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Everything You Need to Know About Iceland’s Pirate Party

  

Category:  World News

Via:  community  •  8 years ago  •  6 comments

Everything You Need to Know About Iceland’s Pirate Party

Iceland’s Pirate Party is hoping to win the largest share of the vote in the country’s Oct. 29 general election, not even four years after the fringe political group formed.

Until this week the esoteric political party had led the polls in Iceland, though the latest opinion poll puts the group a single point behind the center-right Independence Party, which is currently a junior member in the country’s coalition government.

The Pirate Party’s rise against the perceived corruption of Iceland’s political elite is the latest— and perhaps most colorful— in a string of anti-establishment insurgencies throughout globe, from the far left to the far right. Here’s a bit more about the group:

Iceland MP Birgitta Jonsdottir at Homehttps://timedotcom.files.wordpress.com/2016/10/gettyimages-481594984.jpg?quality=85&w=1100 800w, https://timedotcom.files.wordpress.com/2016/10/gettyimages-481594984.jpg?quality=85&w=1100 800w 2x">

 

The Pirate Party formed in 2012, in the wake of the collapse of Iceland’s hugely overleveraged banking industry following the 2008 financial crisis. The Party and its motley group of of anarchists, libertarians and internet activists is led by Birgitta Jonsdottir. The 49-year-old former Wikileaks activisits, web programmer and “poetician” has been an MP for different parties since 2009, but decided to help start the party, which part of an international anti-copyright movement that originates in Sweden, because “I’m often crossing paths with nerds as I’m such a nerd myself” she told the Financial Times .

Jonsdottir thinks Iceland’s population of about 300,000 are sick of corruption and “nepotism.” She also likens the country to Sicily and claims it is controlled by a handful of “mafia-style families” and their friends. “That might explain why, when the banks were privatized in 2005, stern laws and promises of professionalism were tossed aside and the banks were handed over to bosses who pleased the ‘mafia’ families” she writes in the New Internationalist .

 

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Larry Hampton
Professor Quiet
link   seeder  Larry Hampton    8 years ago

While slim on policies , the Pirates espouse a set of core values, which include direct democracy, pushing civil rights and more transparency from companies and the creation of informed decisions. The party wants to be the “Robin Hood” of politics by handing power back to Icelanders, and seeks to make the country a haven for hackers and whistle-blowers (including Edward Snowden). It also hopes to make cryptocurrency bitcoin legal tender.

The Pirates have also created a crowdsourced draft of the constitution, which includes provisos to create new rules for governance and to renationalize the natural-resource industries of the small country. Like other European populist parties, the Pirates want a referendum on Iceland’s relationship with the E.U., but promise to not conduct the nativist, anti-immigrant stance seen in U.K.’s iteration. “We don’t want to make the same mistakes that happened in Britain” Jonsdottir told the Washington Post . “You have to make sure that it is an informed campaign. People need to know what [membership] implies.”

 
 
 
Enoch
Masters Quiet
link   Enoch  replied to  Larry Hampton   8 years ago

Dear Friend Larry Hampton: Government for and by the people.

How refreshing!

E.

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   Buzz of the Orient    8 years ago

Think Brexit, think Iceland - is it possible that the public is finally starting to get wise about being manipulated? Are Americans getting wise?

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   Buzz of the Orient  replied to  Buzz of the Orient   8 years ago
Ooops. Looks like the party's pooped.
 
 
 
Dean Moriarty
Professor Quiet
link   Dean Moriarty  replied to  Buzz of the Orient   8 years ago

Sounds like they have the same problem there as we are having with our Democrats here. 

“This is our next generation that is taking the country to the next level. But they keep voting for the criminals we have here,” she said. "

 
 
 
Dean Moriarty
Professor Quiet
link   Dean Moriarty    8 years ago

Interesting a party that grew out of Wikileaks that strongly supports Edward Snowden. 

Iceland’s Pirate Party is only 4 years old, and was originally formed as a protest party to change copyright law. The Pirates’ platform has since expanded to encompass a wide range of  reforms and initiatives , including offering asylum to American whistleblower   Edward Snowden.

 

Jónsdóttir developed ties to WikiLeaks by  helping Julian Assange   obtain and publish a classified U.S. military video showing a 2007 helicopter attack that killed a dozen people in Baghdad.

 

We we need more like her Assange and Snowden. 

 
 

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