a taxpayer bailout. It doesn’t matter which faction of the narrow political spectrum is in charge. The message is starkly clear — when the banks fail, you pay. The solution is presented to citizens as a fait accompli, a mandatory submission to indefinite financial slavery for the benefit of the failed financial elite. The will of the people doesn’t matter even when there’s a direct vote.

The failed financial enterprises that control global commerce are opening their new show on the road in Iceland. Greek citizens are next in line for indentured servitude, thanks to their lying leaders and Wall Street’s Goldman Sachs.

Citizens in the United States remain overwhelmingly opposed to bailouts for Wall Street and big banks. Like Iceland’s Prime Minister, members of Congress and the president don’t care. Big banks have now received at least $12 trillion in credit and cash from the US Treasury and Federal Reserve Bank. The 17 million citizens out of work, their families, and the eight million forced to work reduced hours are barely mentioned and get just a pittance compared to the ultra wealthy bankers.

How did the financial elite and their political minions do it in Iceland? The lesson is instructive.

Tiny Iceland‘s Bankers Fool British and Dutch Regulators

Iceland’s second largest bank wanted some new customers. In 2006, the bank created the Icesave banking service. For the British market, Icesave pushed high fixed interest rates and easy access to online banking. The Netherlands sales pitch was based on banking transparency, seeing how the bank functioned online, with a 5% interest rate on deposits.

British regulators voiced no major problem with Icesave’s policies until the bank collapsed in October 2008. The Netherlands central bank (just now in a liquidity crisis) gave its stamp of approval to Icesave even though there were substantial warning signs that the bank was in trouble.

By the time Icesave was insolvent, its 300,000 British depositors and over 100,000 in the Netherlands saw their money vanish. The finger pointing began. The Dutch central bank claimed Iceland’s regulators lied to them. British regulators were shocked at the disarray of Iceland’s banking system.

Dutch and British regulators failed to mention that they’d outsourced regulation for their citizens to tiny Iceland’s central bank. These financially savvy nations couldn’t be bothered with their own people until the Icesave scheme did its damage.

Dutch and British political leaders somehow forgot to mention that Sweden and Norway insured the deposits of their citizens when another Icelandic bank failed in those countries.

Icelanders Stuck with the Bill

Icesave’s failed business tactics, negligent regulation by Iceland’s government, and indifferent British and Dutch authorities created the problem. But citizens are taking the fall.

The usual suspect, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), offered up billions in cash in return for covering the lost deposits for British and Dutch citizens. IMF backed off of this position as it became clear that Icelanders would reject the March 6 referendum. (Image)

Ultimately, the financial machinations by international bankers and G-20 leaders don’t matter. The people of Iceland are in no position to pay the bill. Pretending otherwise only prolongs the charade of some order for the comatose global financial system. Who benefits? The financial elite who continue to accumulate more and more money as though it’s actually worth something.

Furious Citizens – Bloggers Won’t Give Up

Icelanders take their voting seriously. Turnout is usually above 80%. But the turnout for this referendum was 57%, the lowest figure in years.

The very good news is that Icelanders are providing real analysis and hitting the streets on a regular basis to protest the big con pulled by their leaders and financial elite. This is a sample of the vibrant dialog of the people who choose to fight back.

Independent Icelandic News – The Icesave Fraud Case

“The public was deliberately lied to and the deception was complete. The banks fell, the Brits and Dutch, and Germans too are pissed off and we Icelanders have to loose our savings, our homes, our jobs, our dignity. We also have to pay for the Germans, the Dutch and the Brits.

“We are only starting to ‘feel the cold dead hand of the neoconservatist financial free market monster’ that tore through the world and is still squeezing the Icelandic nation, even after its death. We don’t get a recession, we get a complete collapse.” June 23, 2009

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Economic Disaster Area – Arrogant, Humiliating, Short Sighted, and Stupid

“Right now the nation is numb. Everyone is waiting for something while trying to stay afloat. Businesses and individuals who have been watching their cash fly out the window atop exorbitant interest rates for years are experiencing a drowning feeling. It seems like many are just shutting their eyes and resigning their fate to fate itself while still waiting for rescue to appear somewhere on the horizon.  (Image)

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The Iceland Weather Report – Johanna (Iceland‘s Prime Minister) sends a clear message

“As if the government wasn’t in enough trouble with public opinion here at home, Prime Minister Johanna Sigurðardóttir has publicly announced that she plans to shun the referendum tomorrow.

‘To me it is pointless and I find it is very sad that the first referendum since the founding of the republic revolves around legislation that is already obsolete. Consequently I see no point in taking part in this referendum,’ (said Iceland’s Prime Minister). alda March 5, 2010

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Iceland Banking Crisis News and More

“According to numbers, 1.5 % percent have said yes to the agreement to pay Icesave, but 93.6 say not to that. But this does not change anything. The Prime minister and finance minister say that there is a new deal on the table. Iceland’s President says that a Referendum makes the democracy stronger. The outcome of the referendum does not have any affect on the government in Iceland.” Halldor Sigurdsson, Mar 7

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Economic Disaster Area – National Referendum – A Sad Day for Democracy in Iceland

“Tomorrow is the first national referendum Icelandic citizens have been allowed to participate in by the political elite since the conception of the republic in 1944. By all measures, this should be a happy day for democracy in Iceland.

“But instead it is not a cause for celebration but a large milestone in the farcical power play which has taken place between the four largest political movements in Iceland since 1944.

“Yes, a farce.’Isn‘t that what this whole thing really is’, asked a Dutch journalist yesterday after surveying the scene? It is a sad day.’ March 5 @ Dadi

END

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About The Author

Michael Collins is a writer and researcher in the DC area. He focus in on election, financial, and political fraud along with other corruptions of the new millennium.

Number of Entries : 175
  • http://readraza.com msedano

    When something appears to be too good to be true, it is. I suppose there’s an H.L. Mencken corollary here, “no one ever went broke underestimating the financial intelligence of the ____ people.”

    • Michael Collins

      It’s The Internationale isn’t it. Where’s John Reed when we need him? The Dutch and British regulators thought a nation of 300,000 could guarantee debts incurred by their bankers playing in a population area of about 80 million. There was no right to grant a business permit for this branch, Icesave, of an Icelandic bank. Now the neoconservative governments of the two larger countries are playing hardball. I wonder they’d react if this screwing brought down the entire house of cards. It will be Iceland or Greece or the next one. It’s about time. We need a reboot! Viva La Raza!

  • http://www.learcapital.com/exactprice Hal (GT)

    I can’t help but wonder how this news will be received and digested by the Greek citizens and others around the globe. “Look. You can defy big banks and big government.” Unless of course they role over you with their tanks.

    • Michael Collins

      (see below, oops)

  • Michael Collins

    Well put. Those tanks are locked and loaded, no doubt. But the IMF crowd has been trying to beat down the Icelanders for almost two years now and the citizens just get more incensed.

    The Greeks are watching closely. Now that Goldman was exposed for double dealing with Greece and then quickly exonerated, I suspect that the Greeks will think that they have nothing to lose like their brothers and sisters in Iceland, We’ll see soon.

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