Truro News

DYER: CATALONIA JUST WON’T GO AWAY

- Gwynne Dyer

I’m sitting here trying to write an article about the election in Catalonia today, because there’s nothing else to write about. It would be more interestin­g if the African National Congress, South Africa’s ruling party for the past 23 years, elects a new leader who is not Jacob Zuma’s ex-wife, but the results on that won’t be in in time.

Apart from that there’s nothing except more stuff about Donald Trump’s Russian links. So it has to be Catalonia – and the problem is that I don’t care what happens in Catalonia.

One more smallish group defined by some tiny distinctio­n of religion or language or history wants to break away from some other, bigger group – “Spaniards,” in this case — that is defined by slightly broader and more inclusive distinctio­ns of the same kind, and I simply couldn’t care less.

Maybe, after all the nonsense that happened in the past six months — big demos for independen­ce, an illegal referendum that was designed to provoke the Spanish state into over-reacting (and succeeded), and various pro-independen­ce leaders jailed or going into voluntary exile to avoid arrest – a majority of people in Catalonia will be so fed up with the turmoil that they vote to remain part of Spain. But I don’t think so.

Maybe a majority will be so enraged by Madrid’s blundering over-reaction that they vote for their independen­ce from Spain, and actually get it.

Then most of the larger companies in Catalonia will move their headquarte­rs elsewhere (several thousand have gone already), and they will have a new currency nobody trusts (because they will no longer be in the European Union), and the people running the place will be the single-issue fanatics who managed to put this issue on the agenda in the first place. They don’t seem to have many ideas about what to do next.

As H.L. Mencken said, “Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.” But I don’t think the Catalans are going to vote decisively for independen­ce this time either.

Instead, they are going to split their votes in a way that leaves no clear majority for or against independen­ce, and makes it hard even to form a coalition government. (What is happening in Catalonia this month is actually an election, not a referendum, although everybody is treating it like the latter.) So we can look forward to months, years or even decades more of the same.

On a somewhat larger canvas, this is exactly what is happening in the United Kingdom, too. Just as the Catalans complain that they are paying too much tax to the Spanish government, which transfers it to poorer parts of Spain, so the “Little Englanders” complain that the UK pays too much to the European Union (which spends a lot of it raising standards in the poorer parts of eastern Europe).

Just as the Catalans (and especially younger Catalans) are far less different from other Spanish citizens than the separatist­s imagine, so the English (and especially the young English) are far less different from other Europeans than the Daily Mail-reading older generation of English nationalis­ts imagines. It is the “narcissism of small difference­s,” in Sigmund Freud’s famous phrase.

Obviously, not every separatist movement that appeals to nationalis­m is wrong. The anti-colonial struggles for independen­ce in the 20th century were fully justified and necessary because the injustices were great and the gulf between rulers and ruled was im- mense. The American war of independen­ce in the 18th century was justified because great questions about human rights and democracy were at stake.

But when all parties concerned subscribe to democratic values, it generally makes more sense to stay together and try to work out the difference­s. Separatist pro-independen­ce movements in democratic countries tend to be driven by the ambitions of politician­s who want to be bigger fish in a smaller pond.

As former Canadian prime minister Jean Chretien put it (in a broken half-english sentence calculated to insult his fellow French-canadians who were the separatist leaders in Quebec), they want to drive up “dans un gros Cadillac avec un flag sur l’hood” (in a big Cadillac with a flag on the hood).

Enough said.

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