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The Poor Prole’s Almanac

Iceland’s Pots & Pans Revolution; Pragmatic, Everyday Revolutionaries part 1

The Poor Prole’s Almanac

Bleav + The Poor Prole’s Alamanac

Home & Garden, Science, Nature, Leisure, Education, How To

5761 Ratings

🗓️ 25 June 2023

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The 2009–2011 Icelandic financial crisis protests, also referred to as the Kitchenware, Kitchen Implement or Pots and Pans Revolution, occurred in the wake of the Icelandic financial crisis. There had been regular and growing protests since October 2008 against the Icelandic government's handling of the financial crisis. The protests intensified on 20 January 2009 with thousands of people protesting at the parliament in Reykjavík. These were at the time the largest protests in Icelandic history.   Protesters were calling for the resignation of government officials and for new elections to be held. Unlike every other country during this global crisis, numerous officials and bank leaders were imprisoned and the government reclaimed ownership of many industries in response. How did this protest develop, and why was their protest so successful in comparison to other movements such as Occupy Wall Street? We chat about why average citizens got involved and lessons we can learn from this unique period in history.   To support this podcast, join our patreon for early episode access at www.patreon.com/poorprolesalmanac For more information and updates, visit www.poorproles.com and subscribe to our e-mail list. For the supplemental reader that goes along with the podcast, visit: https://poorprolesalmanac.substack.com   Sources: Dixon, M. (2018). Economic crisis and mass protest: The pots and pans revolution in Iceland. Social Forces, 96(4). https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soy029 Bibler, J. (2021). Iceland’s secret: The untold story of the world’s biggest con. Harriman House.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome back to the Port Prolls Almanac.

0:16.5

And what is our last installment of this mini seriesseries, we got a special one for you.

0:22.8

Right, Elliot?

0:23.7

Yeah, I guess it's kind of special.

0:25.2

Everything you do is special to me, Elliot.

0:27.6

Thanks.

0:28.7

So yeah, we've been, we've covered a couple different stories on community defense.

0:34.5

And we wanted to end the season, like not just the mini series, but like our

0:38.1

entire season before the interview series for the summer on, I think, a fairly optimistic

0:43.7

note, we could say. Yeah. Let's go with optimistic. Yeah. We'll call this case special because

0:49.5

I think it's one of those things when you look back in history, and obviously I'll mention this again in the episode, but hindsight, be a 20-20 when you have a crystal clear picture of what happened and you can learn from what happened, I think this is one of those instances.

1:07.2

It doesn't really get talked about a lot, and so I had to look into it to educate myself about it.

1:12.6

And I wanted to share with everybody else.

1:14.6

So here we are.

1:16.1

Oh, yeah.

1:16.6

Man of the people.

1:17.9

Yeah.

1:18.2

So what we're talking about today is Iceland.

1:20.7

And it's financial and banking collapse that happened in 2008.

1:24.6

And how that whole global recession for the economy just rippled throughout the world

1:30.6

and affected a lot of people and a lot of the same way.

1:34.2

But it was an interesting time because there were so many bubbles bursting all at once.

...

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