Reykjavík Grapevine - 06.05.2016, Blaðsíða 8

Reykjavík Grapevine - 06.05.2016, Blaðsíða 8
The villain of this issue is also law- yers. While it’s true that lawyers can only engage in legal action within the confines of the law, some of them take their interpretation of the law to new and questionable heights. For just one example, lawyer Vilhjálmur H. Vil- hjálmsson has launched a libel cam- paign against some 22 people—many of them journalists, some of them just regular folks posting on social media—for their reporting of or com- mentary on a now infamous reported rape in Reykjavík. The libel suit raises serious questions about freedom of the press and freedom of expression, both of which are constitutionally guaranteed, and Vilhjálmur has gone on the record saying the press covers sexual assault cases too much. Win or lose, his suit may have a strong chilling effect on Ice- landic journalism, which does the public no favours. For this reason, lawyers are this issue’s Villain of the Issue. The hero of this issue is lawyers. People like to speak ill of lawyers as blood-sucking parasites who prey upon the worst of humanity’s impuls- es. However, we say this because we’re not in a position where we need them. Consider, for example, Iceland’s asy- lum seekers. Quite possibly the most vulnerable members of Icelandic so- ciety, these are people who more often than not do not understand Icelandic, let alone Icelandic law, and need every resource at their disposal just to stay in this country. Fortunately for them, there are lawyers in this country who are willing to fight for them, in and out of court. Oftentimes, they can mean the difference between deportation and residency. For this reason, lawyers are this issue’s Hero of the Issue. HERO OF THE ISSUE VILLAIN OF THE ISSUELawyers Also Lawyers Getty Images Depicted: Good lawyers Depicted: Bad lawyers The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 5 — 2016 8 The Panama Papers leak is still fresh in people’s minds, espe- cially as The Grape- vine broke the story that Dorrit Moussaieff, wife of Presi- dent Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, has connections to many offshore tax shelters. But even as there has been concerted and very vocal criticism of the sitting government and its ties to offshore accounts, recent polls taken in the wake of the Panama Papers leak show that the ruling coalition has ac- tually risen in support. At the same time, the Pirate Party—which has topped the polls for over a year now— have seen their first significant drop in support. There is as yet no scientific explanation for these results—code- pendency perhaps?—but the numbers speak for themselves. In what is probably the most adorable news we have ever reported on, Ripley, an Icelandic child named after the pro- tagonist of the Alien franchise, met her namesake—or at least, the actor who plays her, Sigourney Weaver. Ri- pley’s parents were informed of Weav- er’s arrival after she was spotted by NEWS IN BRIEF We can feel it. It’s coming in the air tonight. The first signs of the impend- ing horde of tourists that will descend upon Iceland this summer are appear- ing on the horizon. Apparently 1.5 mil- lion tourists came last year, the vast majority of them in the summer and almost all of them passing through Rvk. This year, if all the reports come to pass, will be the biggest year yet. Tourism as critical mass. And us bar workers are absolutely dreading it. Because make no mistake: While everyone has been wringing their hands impotently at this country’s out of control tourism industry that’s torn the ass out of downtown Reykjavík (which, by the way, looks like a dysto- pian building site sponsored by retro clothing manufacturers and beards), us 101 bar staff have been the unoffi- cial front line dealing with and clean- ing up the end results of a lack of plan- ning by the powers that be. And all of us with a weary smile on our faces. 101 Rvk will be overrun this summer like a bad case of the tourist tribbles, complete with overpriced clothing and backpacks (even though it will be July, they will come into the bar looking like they’re about to do an Antarctic expedi- tion), and a preening self-righteousness masked with an overbearing politeness. A mask that will surely slip once they get several pints down them. And the questions. Man oh man, the questions! Mark Twain famously said, “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these ac- counts,” but he never had to deal with the people who come our way, babbling the inanest crap, the sort that make you wish there was another world war. What’s the wi-fi password? (While standing in front of the sign telling them.) Do you have a drinks menu? (No.) Where is there a good restaurant that serves authentic Icelandic food? (They’re never happy when you tell them to go to the hot dog stand.) Are there any good clubs? (No.) Can I climb up Esja in February? (Why would you want to do that? Do you really want to die needlessly?) You don’t sound Ice- landic, where are you from? (Please don’t speak to me…) All this and more, all the way up to “It’s my birthday! Can we get some free drinks?” (Do we look like a booze ATM?), the ever-wonderful “Where can I buy some weed/cocaine/ MDMA?” (Actually, we can’t really help you in doing something that’s still il- legal), and the classic, “We’re on a stag do, can you tell how we can get some… um… ‘escorts’?” (See previous answer. And that’s really fucking icky mate.) But before you think this poorly thought-out column will simply be a stick to bash El Fokking Turista with, the locals are infinitely worse, the ones still believing that they are merely acting out the scenarios of Jeff Who’s “Barfly.” You’d be hard pressed to find a worse bunch of entitled, narcissistic oxygen thieves this side of the West- ern Hemisphere. From the cool kids wearing the latest dogshit fashions while tweaking on chalk dust speed, to “artistic” fools suffering delusions of grandeur, to the lecherous, ever so mildly racist older folk who think they own the fucking place. And that’s just the Grapevine staff who come bran- dishing their “eternal happy hour” staff cards. A pox on you all! So… you want to know the real Iceland, the one that you may only glimpse of in the papers and in docu- mentaries about our “cool” petri dish culture? Then be sure to read more in the coming weeks. You’ll almost cer- tainly disagree with it, and say that this messenger is full of crap, but at least you can’t say you haven’t been warned when you find yourself in toi- let bowl hell at Paloma at 4am. Strange Brew: “Summer is coming...” Words BOB CLUNESS Photo ART BICNICK STRANGE BREW Our new bar column tells you how it really is when those happy hours finish… SHARE: gpv.is/brew
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