If you find yourself in agreement with Assange, that's a good reason to rethink your position.
If you find yourself in agreement with Assange, that's a good reason to rethink your position.
Hope is the denial of reality
If you find yourself in agreement with General Franco, that's a good reason to rethink yours.
Utter, utter morons. After today I think Catalonia will go independent. Dictatorships fall. Spain can't stomp on people forever not and try and pretend to be a free nation and their actions today have taken two guns and shot themselves directly in both feet, support for independence will surge now. Or do you think that Police grabbing and dragging old people who want to vote is a fantastic idea?
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Playing right into the hands of the separatists. Sad.
"One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."
This Police brutality on innocent people who just want to vote is like something from Venezuela not 21st century Europe. We have videos now of Spanish Police attacking voters, voters bleeding on the floor.
Come on Loki where are your principles? Do you only care about Police brutality when it isn't state sanctioned?
Anti-referendum protesters are literally chanting Franco-era chants. I have no doubt Russia was very active in Spain in the run-up to this referendum.
"One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."
Whether you support the referendum or not I hope everybody here agrees that the government/police response is insane, very troubling.
Unless of course you're one of the people here who are fine with violence against protesters since they are blocking roads
Keep on keepin' the beat alive!
Going after voters is overkill; going after political officials is not. Will this backfire? Probably. Did Spain have another choice? Not really.
Hope is the denial of reality
So how does it feel backing a referendum that was quite likely to lead to violence? Are you all going to pretend the violence was unforeseeable? Or that the moral case for a policy should be unconcerned with likely costs?
How does it feel to be Rand clones, basing your views on the absolute best-case scenario and then moving the goalposts when that outcome failed to materialize?
Hope is the denial of reality
Haven't been following this very closely but I've got two thoughts.
1. The population has an obligation to obey the law, only in the case of a call for outright revolution is violence an acceptable tactic. Most would agree the American Revolution was a justified act, is a Catalonia revolution in the same boat? No clue but this might be the narrow set of circumstances I'm OK with violence on the part of the mob.
2. Police should respond violently if crowds become violent. However a lot of the footage (and again I'm fairly ignorant of the issues going on here) seems to be the police randomly beating people. Like what the fuck, arrest them if they are breaking the law - they don't seem to be resisting so why are you wailing on them with batons? /boggle Spain looks incompetent and totalitarian with the way the response has occurred.
If engaging in democracy is likely to lead to violence, the problem is on the institutions being voted against. Use of force in suppression of democracy, even "illegal" democracy, is unconscionable. The proper response is political and court action, not action at the end of a police baton. You remember my stance back during the Bundy Ranch stand-off? Let the acts go for now and go after them later, when it doesn't pose a risk of violence. Which is what the federal government did, and what the Spanish government ought to have done. You keep saying "if a referendum happens then Catalonia is instantly independent." That's not how reality works and you know it. More than one area in the US has voted to secede since the Civil War. Do you think voting for it actually made them independent?
In a liberal democracy it is not the people's job to restrain themselves to avoid giving their government an excuse to use violence against them. It is the government's job to safeguard them from violence, not to be the source of the threat. You're somehow able to recognize this in the BLM thread but the instant someone is taking a policy stance you don't like that recognition goes right out the window.Are you all going to pretend the violence was unforeseeable? Or that the moral case for a policy should be unconcerned with likely costs?
Last night as I lay in bed, looking up at the stars, I thought, “Where the hell is my ceiling?"
So you say that the Catalans have no right to declare independence and you don't recognise it, you don't beat up voters!
Violence has only come about from the oppressors* side as far as I can see and the people standing up peacefully to the oppression and Police batons (many of whom have personally survived dictatorships like General Franco) are not the ones to be blamed. Blame lies purely and solely with the ones using unjustifiable violence against a peaceful and civil democratic exercise.
* If the use of that word was debatable before today it no longer is.
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Great referendum. From the people who went to the polls, 101% (literally) voted. From that 101%, 90% apparently voted yes. On a turnout of 42% despite the images shown on TV. This is about as credible as the Crimean election. So not only law-breakers, but also fraudsters.
What should be is irrelevant. The result was entirely foreseeable. I said the likely costs of having this referendum were going to be far higher than the benefits (which are minimal). We know this is just the start. You refuse to weigh reality in your calculations.
Incidentally, most of the violence was in ~4 polling stations in central Barcelona where the police didn't have the numbers to stave off the mob (terrible planning by the Spanish government). And yes, the police overreacted. Something the Spanish police is known for doing. There's footage floating around that was supposedly from today but was actually from some strike a few years back.
Everyone comparing this to Franco really needs to read about Franco.
Hope is the denial of reality
I'm sure the vote was rife with irregularities. That's what happens when ballots have to be secreted away from the police, polling stations get raided, people get beaten, and voting is forced underground. How can any type of transparency be expected, or results validated in that kind of chaos?
Bollocks to that, you can't complain about irregularities when you've done everything to bully, destroy and intimidate the vote. The ones acting undemocratically here are clear and its not the Catalans.
They're only foreseeable if Spain isn't democratic and if Spain isn't democratic the Catalans deserve their freedom. QED.What should be is irrelevant. The result was entirely foreseeable. I said the likely costs of having this referendum were going to be far higher than the benefits (which are minimal). We know this is just the start. You refuse to weigh reality in your calculations.
Ah so they should have expected to be beaten up as they've been beaten up before? That makes it all better!Incidentally, most of the violence was in ~4 polling stations in central Barcelona where the police didn't have the numbers to stave off the mob (terrible planning by the Spanish government). And yes, the police overreacted. Something the Spanish police is known for doing. There's footage floating around that was supposedly from today but was actually from some strike a few years back.
That's like suggesting that if a peaceful BLM protestor gets shot by a Police officer in America that its entirely to be expected and is the fault of the BLM movement for organising the protest as they should have expected the Police to turn violent in response.
It will be interesting to see where this goes. On the one hand you have the right of self determination. On the other side you have constitutional considerations that need to be taken serious as well. A Catalunya that, disregarding the Spanish Constitution simply declares independence can not expect to immediately have much credibility as a partner in international politics.
Congratulations America
Spain also holds a number of exclaves in Morocco, over the objections of Morocco, despite the Spanish position over Gibraltar being that territory integrity trumps the right to self-determination. So there's that.
When the sky above us fell
We descended into hell
Into kingdom come
Can't confirm this yet, bit reports of there being no voter registry, no attempt to stop multiple-voting, especially in rural areas that exhibited a turnout of over 100%, and no neutral observers around during the counting. These issues predate the government crackdown.
Hope is the denial of reality