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:D

I would just call Annuder stupid, but he puts far too much time and effort into making a mockery of the whole situation. Not Russian. My guess is Basildon.

--/ Basildonaise?

Not one of the backward Basildononian fascist colonisers but an oppressed Wickfordian revolting and tearing of the Yoke of decades of Basildonaise oppression

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It's not classist to point out the make-up of C's voters. However, seeing as only 3% of people living in Catalonia consider themselves "only Spanish" (source Metroscopia), what you're saying is clearly bollocks. The guy in the video is a cunt. No doubt about that.

Have you got any more statistics from Metroscopia, I mean El Pais? The newspaper that ran the headline " El separatismo pasea su odio a España por las calles de Bruselas".
Separatism shows its hate for Spain on the streets of Brussels. Nice newspaper you quote from. Why do you only quote the manipulative media in your posts?

Also, you are labelling catalans in general as being anti-andaluz on the basis of what? El pais? One video?

If people weren't all frothing at the mouth and actually read what I had written they would see that when I say unionists are scum, I am referring to the ones who

A. marched to police stations to support the violence.
B. Voted for an extreme right wing party who want to create a medal for those same violent police.

I have expressed that in the context that they are blinded by their nationalism, which is spanish and not Catalan and that a percentage of them who are working class have voted against their own economic interests.
 
Ironic that Catalans consider Andaluces so lazy, when the very GDP per capita they seem so proud of, was built on the back of Andaluz migration. Then they have the cheek to say they are subsidising other regions. The subsidy was built on the back of the Spanish working class.

A right wing spanish nationalist myth used to stoke hate against the catalans and you are repeating it here unopposed and with two likes from two goons. Thanks again Favelado for your informed posts.
 
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Have you got any more statistics from Metroscopia, I mean El Pais? The newspaper that ran the headline " El separatismo pasea su odio a España por las calles de Bruselas".
Separatism shows its hate for Spain on the streets of Brussels. Nice newspaper you quote from. Why do you only quote the manipulative media in your posts?

Is Metroscopia owned by El Pais? Sorry if I'm wrong but i don't think so. I haven't quoted from El Pais. You've made that up.

"Also, you are labelling catalans in general as being anti-andaluz on the basis of what? El pais? One video?"

No, I'm basing it on first hand experience of things said in the 2 years I lived in Manresa and Barcelona, and the 4 years I spent living with them here in Madrid. I'm also basing it on exactly what you've said here. Not every Catalan believes it, but it's well and truly out there and doesn't take long before it gets spouted out in the street or in a bar. "In Andalusia it's just fiesta and siesta." I heard it from the mouthes of Catalans in so many classes.You know this is true.

"A right wing spanish nationalist myth used to stoke hate against the catalans and you are repeating it here unopposed and with two likes from two goons. Thanks again Favelado for your informed posts."

I've never seen or heard that. It just occurs to me to be at least somewhat true based on the history of Spain. Are you saying it's completely untrue?
 
A right wing spanish nationalist myth used to stoke hate against the catalans and you are repeating it here unopposed and with two likes from two goons. Thanks again Favelado for your informed posts.

As to being a myth, well, it's one propounded by the Guardian.


Jiménez, 61, comes from Cornellà, one of a string of satellite towns thrown up around Barcelona to accommodate the mass migration from the south and west of Spain in the 1960s and 1970s. The towns are known as the cinturón rojo, the red belt, because of their history of radical politics.

As the Baix Llobregat area south of Barcelona began to industrialise, hundreds of thousands of Spaniards abandoned the countryside in search of a better life up north. The factories and housing estates became a crucible of leftwing politics and to this day the cinturón rojo has never voted for nationalist candidates.

In Catalonia’s ‘red belt’ leftwing veterans distrust the separatists
If it's not true why exactly, did so people migrate from the South to the North?

It makes sense to me as it mirrors the experience of industrialisation it other countries. Italy, which I confess I know much better than Spain, saw a similar patern of migration in the 50s and 60s with people moving from the south to work in the factories around Milan and Turin. A story dramatised by Viscount in Rococo e I suoi fraternity. An excellent if not exactly cheery
Film to watch over the Christmas break



The issues used raised here, migration from the South and
abroad; and being taxed to support poorer regions of the country have also been used by Italian political parties. In particular the viley racist Lega Nord.



If I have to be a goon, I would prefer to see myself as the Sellars of this thread balancing Pickman's Milligan. My fear, though, is that I'm Bentine trapped in my personal Potty Time.

359full-michael-bentine%27s-potty-time-screenshot.jpg


Physically, however, I'm more of a Secombe

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Ironic that Catalans consider Andaluces so lazy, when the very GDP per capita they seem so proud of, was built on the back of Andaluz migration. Then they have the cheek to say they are subsidising other regions. The subsidy was built on the back of the Spanish working class.



Sadly, the lazy Andalusian nonsense is not unique to Catalonia, but it is said throughout Spain.
 
Sadly, the lazy Andalusian nonsense is not unique to Catalonia, but it is said throughout Spain.

It's not said with the same seriousness, frequency, nor vitriol where i live. In Madrid a lot of people say it's true that Andalusia is for partying, but they're usually not even saying that it's a bad thing. I've never heard a madrileño call them lazy as such, or complaining about them being a burden on the rest of the country. In Catalonia there is a bitterness held by many towards those in the South.
 
Pablo Iglesias Thinks There Is an Alternative

A corrective to some of the, err, more spirited Catalan Nationalist posts on here...


EG
The standoff in Catalonia has been one of the worst constitutional crises since Spain’s transition to democracy. How would you explain the events of the last few months to an international audience?


PI
Spain is a plurinational country. In some countries, this kind of composition is easily recognized. An example would be the UK, where English, Scottish, Welsh, and Northern Irish identities coexist. This is also the case in Belgium and Switzerland. There are other countries, however, where there is a clear correspondence between the state and the nation. This is the classic idea of the nation-state coming from the French and the American Revolutions, in which state and nation are aligned.

In Spain different national identities coexist but they do so in a way that is disjointed. For example, inside Catalonia, Spanish national sentiment also exists [as was seen with the recent pro-monarchy demonstrations in Barcelona] and this is also true of the Basque Country and Navarre. And, at the same time, there are territories in Spain with identities recognized as nationalities, although without having any intention of separating — such as the Valencian Community and Andalusia. As a consequence of these identities, there is political conflict as well as diverse institutional arrangements. Therefore, there are not only cultural differences but also distinct judicial systems, with different civil law in Catalonia to the one operating in Castile.

During recent months, we have witnessed the unfolding of the independentista strategy of unilateral “disconnection,” which has led to a dead end. We are now at a point where, on the one hand, we have a right-wing government backed by a broad block of pro-monarchy parties, as well as by the entire judiciary and the power of the state, which is unable to provide an inclusive proposal for Catalonia or to redefine the Spanish constitution territorially. On the other hand, we have an independence movement with an exhausted strategy: having seen what it entails to confront the central government, it is left with few moves going forward. Instead of this impasse, we need dialogue to reconstruct the state as a plurinational entity.

We in Unidos Podemos defend Catalonia’s right to a legally negotiated referendum. Though not pro-independence, we are in favor of recognizing Catalonia as a nation and see the need for a new constitutional framework, or adjustment, recognizing this fact.

...

TG
A number of Catalan leaders who had been imprisoned have been recently released on bail. But the escalation to the point they were imprisoned at all was remarkable. What do the last two months reveal about the state of Spanish democracy?


PI
The imprisonment of elected politicians reveals deficiencies in Spanish democracy. We have always talked in terms of political prisoners, even though this does not necessarily mean we agree with their core beliefs or strategies. We think that, in a democracy, political conflicts should be resolved through political channels, not with police intervention. There is no judicial solution to the Catalan problem but there are political solutions which will later inform the law. Democracy should be the source of the law, not the other way around.

It is outrageous that the current scale of corruption in the governing Partido Popular has been met with such impunity, while Catalan political leaders are imprisoned under charges that many legal officials see as having little basis. This has been made evident in the withdrawal of the demands for [Catalan Premier] Puigdemont’s extradition. The Spanish government feared that, in a Belgian court, no substantial charges could be pressed against him. This exceptional situation paints a worrying picture of receding democracy.
 
The rhetoric of Catalan politicians when I lived there. "Good Catalans speak Catalan" was something i heard bandied around. Didn't a Barcelona mayor say that some time ago? Newcomers to Catalonia offered free Catalan classes by the Generalitat, but not free Spanish classes despite the fact that immigrants overwhelmingly want the latter. Criticism of those who referred to "Spain" and not "The Spanish state".

On another note, i found Catalan nationalism to be pretty middle class. It would be interesting to see the class breakdown of independence support, and maybe someone on here can point in the right direction.

The most working-class area I can think of in Barcelon is L'Hospitalet de Llobregat. It was strongly anti-independence, whereas funky bohemian Gracia was the opposite. I've got a feeling that there is a class divide that still exists now.

Super-rich - Pro-Spain.
Lower middle class and middle class - Pro-independence
Working class and immigrants from Africa/South America - Pro-Spain.

Age demographics will blur this, but I think that would be broadly true. What are other posters thoughts on this?


Here's a thing . They aren't fucking Spanish . Just like im not british . I know its a bit inconvenient for non Spanish people...a drag ... but what bit of that do you not get ? They aren't Spanish...that's why they...and the basques...don't do Spanish .
 
They want to learn a language that means they can communicate with everyone in Spain, and not just a minority of people. Catalans can speak Spanish too, in the vast majority of cases. Pragmatism rather than politics.

Then go to fucking Madrid . Or Valencia...or Seville . Fucking simple .

Had this bollocks in ghaoith dobhair years ago . Germans , French, English and swiss whod bought their little cottages turning up at residents meetings complaining they weren't being held in English . Tough shit...not the lingua franca . Inconvenient but shit happens .
 
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The most working-class area I can think of in Belfast is The Shankill. It is strongly anti-Irish Independence, whereas funky bohemian Andersonstown is the opposite.

I have a feeling the 'divide' is not so-class based

If you want proper grim working class try Tigers Bay . Makes the Shankill like Woodstock .
 
They aren't fucking Spanish . Just like im not british . I know its a bit inconvenient for non Spanish people...a drag ... but what bit of that do you not get ? They aren't Spanish...that's why they...and the basques...don't do Spanish .

It's not that simple. Basques, Catalans, Castilians etc are something, but perhaps there isn't a word for it. I'm lucky, semantically, that I am Welsh, British and European in successive onion layers.

Arnaldo Otegi said something like that he could only be Spanish when Spain ceased to exist, when it was a word like Scandinavian.

(Something there isn't a word for in 'our' case is a term like 'British Islander'. The word British might be the tricky part!)

Had this bollocks in ghaoith dobhair years ago . Germans , French, English and swiss whod bought their little cottages turning up at residents meetings complaining they weren't being held in English . Tough shit...not the lingua franca . Inconvenient but shit happens .

And yet Spanish is the lingua franca of Iberia: it's the language that Basque nationalists use to talk to their Catalan counterparts. But that doesn't mean that a Catalan with a cottage in the equivalent of a Gaeltacht* in Euskadi can insist that local government proceedings take place in Spanish!

* Not that there is one AFAIK, there are very Basque-speaking areas but they don't have any special status. I may be wrong.
 
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Then go to fucking Madrid . Or Valencia...or Seville . Fucking simple .

Had this bollocks in ghaoith dobhair years ago . Germans , French, English and swiss whod bought their little cottages turning up at residents meetings complaining they weren't being held in English . Tough shit...not the lingua franca . Inconvenient but shit happens .

You don't know what you are talking about.

El uso del catalán y el castellano en la vida cotidiana catalana

Spanish is overall the most used language in Catalonia, with Catalan also being extremely widespread. The way the two languages are used by people varies massively. In Barcelona some people switch between them mid-sentence. Catalan is now the most used language academically and in state administration, with Castilian still the most used between friends. There will be a big difference between what happens inside Barcelona and outside of it too.

Your use of Valencia as an example is stunningly ignorant seeing as Valenciano exists.
 
Here's a thing . They aren't fucking Spanish . Just like im not british . I know its a bit inconvenient for non Spanish people...a drag ... but what bit of that do you not get ? They aren't Spanish...that's why they...and the basques...don't do Spanish .

Catalans and Basques do use Spanish. It just depends. You're wrong.
 
Scathing piece from Miguel Amorós here. I don't always agree with his all encompassing pessimism usually (or the spread of it amongst those from similar traditions) but this is avery good descriptive piece - and i's interesting that another piece identifies a coalition of regional capital and with conservative middle class types as the driving force here.

It is obvious that the Catalonian crisis was serious enough for the State to arrange for a different status for Catalonia under its jurisdiction, with greater autonomy, but it will not be the current pro-sovereignty elements who will negotiate this transformation. The enemy—the loyalist bloc—has emerged morally and electorally reinforced from this conflict. The urban working class masses, depoliticized by decades of social democracy and Stalinism, have become “constitutionalist” without knowing anything about the Constitution. In the working class neighborhoods of the Barcelona metropolitan region, in the big cities, and all along the Mediterranean coast, Spanish flags are flying. As was so often the case in the past, the degree of sovereignty will be determined by the parties that are not in favor of sovereignty. It is an irony of history.

It is also obvious that Catalonia will be ungovernable if any attempt is made to rule it without any concessions to the pro-sovereignty movement. The latter’s many contradictions will not detract from its electoral support. If things have not turned out as planned—and while it is clear to those who have not been convinced by the official account of the meaning of the sovereignty movement that the “procès” was, more than anything else, a very cleverly staged farce—what might nonetheless seem strange but really is not at all odd is the fact that for most of its supporters none of this makes any difference. The pro-sovereignty movement was an excellent manipulator of emotions. Its followers wanted to hear exactly what their leaders told them, without worrying too much about the falsehoods or the demagogy that the messages thus conveyed might contain.

The determinant factor in our current situation, however, is the politicization of the wage-earning middle classes, which were until recently the electoral base of the traditional parties, a phenomenon responsible for an abandonment of social questions in favor of the political struggle. The state- or anti-authoritarian socialism of the proletariat has been overshadowed by the civil society movement of the new middle classes, which are decidedly nationalist in Catalonia, and self-management has been sidelined by the “assault” on institutions. The end of the working class as a transformative social force has left the initiative to other, more socially conservative, Keynesian, profoundly statist classes, and, in the meantime, the rebel minorities, the libertarian ghetto, the alternative trade unions and the so-called social “movements” merely reflect the decline of class consciousness, the loss of memory, and the forgetting of the lessons of the past concerning the experiences of the false struggles of the middle classes and their politics.
 
You don't know what you are talking about.

El uso del catalán y el castellano en la vida cotidiana catalana

Spanish is overall the most used language in Catalonia, with Catalan also being extremely widespread. The way the two languages are used by people varies massively. In Barcelona some people switch between them mid-sentence. Catalan is now the most used language academically and in state administration, with Castilian still the most used between friends. There will be a big difference between what happens inside Barcelona and outside of it too.

Your use of Valencia as an example is stunningly ignorant seeing as Valenciano exists.

I lived on the coast in Valencia for a few months many years ago and am well aware of its local dialect thanks . I'm also well aware that Spanish is the dominant language in Catalonia..just as English is by far the dominant language in Ireland , Wales etc, Canada etc . If people in some of those regions insist on conducting their affairs in the local lingo as opposed to the dominant one then the onus is on anyone who moves there to go and learn it . Otherwise you're forcing people to accept their native language as opposed to the culturally dominant one has an inferior status . Even when officially it doesn't .
 
Catalans and Basques do use Spanish. It just depends. You're wrong.

I'm not wrong . I'm not arguing for an instant they don't use Spanish , I'm arguing they don't regard themselves as Spanish, that they reject Spanish statehood and nationality and have a different national identity to the Spanish . And that the promotion of their respective languages over and above Spanish is an inherent part of their respective bids for independence , where Spanish is relegated to second place . It's you that's wrong . you're criticising them for elevating their own languages and national identities over the Spanish one .
 
This is just the simplistic armchair nonsense of someone who has little idea about the Basque Country nor Catalonia. "They" is the giveaway. If only these places were in the kind of situation where there was a simple "they". It's a mess exactly because there is isn't.
 
I've looked it up and it's not recognised by the EU as a language . It's also considered by most academics as a dialect as well .

So , señor , in your pipe and smoke it .

It's recognised as one of the official languages of Spain in the constitution, just like Catalan or Basque. For fuck's sake. Did you tell the locals that? So culturally sensitive.
 
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they don't regard themselves as Spanish, that they reject Spanish statehood and nationality and have a different national identity to the Spanish

There is no "they".

In the Basque Country roughly speaking half of them are not nationalist. There are all sorts of shades even among the half that are nationalist: regionalists, federalists, separatists, and so on. Lots of even them regard themselves as both Basque and Spanish, which would not be affected by independence. Like Scots and Welsh being British.
 
It's recognised as one of the official languages of Spain in the constitution, just like Catalan or Basque. For fuck's sake. Did you tell the locals that? So culturally sensitive.

It's a dialect derived from Catalan . And im sure that really annoys some of them when it's pointed out . Especially the ones that ripped off every Catalonian number plate they happened across or used the word " Catalan " as an insult .

There were a few things I found best not to tell the locals , namely that I didn't believe they invented Paella and the Catalans nicked the recipe . Or that Franco was a cunt .
 
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