
With a society prospering in splendid isolation and a population smaller than one-thousandth of the EU total (1), Iceland until recently had little incentive to be subsumed by the Brussels bureaucracy, an institution judged by many to be like the bus in Speed: racing towards an undesirable outcome, but unable to stop.
Then, in the second half of 2008, the Downturn happened. Iceland was particularly badly hit. The collapse of its three major banks constituted, mutatis mutandis, the worst national banking crisis ever, anywhere (2). Grassroots protests against the Icelandic government’s mishandling of the crisis swelled to something called the Kitchenware Revolution, a reference to the pots and pans being banged. The protesters also hurled snowballs and yoghurt at the parliament building, breaking at least one window. Pretty light-hearted stuff, but by January 2009, the protests turned from anecdotal to properly riotous, with police using tear gas to disperse thousands of protesters – a situation unheard of in the normally placid world of Icelandic politics.
Previous to the Downturn, Icelanders assumed that being in the European Free Trade Association the stability of belonging to a large trade area without imposing on their independence, economic or otherwise. But the banking crisis exposed the vulnerability of the Icelandic economy, especially the volatility of its currency, the krona (ISK). In January 2008, it traded at 90 ISK to the euro. On October 7th, the Icelandic central bank tried to peg the krona to the euro at a rate of 131 to 1, but it plummeted to 340 the next day, and trading was suspended. Opinion polls conducted at the end of 2008 suggested that at least 68% of Icelanders now opted for EU membership, with an even larger majority (over 72%) wanting to adopt the euro.
In January 2009, a euroskeptic government was replaced by a more pro-EU one. The new prime minister Valgerður Sverrisdóttir floated the idea of joining the eurozone but not the EU (3), but a government study considering that option has concluded, in March of 2009, that combining membership of the EU and the eurozone would be the better choice. In mid-July 2009, the Icelandic parliament approved the country’s application for EU membership. The EU has already indicated that Iceland might be able to join as early as 2011, together with Croatia.
Necessity does not imply enthusiasm, however, and Icelanders remain lukewarm europhiles at best – as illustrated by this map, sent in by Icelander Anna Rögnvaldsdóttir. She explains that it is the product of Fiton, an Icelandic ad agency. “Recently, [they] held an in-house poster competition (just for the fun of it, I gather). The challenge: To design a propagandistic poster either in favour of Iceland joining the EU or against.”
This one, clearly in the Against-camp, is the image of a Frankenstein-like monster, composed of European Union member states, about to crush Iceland underfoot. Predictably, one of those feet is Italy, already boot-shaped. The one about to step on Iceland, however, is made up of the UK and the Czech republic, with the latter’s Moravian borderlands within channel-swimming distance of the southern Welsh and western Cornish coast. Crete is jammed into Scotland’s North Sea coast while the rest of Greece balances uneasily atop the Hebrides. Slovakia, Bulgaria and Hungary make up the rest of the EU monster’s right leg.
The left leg is completed by Germany resting on Italy (not that much of a stretch, since normally only a thin sliver of Austria separates the two). Romania, on top of Germany, actually does border Hungary, which is placed right next to it. The core of the European bogeyman is made up of France (fittingly, some might say), while Finland and Denmark are its left arm and Sweden and Belgium its right arm.
Poland could be considered Europe’s left shoulder, but Ireland seems just to be there as filler – and is that Albania just north of the Galway coast? That can’t be right. The head looks scary and non-human, Austria and Slovenia mimicking mandibles straight out of a science fiction movie and Spain’s Galician protrusion representing a brow more prominent than that of the most eminent neanderthal. Atop the whole construction, somewhat forlornly, sits the Netherlands.
What a contrast, this scary composite picture of Europe, to the heart-shaped image of the United States puzzled together in a similar way in #402.
————-
(1) 320,000 Icelanders versus 497 million EU citizens.
(2) estimates of the foreign debt held by Landsbanki, Glitnir and Kaupthing are of more than €50 billion, or €160,000 per Icelander. Or almost 6 times Iceland’s gdp (of €8.5 billion).
(3) as is currently the case in Montenegro and Kosovo (which previous to the euro had used the Deutschmark) and the Vatican, Monaco and San Marino (which as per agreement are allowed to coin their own euros) and Andorra (which uses the euro by default, having previously used the Spanish peseta and the French franc).


Just a heads up, in the text your third footnote is notated by (2), not (3).
Comment by Bryan Burgers — October 13, 2009 @ 3:14 pm
I think the dude’s wearing a Dutch/Galician sombrero. I’m sort of confused about what Austria and Slovenia are doing though. Perhaps Latvia would’ve been a better fit there.
Comment by FM — October 13, 2009 @ 3:14 pm
@ Bryan Burgers:
Thanks, corrected.
Comment by strangemaps — October 13, 2009 @ 3:48 pm
What happened to Norway?
Comment by James Fee — October 13, 2009 @ 3:56 pm
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Pingback by Europe vs. USA | Julien Trédan-Turini // — October 13, 2009 @ 3:59 pm
Norway is not in the EU. Lucky bastards.
Comment by St Augustin — October 13, 2009 @ 4:07 pm
I’m sorry but I have to correct you a bit. The new prime minister isn’t Valgerdur Sverrisdottir but Johanna Sigurdardottir. Valgerdur might have said something to that effect but she was the minister of industry but had been retired for a while when the collapse happened last fall.
An interesting tidbit: It’s probably not a coincident that the designer placed the UK as the crushing foot. Since the poll in the end of 2008 the opinon has been changing rapidly against the EU. The reason is probably related to the so-called Icesave-dispute between Iceland and the UK where many Icelanders feel they have been treated unfairly by the UK and is among other things the result of a European regulations adopted by Iceland through EEA that doesn’t account for a total system meltdown.
Comment by Halldór Berg Harðarson — October 13, 2009 @ 4:16 pm
The map has Albania (!?) but where are the Baltic states?
Comment by Dunkleosteus — October 13, 2009 @ 4:34 pm
Norway has helped Iceland a lot, so they are not part of the “bad boys” I guess.
The Baltic states have problems a bit like Iceland, so they are out too.
Luxembourg? Malta?
Albania?
I have no clue.
Comment by Ole — October 13, 2009 @ 5:06 pm
Norway is not a member of the EU. And it’s more than just a sliver of Austria that separates Germany and Italy (unless you only considered EU members in that statement).
Albania seems to be placed on the left shoulder (beneath Austria) – not sure. A very clumsy design.
Comment by Kat — October 13, 2009 @ 5:28 pm
Albania ( between Sweden and Portugal ), not yet and not tomorrow a EU member, and one of the poorest european country, crushing Iceland, still recently one of the richest…very funny and clumsy, dear “northern neighbours” !
By the way, you’re as close to The Americas as to Europe, you could join the Canadian Federation…
Comment by lp — October 13, 2009 @ 7:10 pm
I believe that is Cyprus at the far-right of the picture (or, in terms of the figure, at the tip of its left hand).
Just a guess…
Comment by Jordan — October 13, 2009 @ 9:39 pm
If I’m not mistaken, all the countries are oriented with north facing up (probably to ease recognition). This could explain the apparently “clumsy design”.
Comment by John — October 13, 2009 @ 9:49 pm
Malta is between Greece, Slovakia, and Bulgaria. Can’t find Luxembourg.
Comment by Eugene van der Pijll — October 13, 2009 @ 10:05 pm
You’re mostly reading English-language news, right?
Basically, anything from Time, The Economist, Financial Times and the Wall Street Journal on what goes on in Bruxelles can be taken to be a flat out lie until proven otherwise.
So here’s the actual tale, in brief:
1) Iceland runs their country like a hedge fund. Their banksters gamble like crazy in a way that would make even Citigroup blush. They amass huge ForEx risks, on heavily geared “investments.”
2) The bubble pops.
3) The IMF issues a bailout. The Nordic Council issues a bailout a little later (with mostly Norwegian money). Russia expresses interest, but I don’t know whether they followed through or just did it to rile up English-speaking Cold Warriors.
4) Iceland wastes the bailout (in typical IMF-inspired insanity) on propping up their ridiculously overvalued currency for a few days (no points for guessing whether the banksters grabbed all the hard currency they could get and off-shored it while the going was good).
5) The bailout money runs out. The Icelandic currency collapses. Aforementioned ForEx risk explodes.
6) Iceland nationalises the banksters’ debts. From this point on, the Icelandic state is insolvent.
7) The British government freezes Icelandic assets in British jurisdiction, using the terror laws.
8) Bruxelles re-floats the possibility of EU membership for Iceland.
9) Iceland partially repudiates the debt they took over from the banksters, and forces a cramdown on the rest of their creditors. In an interesting development, Iceland tells its remaining creditors that their payments will be indexed to Iceland’s GDP, pre-empting the second round of IMF programmes from enforcing suicidal austerity rules and equally suicidal interest rate hikes.
Take-home points: Neo-liberal policies (a.k.a. Manchester liberalism, freshwater economics, neo-classical economics, marginalist economics, Washington Consensus) result in Epic Fail whenever it is attempted. IMF policies turn Epic Fail into disasters, then into catastrophes.
Of course, those take-home points should have been readily apparent to anybody who has followed international economic and political affairs over the last – oh, fifty or sixty years… After all, Iceland’s collapse is basically a blow-by-blow replay of the Argentinian crash ten years ago, and the Russian crash fifteen to twenty years ago.
- Jake
Comment by JakeS — October 13, 2009 @ 10:26 pm
What happened to Norway?
Comment by wpclassifiedsnet — October 14, 2009 @ 2:23 am
Is that Malta to the west of Bulgaria and east of Thracian Greece? I think that’s Luxembourg in the “jaws” between Spain and Austria. It’s weird that the 3 baltic countries are missing, but Albania is included. Ah well, the Icelanders probably don’t know much about the EU anyways. And technically, the mandible is the lower jaw (Austria) while the maxilla forms the upper jaw (Slovenia).
Comment by Novelty — October 14, 2009 @ 4:05 am
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Pingback by Iceland To Join E.U.? « noisedfisk — October 14, 2009 @ 4:11 am
Ciao, ti andrebbe uno scambio link col mio blog Geekblog?
grazie 1000! http://www.geekblog.it
Claudia
Comment by Geekblog — October 14, 2009 @ 8:00 am
in case of some shapes it’s fun to guess what country it is!
it could be an interesting idea for a game (for children?)
Comment by Flo — October 14, 2009 @ 8:25 am
Definitely see Cyprus and Malta where people pointed them out, but the speck between Spain and Austria doesn’t look like Luxembourg to me, unless it’s rotated and shrunken. And yeah, Baltics are missing in lieu of Albania randomly. Other than that, pretty good work on making a shape without rotating or changing the scales of the countries.
Comment by Patteroast — October 14, 2009 @ 9:23 am
Great information
Comment by FREE - Watch or Download HD Movies — October 14, 2009 @ 10:13 am
This design would make an excellent T shirt. I would buy one and I don’t even live in Iceland.
Comment by JT — October 14, 2009 @ 11:45 am
I prefer to think of Ireland as the beating heart of Europe rather than ‘filler’.
Comment by Sean Patrick O'Brien — October 14, 2009 @ 12:52 pm
This is really funny. The only thing I’d have done differently would have been to put Portugal west of Spain (in its “natural” place), and use Austria and Slovenia to form the (wide) neck.
That way, the EU body would have a nicer (and a bit more natural-looking) face while crushing Iceland.
Comment by Miguel Farah — October 14, 2009 @ 1:05 pm
Thnks
Comment by 7daraje — October 14, 2009 @ 4:10 pm
What happened to the Dutch isles in the north – the Waddeneilanden? And I miss the IJsselmeer, the big lake between Friesland and Northern Holland.
Comment by Carlitos — October 14, 2009 @ 7:13 pm
Interesting map! I was wondering where Malta was, thanks Eugene for pointing that out. I also don’t see Luxembourg, the spot between the mandibles (and/or maxillas) doesnt seem right to me.
Interesting that they used Corsica for the hand, whilst using France for the body, and STILL maintaining geographic unity of France. Strange that the do not show the inland lake of the Netherlands, the map looks really unlike the country now. And I think North Cyprus should be very happy to be included in the map :-)
Comment by sdinjens — October 14, 2009 @ 7:57 pm
At least they didn’t forget the Baltic countries this time.
Comment by h2ppyme — October 14, 2009 @ 8:33 pm
I wonder what that blob next to Britain is (not the Czeh republic). The one to the west of Scotland.
Also, funny how many people on this site have no idea Norway isn’t in the EU. Then again, the mapmaker had no idea Albania wasn’t in it, so why be suprised?
Comment by DuckofDeath — October 14, 2009 @ 9:14 pm
JakeS: “Russia expresses interest, but I don’t know whether they followed through or just did it to rile up English-speaking Cold Warriors.”
Russia just decided that they could use money themselves
Obscure fact: Iceland was the first country to recognize the regained independence of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. Þakka þér fyrir
Comment by L — October 14, 2009 @ 10:19 pm
@30 DuckOfDeath
The blob next to Britain is presumably Northern Ireland / Ulster (part of the UK).
Comment by MDR — October 14, 2009 @ 10:19 pm
“…an institution judged by many to be like the bus in Speed: racing towards an undesirable outcome, but unable to stop.”
Are you talking about the US, or the UK ? The phrase could be applied to anyone of those too.
Comment by stephan — October 14, 2009 @ 10:35 pm
The “blob next to Britain” is Northern Ireland. If only it was just a “blob” – a bit of trouble may have been avoided.
Comment by Robert — October 14, 2009 @ 10:39 pm
Inclusion of offshore territories is rather inconsistent.
Included:
Corsica
Sardinia
Sicily
Balearic Islands
Isle of Man
Lewes with Harris
Orkneys
Shetlands
Gotland
Oland
Crete
Evvoia
Kephallenia
Fyn
Lolland
Sjaelland
Missing:
Aland Islands
Channel Islands
Kerkyra
Levkas
Zakynthos
Aegean Islands
Romania and Hungary are not only placed adjacent, but very close to their actual relationship: the only two countries for which this is true.
Comment by Rich Rostrom — October 15, 2009 @ 4:49 am
the métaphore o f the bus is funny…but i do not see what is supposed to mean.
In fact, the debate is clear between europea, those who want a more ” federal” state, and those not.
Clearly, it’s the reason why Island never join. Now they put in the balance the advantages…no just the primal fear.
Comment by Maitresinh — October 15, 2009 @ 5:23 am
Nice to see the Scottish islands nestling next to Greece – if ony their beautiful unspoilt sandy beaches were as warm as their new neighbour’s, Scotland would enjoy a massive tourist boom…
Comment by Andrea Flowers — October 15, 2009 @ 12:59 pm
Rich Rostrom
Mostly correct, but I’m pretty sure that Aland Islands
and the Channel Islands are not a part of the EU.
And then it’s a strange failure to include Albania.
Comment by Einar — October 15, 2009 @ 1:21 pm
If significant rotation were allowed, the Netherlands could have served as a (very large) nose.
Comment by ironrailsironweights — October 15, 2009 @ 1:32 pm
“Mostly correct, but I’m pretty sure that Aland Islands and the Channel Islands are not a part of the EU.”
Einar, the Åland Islands are part of the EU (but, as you said, the Channel Islands aren’t).
Comment by Toni — October 15, 2009 @ 7:39 pm
Very nice map -it’s a pity for the few mistakes, already pointed out. By the way, it seems to me that the “blob” of Northern Ireland is too close to the Scottish coast (the shores should be more separated). Can anyone confirm that?
Comment by P.F.R. — October 15, 2009 @ 10:11 pm
Albania just north of the Galway coast?
Donegal coast. Galway is a further two peninsulas south.
By the way, it seems to me that the “blob” of Northern Ireland is too close to the Scottish coast (the shores should be more separated). Can anyone confirm that?
Scotland and Northern Ireland are in proportion – twelve miles or so at the closest.
Comment by Paddy Matthews — October 15, 2009 @ 10:29 pm
When speaking of the Czech borderlands, don’t forget Silesia (see “Czech Lands” entry in Wikipedia). It would be adjacent to Wales.
Comment by Matt Soule — October 15, 2009 @ 11:44 pm
long live the united Europe
Comment by Feo — October 16, 2009 @ 7:44 am
+1 in varietate concordia.
Viva la Union europa
Comment by Maitresinh — October 16, 2009 @ 12:22 pm
The map is really cool. The message that sends it is not.
It’s good to know that Iceland is going to be just like the UK or the Czech Republic: “please, please, we have a crisis, we need the other countries of the Continent… Oh, now that we are in: Brussels is just bureaucracy and we shouldn’t get in and Lissabon ist just trash” and blablabla…
Comment by José — October 16, 2009 @ 2:17 pm
[...] October 2009 · Leave a Comment Whoever was able to portray the European countries crushing Iceland, loved playing that kind of stuff as a [...]
Pingback by Tangram « La puce, die Welt and everything else — October 16, 2009 @ 5:00 pm
Portugal should be the nose!
Comment by Miguel — October 16, 2009 @ 8:12 pm
*faceslap* Northern Ireland! Way to miss the obvious! Thanks to MDR and Robert for pointing that out.
Comment by DuckofDeath — October 17, 2009 @ 1:56 am
@ Rich Rostrom:
Strange that they would include Kefalonia but not the better known Kerkyra (Corfu).
Comment by Agent5 — October 17, 2009 @ 10:34 pm
It would be nice to have the different regions of the world have similar characters: North America, South America, Africa, Middle East, South East Asia, Oceania, South Asia, East Asia, et al. After creating that we’ll make them fight with each other. Which creature would fight the best? Just like those action cartoons in Japan where different machines create a big robot.
Comment by Duboi — October 18, 2009 @ 9:06 am
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Pingback by Το Top 5 της εβδομάδας (11 Οκτωβρίου – 17 Οκτωβρίου 200911 | Newsfilter — October 18, 2009 @ 11:15 am
I think if here were Baltia, this map would look in that way:
[img]http://img196.imageshack.us/img196/8767/90314765.jpg[/img]
Comment by dars-dm — October 18, 2009 @ 5:44 pm
Just to clarify.
Iceland has asked for help from the IMF after the crisis. Many countries through the IMF promised loans to get our economy going, and we have gotten some loans so far. But the IMF has refused to give the go ahead for the rest, they have not directly given a reason but it is obvios.
We have asked our neighbors as to why we have not gotten more and the answer we always get is that we are waiting for the IMF.
Everything points to the IMF waiting for the Icesave dispute to be resolved. Which is weird since it should be unrelated but the UK and Holland are pressuring the IMF to wait.
The Icesave dispute is about Iceland as nation paying money to people who had money in three privately held banks operating under EU regulations. Like UK’s prime minister said the public should not pay for the mistakes of private banks, yet we Icelanders, the public is being FORCED to pay.
The scale of this extra dept is HUMOUNGUS. Two of our biggest expenditures per year is financing our healthcare system and our education system. Just the interests of the Icesave “loan” per year is about the same as it costs to run either our healthcare system or our education system for a year.
So through the IMF the whole of Europe has put is beneath its foot.
Excellent map.
Comment by Elvar — October 18, 2009 @ 10:07 pm
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Pingback by We’re in deep shit again- Wordstress – The World's Only Reliable Blog — October 23, 2009 @ 2:09 pm
Spain and Portugal should be the FIST!
Comment by JOsep Pujol — October 23, 2009 @ 3:43 pm
al fin y al cabo estamos a la “cabeza” de Europa
Comment by houk van lake — October 25, 2009 @ 2:13 am
Well, in order to clarify:
1. Luxembourg is there. That “island” southwest of Sweden (definitely with an exaggerated scale).
2. Cyprus is partially correct. Although the whole island is in the EU, EU rule so far does not apply to the Turkish northern third of the island. The case is still in court, however.
3. What the hell is Albania doing there? It inclusion (and the exclusion of the Baltic republics) obviously reflects the ignorance of the author. Cool map, poor knowledge.
4. Where are the overseas French territories?
Comment by Javi — October 25, 2009 @ 7:22 pm
@ dars-dm
An other version of your map, without Albania.
http://eumanismo.blogspot.com/2009/10/mapa-europa-checa-persona.html
Comment by José — October 25, 2009 @ 9:32 pm
Cool.. for one time Spain is the head of the UE… but problably it must be the ass hole lol…
Comment by DamBrown — October 26, 2009 @ 11:06 pm
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Pingback by Mapa de Islandia siendo pisada por Europa (meneame) | BlogUniverso — October 27, 2009 @ 3:38 am
You forgot the Canary Islands!
Comment by Anónimo — October 27, 2009 @ 7:17 am
“Ireland seems just to be there as filler ”
Heh heh…yep…that’s how we feel sometimes!
Comment by Pat — October 28, 2009 @ 10:25 pm
Whatever folks. I think u need to think of the message. It is very strong. Like it or not. I really don’t care but I’d like a T-shirt. Who is the author?
Comment by Wazzup — October 30, 2009 @ 12:06 am
This map is a mockup of a poster for the No-vote in a possible EU referendum in Iceland. It was included in a promotional magazine published by the Icelandic ad agency Fiton along with a number of other (mostly tongue-in-cheek) proposals. http://www.fiton.is/Fiton/Bladid/Fitonbladid2009/
Comment by Andrés Magnússon — October 30, 2009 @ 12:27 am
The Author of the original map is Anna Karen Jörgensdottir, a senior graphic designer at Fiton Advertising (www.fiton.is) in Iceland.
Comment by Örn Úlfar Sævarsson — October 30, 2009 @ 9:44 am
yeah, it’s a very “strong” message. Like putting a hitler moustache to Obama and say it’s the devil if you are a Usa extremist…
With such “strong” argumentation – same kind of those during the first irish referendum – we do not have to worry about europhobic hysteria.
They are like a bad beer : zero degree… of argumentation.
Comment by Maitresinh — October 30, 2009 @ 11:11 am
… and where can I get a T-shirt?
Comment by Wazzup — October 30, 2009 @ 3:40 pm
Javi wrote:
“Cyprus is partially correct. Although the whole island is in the EU, EU rule so far does not apply to the Turkish northern third of the island. The case is still in court, however”.
It is not Cyprus’s fault that the bully from the north invaded, ethnically cleansed and occupied one third of its territory! Do not punish the victim!
Comment by Stergios — October 31, 2009 @ 2:01 am
Thank you for sharing this
Comment by ForexFan — October 31, 2009 @ 9:56 pm
That’s good!
Spain’s in the head.
I think it was and now it must be in the tail.
Comment by Federico García Barba — November 1, 2009 @ 6:41 pm
Oh, no, Hungary again at the genital parts! : ( http://www.maps-charts.com/images/520.12%20Europe%20as%20Woman%20-%20Munster%20-%201550.jpg
Comment by Szabo Pal — November 1, 2009 @ 10:17 pm
[...] Iceland crushed by Europe: The post centers around the recent economic downfall of Iceland, and Europe’s role in it. [...]
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Pingback by Les cartes de Dan Meth « Mpj2009's Blog — November 6, 2009 @ 3:48 pm
Uh, Prime-Minister Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir, not Valgerður Sverris, she’s retired and was from a different party.
Comment by Sjonni — November 7, 2009 @ 4:28 am
As others have said, this is not “Iceland crushed by Europe”, but “Iceland crushed by most of the EU states + Albania”
Comment by Nja — November 8, 2009 @ 10:53 am
The coolest photo i’ve seen. Svaka čast!
Comment by izdelava spletnih strani — November 17, 2009 @ 3:34 pm