> On 7 Oct 2017, at 10:22, [email protected] wrote:
> 
> Catalonia is not about independence. We are ready for a level of democracy 
> that we are not allowed to practice and the fight is about political freedom.


hmm. From where i’m sitting, as a fellow lurker in brexit-bound London, i’m 
inclined to question the validity - and wisdom - of using referenda as a means 
to ‘fight for democracy’ (i couldn’t participate in the referendum that’s 
determining my future here btw but that’s not my main point). certainly the 
brexit referendum was called as a means to settle an internal dispute in the 
governing party, and not to address a burning national question.

what has astounded me about the Catalonian referendum is how recklessly the 
political elites on both sides have been willing to escalate the situation - 
and frankly *chml’s post* is the only one that’s come close to addressing this. 
leaving aside the issue of corruption, which is often an easy charge to make, 
if both the Catalonian government and the central government are trying to use 
this referendum to mobilise a base for their political survival then that would 
explain their belligerent postures.

I may be disproportionally focused on the 1990s Yugoslav war of dissolution for 
my own reasons, but it gives us a historical example of what can happen when 
political elites start using regional-national identitarian politics to 
mobilise (and demobilise) segments of their base in the pursuit of a power grab 
(I'd recommend VP Gagnon’s “the myth of ethnic war” for a cogent analysis of 
how this worked in the yugoslav context)

i’m having a hard time distinguishing provincial ethno-nationalism from 
state-wide ethno-nationalism - if this is really a fight for democracy and 
political freedom, why the Catalonian flag-waving? why not link up with 
disenfranchised voters in Madrid, Euskadi and (based on chml’s info) Murcia and 
fight for a more democratic, diverse, devolved, representative, etc Spanish 
state?

Btw Örsan’s analogy with the Kurdish referendum is thought-provoking: I can see 
some parallels but i’d think there’s important differences too: the KRG has 
been effectively self-governing for a couple of decades now, and a similar 
Kurdish entity has emerged in Rojava. Barzani also rather prudently framed the 
referendum in the KRG as a 'basis for a process of negotiation'. it seems to me 
Kurdish statehood is both more viable and justifiable (if politically 
difficult) and would undoubtedly have greater geo-political repercussions

Cheers

Lennaart van Oldenborgh
[email protected]



#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]
#  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:

Reply via email to