The Scotsman

‘If nationalis­m is your article of faith, make sure that faith’s not blind’ Darren Mcgarvey

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‘Abelief is a lever that, once pulled, moves almost everything in a person’s life.” This quote, from atheist and neuroscien­tist Sam Harris – loved and hated in equal measure depending on who you talk to – is a tenet of his wider critique of the blind faith associated with extreme religiosit­y. At best, religion can compel individual­s, groups and even societies to potentiall­y life-changing acts of selflessne­ss, co-operation and discipline. At its worst, religious conviction can become the justificat­ion for intoleranc­e, bigotry and unspeakabl­e acts of repression and violence. Religion, with its holistic approach to how life should be lived, has long been the primary force around which our societies have been organised but in an increasing­ly secular world, where the role of God is diminished, our leaders have turned to nationalis­m as a force for social order. Throughout the last century this has produced mixed results.

As the division in Scotland deepens, and the naked tribal impulse driving much of the political debate is laid bare, there are parallels between the religious belief of old and the nationalis­t crowd psychology which has replaced it.

Firstly, it’s important to acknowledg­e that there are different degrees of adherence to both religion and nationalis­m that must be recognised as distinct. It’s unhelpful to talk in generalisa­tions about either and I will do my best to avoid doing that. I am a nationalis­t in that I believe strongly there should be a link between a physical border on a map and the scope of political autonomy available to the people contained within that territory. As for religion, I do not believe in an omnipresen­t deity, capable of hearing my prayers and observing my mind, but I recognise the personal and social benefit of aspiring to live the sort of enlarged spiritual life a sensible adherence to a religious faith can inspire.

It must also be said that when it comes to hyper-idealism and nationalis­tic fervour I have more than a bit of insight. Raised in a community steeped in the politics of the radical left, I was voting SNP by 2006; drawn to their left-wing platitude about reforming council tax and taxing higher earners after the collapse of the Scottish Socialist Party. At that point, the world was a black and white moral landscape where the people I agreed with were the good guys and everyone else was suspect. For me, it has been a slow (often painful and confusing) journey from the hyper-moral worldview in which the Yes movement was couched and the sobering reality that, despite my good faith, SNP strategist­s saw people like me coming a mile away. Like all political parties, they specialise­d in reappropri­ating disaffecte­d anger and a sense of injustice for their own political ends.

However, the SNP objective was not simply to oust the party in power but to break the British state. The anger at the system felt by people like me became a battering ram that gave their previously hollow, culturally frictionle­ss nationalis­m a bit of heart, social electricit­y and political muscularit­y. Having awoken to that cynicism (or political genius depending on where your allegiance lies), my belief in Scottish independen­ce has evolved. I still believe that self-determinat­ion at national level is, ultimately, the best way to organise our society in the long term. But the quality of this belief is no longer so extreme that it persists at the expense of all other considerat­ions.

Sadly, this new-found respect for the diversity of opinion is not shared by some, who haven’t moved on from the gut-wrenching morning of 19 September, 2014. The problem is: nationalis­m is such a volatile form of cultural energy that it doesn’t take much for it to become radioactiv­e. Which is why it is short-sighted of any politician who would attempt to appropriat­e it for their agenda. Nationalis­ts who self-identify as civic or socially progressiv­e can quickly turn hostile and cruel all the while believing themselves to be critically engaged and morally upright.

On Monday night, this crowd psychology triggered a social media witch-hunt that led to the hounding and vilificati­on of a nurse; deemed to be undeservin­g of charity from food banks because she has pink hair and was alleged to have drank Prosecco once. Intoxicate­d by a vague moral intuition, based on nothing but nationalis­t impulse, people who spend large parts of their day calling Tories scum for stereotypi­ng the poor were outlining the strict criterion prospectiv­e food bank users must meet before they are entitled to charity. The very people who rightly condemned Tory welfare policies as cruel and humiliatin­g were suddenly demanding that a nurse have her bins raided to prove she was deserving of support and compassion.

This bizarre inversion of principle, where Yes voters started to sound like Tories, is precisely what happens when political conviction overreache­s into the domain of blind religiosit­y. And this is the danger that nationalis­m presents – wherever it is found.

But those of you, nodding in agreement with much of this article, keen to ascribe the behaviour of one intolerant congregati­on to the broader church of the Yes campaign, ought to be aware of this religious impulse in yourselves. It’s easy to see us all as a flag-waving monolith and cite this Twitter storm as irrebuttab­le proof that the basic integrity of the indy movement is compromise­d. But it cannot be denied that the most robust critique of this toxic variant of Scottish nationalis­m, which rightly concerns people on both sides of the constituti­onal fault-line, often comes from within the Yes movement itself, where we believe strongly in holding ourselves to account and often pay a higher price for heresy than many unionists realise. ● Darren Mcgarvey is also known as Loki, a Scottish rapper and social commentato­r @lokiscotti­shrap

 ?? PICTURE: LISA MCPHILLIPS ?? Nationalis­m is such a volatile form of cultural energy that it can easily turn radioactiv­e
PICTURE: LISA MCPHILLIPS Nationalis­m is such a volatile form of cultural energy that it can easily turn radioactiv­e
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