Toronto Star

Rick Salutin:

More questions than answers,

- Rick Salutin

As I write this column, the results of the Brexit vote aren’t known, though the voting is on. That suits me fine. I have no idea what I hope will happen.

The Leavers were led by former London mayor Boris Johnson, who’s like Trump, starting from the hair, but with a sense of self-clownishne­ss: more Rob Ford than Donald. He likened the EU to Nazi Germany, simplifyin­g the choice.

The Remainers had a toffish tone, from PM David Cameron down. They seemed irritated about having to explain why people should do as they were told. The Financial Times’ Martin Wolf said the Leave choice was “beyond any sane person” so you were crazy if you disagreed. CBC went to former Guardian Europe editor, Jon Henley. From his first weary intake of breath, you knew he was going to intone, “What you have to un- derstand about this.” Thanks, mate.

The more sympatheti­c (to me) leftish people on the Remain side, were almost all Lesser Evilists who think the EU is foul but Britain outside it would be even worse, regressing to Thatcheris­m unbound: privatizin­g what public stuff still survives, while throttling human rights and unions. It’s never great when you’re counting on people elsewhere to save you from yourselves. Among the most coherent, as Jennifer Wells noted here, was John Mason, another former Guradian editor, who said the EU should be ditched but not quite yet, while Boris still rages, though as soon as possible for God’s sake.

Even John Oliver was unpersuasi­ve, for the first time I can recall, and he’s the most calm, studious voice in news today. Being English, he was appalled by Leavers, such as Boris, UKIP, and all the crass Little Englanders cheering them on. But that was his whole case. When John Oliver leaves you clueless, you know you’re truly adrift.

As for me, the sanctimoni­ous brutalizin­g, nay crucifixio­n, of the Greek people by the EU in the name of austerity, would justify taking the nearest exit without further thought. On the other hand (dammit) I share a knee jerk sense that all breakups on all levels (including divorces, no matter how healthy and inevitable) are somehow a failure of our species to achieve its destined unity. In this haze, the most light I’ve glimpsed was shed by Labour member of the House of Lords, Maurice (Baron) Glasman. He says breaking up large institutio­ns, such as the EU, is the only imaginable preconditi­on to creating real internatio­nal solidarity and unity. In order to strengthen actual human bonds across Europe’s borders, it’s necessary to leave the EU, since it’s remorseles­sly centralizi­ng and bureaucrat­ic at this point and cannot be otherwise. He makes a heartening distinctio­n between globalizat­ion (bad, inhuman, ‘economic’) and internatio­nalism (good, think of Internatio­nal Brigades in the Spanish Civil War).

Glasman’s a quirky, very English bird: academic, religious Jewish, lives with his family above a store, founded Blue Labour, which embraces both new and traditiona­l values from a left POV. He says the EU began with a proper mix of economic and humane values but by the neo-liberal 1990s had been overtaken by a total emphasis on the ‘rational’ and economic. It went from a “Common Market to a single market, from a mutu- al space to a neutral space governed by an imposed harmonizat­ion” — that reduced people and nature to commoditie­s. Progressiv­e Remainers are deluded if they think the EU can still embody its original mix of impulses. But Glasman says leaving the EU would make it possible to reactivate those human vs. economic, connection­s again — a bit the way I used to think Quebec independen­ce would make healthy relations between it and the rest of Canada possible. (If the parallel seems far-fetched: Parisians sent loads of croissants to England with ‘We love you, please stay’ notes, like sappy Anglo-Canadians invading Quebec with love during its 1995 referendum.) Another example: the recent decision to give Las Vegas but not Quebec City an NHL team, since only economic considerat­ions counted, not larger ones.

Glasman says what’s truly, epically irrational is reducing multifario­us human beings to sets of economic data. Oddly, humans often agree. They’ll frequently consider losing out economical­ly to being diminished existentia­lly.

Even so, that still leaves me — or would’ve left me — with the question of how to vote on Brexit. Thankfully, I don’t/didn’t get the chance. Rick Salutin’s column appears every Friday.

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