Reykjavík Grapevine - 14.08.2009, Blaðsíða 2

Reykjavík Grapevine - 14.08.2009, Blaðsíða 2
2 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 12 — 2009 Cover Photo: Hörður Sveinsson hordursveinsson.com Printed by Landsprent ehf. in 25.000 copies. The Reykjavík Grapevine Hafnarstræti 15, 101 Reykjavík www.grapevine.is grapevine@grapevine.is Published by Fröken ehf. Editorial: +354 540 3600 / editor@grapevine.is Advertising: +354 540 3605 / ads@grapevine.is Publisher: +354 540 3601 / publisher@grapevine.is Publisher: Hilmar Steinn Grétarsson hilmar@grapevine.is Editor: Haukur S Magnússon haukur@grapevine.is Journalist: Catharine Fulton / catharine@grapevine.is Contributing Writers: Sigurður K Kristinsson sigurdur@grapevine.is Florian Zühlke / f lorian@grapevine.is Sindri Eldon Marc Vincenz / mysticmarc@gmail.com Ian Watson Eiríkur Örn Norðdahl Dr. Gunni Hildur Knútsdóttir Hugleikur Dagsson Lóa Hjálmtýsdóttir Ragnar Jón Hrólfsson Quentin Bates Bergrún Anna Hallsteinsdóttir Joe Shooman Food Editor: Sari Peltonen Editorial Interns: Rebecca Louder / rlouder@grapevine.is On-line News Editor Paul Nikolov paulnikolov@grapevine.is Art Director: Hörður Kristbjörnsson hoddi@grapevine.is Design: Björn Lárus Arnórsson Photographer: Julia Staples / juliastaples.com Marketing Director: Jón Trausti Sigurðarson jontrausti@grapevine.is Sales Director: Aðalsteinn Jörundsson adalsteinn@grapevine.is Guðmundur Rúnar Svansson grs@grapevine.is Distribution: Sæmundur Þór Helgason distribution@grapevine.is Proofreader: Jim Rice Press releases: listings@grapevine.is Submissions inquiries: editor@grapevine.is Subscription inquiries: +354 540 3605 / subscribe@grapevine.is General inquiries: grapevine@grapevine.is Founders: Hilmar Steinn Grétarsson, Hörður Kristbjörnsson, Jón Trausti Sigurðarson, Oddur Óskar Kjartansson, Valur Gunnarsson The Reykjavík Grapevine is published 18 times a year by Fröken ltd. Monthly from November through April, and fortnightly from May til October. Nothing in this magazine may be reproduced in whole or in part without the written permission of the publishers. The Reykjavík Grapevine is distributed around Reykjavík, Akureyri, Egilsstaðir, Selfoss, Kef lavík, Ísafjörður and at key locations along road #1, and all major tourist attractions and tourist information centres in the country. You may not like it, but at least it's not sponsored. (No articles in the Rey- kjavík Grapevine are pay-for articles. The opinions expressed are the writers’ own, not the advertisers’). For some reason, I don’t have a lot to say this time around. No witty comments or clever analyses to espouse. If there ever were any. However, I did recently receive an interesting letter from a friend of the Grapevine’s. I dug what it said, so I asked Friend if I could print it. Friend said it was alright, as long as long as I didn’t give out her name. So I translated it for you all to read. Here it is: “Dear Haukur and the Grapevine crew, How are you guys? It seems like I haven’t seen you all in ages, even if it’s only been a couple of months since I left the country. How are things anyway? I like keeping up with what’s happening on your website, and I do read the paper on line. You guys have been doing an OK job since I left. I like a lot of what you print; it makes me feel like I’m back at KB, browsing through a fresh copy over a cold one. Also, the letters are always fun. Good to see Andy Saur is back in action. Anyway. I was reading over your last editorial (from issue 11) and I felt the urge to share some of my thoughts with you, something you said there really resonated with me and sort of made me reflect on why I left in the first place and my feelings about the whole collapse thing. I understand why you got bored of covering that, by the way. It’s a boring, boring topic. And you do get angry when you think about it. Pissed off, in fact. Anyway, the following passage struck a cord with me especially, when you say that: “...what we have is the result of what the majority of us asked for, what the majority of us voted for, approved of, condoned and cheered on. Not me, ever, but that’s how democracy works. [...] it’s not like they weren’t being warned, again and again. It’s not like our corrupt system wasn’t evidently and obviously so – it was. Probably still is.” As I said, it made me think pretty hard about why I chose to leave, and why I’m not sure I’ll be returning anytime soon. All of the sudden it dawned on me that I’ve been feeling out of step with Icelandic society and its values for a long, long time. It’s not that I don’t like the people or our general way of going about things – I really do. I like the can- do spirit, the go-for-it attitude, the not thinking anything through, necessarily. The crazy scramble to finish a job, staying up for a week working hours on end before stumbling out and getting drunk for another week. I like how people are kind of rude, how they bump into you and how not every single person you meet tries to make small talk and exchange meaningless banter, feigning a smile and an interest in who you are and what you’re doing for two seconds (this is an especially popular activity here in the US). I like the landscape and our schools and our TV shows that aren’t reality TV shows. So it’s nothing like that. I like the people, and I am proud of a lot of what we as a nation have stood for over the years. I am by no means a self-hating Icelander (if such a thing even exist, I feel we may be too full of ourselves to ever appreciate the subtle art of self-hate). I just feel hopelessly out of step. And I’ve felt that way for a long time. I feel no one out there is speaking on my behalf. I feel my own views and opinions, my values and needs, that they haven’t been represented in public life by... by anyone. For as long as I can remember, for all of my 27 years. Nothing. And those who try and speak them or something of the like get laughed off the stage or ignored. Remember: every single person who opposed privatisation and corporate interest and smelting and didn’t necessarily like where we were headed as a society back in the nineties and early 2000s – they were laughed off or ignored. Or considered jealous or crazy. “Do you want to return to the trawler?” They’d say. “Do you think we can live off eating grass and mountain herbs?” (What’s ironic here is that the policies those people supported have brought us closer to working on a trawler, eating mountain herbs, than anyone even thought possible). I haven’t supported any of the governments we’ve had since I started following politics back in 1993. Not a one. I mean, fuck. It’s like every single decision made by every single ruling party in Iceland has been in direct opposition with my views on the subject. Every time! They built Smáralind. Everyone loves it. I don’t love it. I hate it. They tried their best to demolish our social welfare system. They privatized everything to fuck. They make silly highways all over the city that make it impossible to get around on foot or bike. They hunt whale. They build aluminium smelters. They give tax breaks for corporations and banksters. They... they declared war on Iraq! Fucking Iceland fucking declared war on a sovereign nation! Their favourite singer is Bubbi (or maybe Bono), their favourite food is KFC or McDonalds and their favourite show is Icelandic American Idol. So yeah, I’m glad I left. It’s not that things are much better here in the US – believe me they are NOT. USA also loves Bono and McDonalds and American Idol, and they also declared war on Iraq. But at least there are many. many people living. This makes room for diversity of opinion, it enables someone like myself to identify with a group of people numbering in the hundreds of thousands. I feel part of something, and I feel free to form my own opinions and identity. I feel they are respected, even by those that do not agree. This is important to me. I don’t know what any of this means, or why I decided to write and share this with you. I guess I just felt like voicing my opinion for once. And I do miss a lot of things about home (including you guys). See you soon,” Editorial | Haukur Magnússon Haukur’s 12th Editorial! An Expat Writes + COMPLETE CITY LISTINGS - INSIDE! THE ESSENTIAL GUIDE TO LIFE, TRAVEL & ENTERTAINMENT IN ICELANDYOUR FREE COPY Issue No 12 – August 14 - August 27 – 2009 Everyone's favourite experimental electro/pop/whatever outfit, múm, are about to release their sixth LP, Sing Along To Songs You Don't Know. Founding members Örvar and Gunni tell the Grapevine about the band, about the album, and how the January revolution broke their hearts. PG. 16. www.grapevine.is Complete Reykjavík Listings Lots Of Cool Events Opinions! Reviews! Comix! + Prostitution In Iceland: Yes, Prostitution In Iceland Riceboy Sleeps: Jónsi And Alex Like It Raw Declaring Independence With Greenland: Life In Nuuk The EU VS Iceland's Fishing Industry: What Will Change? + Visit our stores: Geysir Haukadal, Selfoss. Tel: 480 6803 Geysir Hafnarstræti 5, 101 Reykjavík. Tel: 555 2808 The socks are knitted of Icelandic wool, which repels rain to remain feeling dry. NEVER COLD – AUTHENTIC ICELANDIC ULLARSOKKAR Choose from our assortment of traditional Icelandic wool products and the largest gift and souvenir selection in Iceland.

x

Reykjavík Grapevine

Beinir tenglar

Ef þú vilt tengja á þennan titil, vinsamlegast notaðu þessa tengla:

Tengja á þennan titil: Reykjavík Grapevine
https://timarit.is/publication/943

Tengja á þetta tölublað:

Tengja á þessa síðu:

Tengja á þessa grein:

Vinsamlegast ekki tengja beint á myndir eða PDF skjöl á Tímarit.is þar sem slíkar slóðir geta breyst án fyrirvara. Notið slóðirnar hér fyrir ofan til að tengja á vefinn.