There was a public citizen meeting tonight (pardon me if I got the translation wrong – my dictionary search also suggests the term “town meeting” and google’s further definition is: An informal gathering of an officeholder or candidate for office with a group of people, often local, in which the audience raises questions…)
It was the fourth meeting of this sort in four weeks. The meetings have grown from a small theater to a bigger concert hall to one of the largest lecture halls of the University of Iceland.
I’ve wanted to go to the other meetings, but I haven’t made it. This time me and my husband were organized, we arranged for my parents to look after our children, and took off. We were there on time, but the building was already full. It was stuffed to the door.
We spent the night in the hallway, along with hundreds of others. There were large TV screens, on which we fallowed what was going on on the other side of the door. This citizen meeting was different from the other three because
a) a large part of the government finally showed up to answer questions from the public
b) it was broadcasted directly on the national TV.
As for the meeting, what was said there and how it came about, I have to say that I was pretty satisfied. Of course I am not referring to the way most of the government spoke back to the people, but to the discourse at the meeting in general. The speaches were good.
A man named Benedikt Sigurðsson discussed very clearly some practical issues that regard the financial situation of me, my family and many like us. All the other speakers made perfect sense to.
I could make a very long post about the meeting and all the thoughts and emotions it brought forth. However, I doubt that many of you who read my blog (the number is increasing day by day, thank you all), would bother to read it. So I’ll pick out one little thing that our Minister of Industry, Össur Skarphéðinsson, said, when answering a question from a civilian.
The civilian asked whether the government had planned to evict those of us who will in the end give up and stop paying our debts from our homes. The minister replied that they were working on adjusting the laws so that they would not have to evict us, but could let us stay there (paying rent to the banks that will by then have swallow what once was ours).
This is my personal answer to Mr Össur Skarphéðinsson, and pardon the caps lock but this is how I show my blog-emotions:
I HAVE EXPERIENCED LIFE OUTSIDE OF ICELAND AND SEEN HOW REAL WELFARE SYSTEMS WORK. I STILL HAVE A SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER IN A NEIGHBOURING COUNTRY. IF YOU WILL MAKE ME LOOSE MY HOME, THAT ONCE WAS 30% MINE AND 70% MINE TO BE IN DUE TIME, WITH REGULAR AND HONEST PAYMENTS, I WILL LEAVE.
And now, in normal sized letters again, this is what I will take with me:
a) I will take my MA degree, paid for by Icelandic tax payers and my blood, sweat and tears.
b) I will take my BA degree, paid for by Icelandic tax payers and my blood, sweat and tears.
c) I will take my experience, my strong will, my intelligence and my ability to survive.
d) I will take my exceptionally bright children (the older one has a confirmed IQ of 132 = not a future doormat of the likes of you)
e) I will take my extraordinary smart husband, his BA degree and his experience from the Icelandic business sector.
You keep the rest.