Tuesday 27 August 2019

Catalan nationalists laugh at death – when a Spaniard dies




Joan Marc Jesús is a Catalan nationalist, a leading member of the secessionist ANC (Catalan National Assembly) and of the ERC party (Catalan Republican Left, the one that has its origins in 1930s fascism).
The other day a Spanish air force plane crashed in the sea, killing the pilot. This charming specimen of the Catalan nation thought that it would be funny to tweet that the air force was “throwing rubbish into the sea” and “They are polluting the ecosystem. I hope that no marine species has suffered.”




And while we are on the subject of disgusting Catalans, let us return to Xavi Boada Vila, whom we have met before (here).
“In an independent Catalonia the first language will be Catalan. The second, fairly widely spoken will be French with English third. Spanish will be residual for immigrants and workers who don’t want to get on in life.”




Sources (Spanish)
El Catalán
(A leader of ERC makes fun of the death of the air force pilot in La Manga, Murcia)
El Mundo
(A leader of the ANC makes fun of the fatal accident in La Manga: “Now the air force is throwing rubbish into the sea)

Awful Spanish politicians and toadying British media

Catalonia is not the only part of Spain that is governed by fools, imbeciles, nincompoops, cretins and worse. Unfortunately, the national government is no better – and not least because they are trying to get into bed with the Catalan coup-mongers in order to form their coalition.
Top of the list we have prime minister Pedro Sánchez, who fancies himself as James Bond, although he’s really just a jumped-up Captain Mainwaring with steel-plated elbows.

Then there’s the Deputy PM Carmen Calvo, who claims that feminism is exclusively for “progressive women”
[Feminism] has flourished, and as it has flourished two very interesting things have happened. The first that feminism is for all women. No my dear, oh no my dear [no, bonita]. We’ve worked on it in the genealogy of progressive thought, of socialist thought.
It was not always thus. Finance Minister Indalecio Prieto (PSOE) described it as “a stab wound” for the Republic.

He was echoing the views of progressive women:
Women's suffrage was officially adopted [in Spain] in 1931 despite the opposition of Margarita Nelken and Victoria Kent, two female MPs (both members of the Republican Radical-Socialist Party), who argued that women in Spain at that moment lacked social and political education enough to vote responsibly because they would be unduly influenced by Catholic priests.
In other words, women should be disenfranchised caused the socialists feared that they would vote the wrong way!
This contrasts with one of the first women to be elected to the Spanish parliament, Clara Campoamor, who said:
I am as far distant from fascism as I am from communism. I am a Liberal.
Calvo wants to promote feminism in her own progressive way. She has tweeted:
There will be a constitution in the future that says, in so many words, that women and men are equal. Now it doesn’t say that.
Oh yes it does, my dear:
Article 14 [my emphasis]
Spaniards are equal before the law and may not in any way be discriminated against on account of birth, race, sex, religion, opinion or any other personal or social condition or circumstance.
For a Deputy Prime Minister not to know that might be regarded as extremely unfortunate. However, it gets worse. She is the professor of Constitutional law at the University of Cordoba. What does that say about her university? Or rather, since such appointments are made by competitive examination, what does it say about the political affiliations of the university board that appointed her?
In fact the conservative PP can claim the first Spanish women to have been a mayor, Ombudsperson, President of the Congress   and  President of the Senate, and the first woman ever (she was Spanish) to be a Vice President of the European Commission, and the first woman (not Spanish) to the Commission President.
Next up is the Justice Minister Dolores Delgado. She once distinguished herself by describing a very important judge, Grande-Marlaska, as a “queer” [maricón] who “looks like George Clooney but he’s a sissy” [nenaza]. He is now Spain’s openly gay Interior Minister.
On the subject of gender equality in the judiciary, she has some surprising views that many would regard as hardly being progressive:
I’ll tell you something, I’d want to be tried by men, I don’t trust girls. I don’t get on well with girls but with guys you know perfectly where they’re going.
These comments were made at an informal get-together that included a man called Villarejo, a police officer under judicial investigation – curious company for a justice minister one might think. She had previously denied having met him. After the tapes were published she admitted, in the fourth version of her story, that she had in fact met him three times.
It goes without saying that the media, so quick to criticise the horrors of right wing Italian politicians, keep quiet about the shenanigans of “progressive” Spaniards who try to do simultaneous deals with one party that is financed by Venezuela and Iran, one party that is led by a man who has done time in prison for an ETA terrorist offence and is disbarred from holding public office (to which party he has sold the mayoralty of a town in Navarra and removed the Guardia Civil from the region), and another party that ran a coup against Spain in 2017. The reason that Spain had another election in April this year is that the nation was appalled by Sanchez’s attempts to sell the country to the Catalan secessionists in order to get his budget through parliament.
The Guardian’s Sam Jones and Stephen Burgen have, of course, been falling over themselves to worship the ground that Sánchez walks on. Even the normally level-headed Economist is not immune. On 17 April it recommended a vote for Sánchez to dispel “the ghosts of Franco’s nationalism”, ignoring both its own professed liberalism and the fact that Sánchez himself was acting as Franco’s best publicist with his ridiculous, doomed, futile attempt to get the old dictator out of the Valle de los Caídos (and he’s still there with Sánchez having unsurprisingly achieved absolutely nothing at all except a lot of free publicity for himself and Franco). On 23 May the Economist’s Jeremy Cliffe (aka Charlemagne) joined in the “progressive” pretence (though lie would be a better word) that Vox was a constituent part of the Andalusian government and that the PSOE had not been expelled from that government to widespread relief and satisfaction after 40 years presiding over an era of spectacular corruption, with four of its top people already behind bars for up to five years and almost a score still on trial and expected to join them shortly.
The problem is simple: these partisan journalists play with a huge home advantage on a field that is rigged 45 degrees in their favour. Who among their readers will know the truth? How many of their readers will ever follow Spanish affairs in sufficient detail and in the Spanish language to know what is really happening here? They just send their editors whatever they want (or are ordered) to write and nobody will ever know what is really going on. Simple problems do not, sadly, have simple solutions.
In a few weeks time we will see the result of the trial of the Catalan secessionist coup-mongers. Two years ago the British media covered themselves in contempt by parroting the propaganda lies of the Catalan government. As I have reported (Catalonia - the Spanish government sets the record straight.) they have now been told the truth by the Spanish Foreign Ministry – though of course they knew the truth perfectly well at the time but chose to ignore it. Will they report honestly on this occasion? I am not holding my breath.

Sources
English
Wikipedia
Boletín Oficial del Estado [Spain’s Official Government Gazette]
Guardian
Economist
Spanish
Wikiquote
El Español
(Calvo sticks to her “No, my dear”: “Progressive politics has always been behind feinism)
El Mundo
(The Justice Minister Dolores Delgado in the Villarejo tapes: “Marlaska’s a queer”.)
(Pedro Sánchez humiliates the state by accepting a mediator with Torra)
(The Navarra Socialist Party folows the expected script and hands Bidu the mayoralty of Huarte, the Coucil that Chivite bemanded in her investitures)
ABC
(Minister Delgado’s four versions on her relations with Villarejo)
El Español
(The tweet that takes down Calvo’s “No, my dear”: PP women who became president first)






Monday 26 August 2019

Catalonia - the Spanish government sets the record straight.


The Spanish government has reacted (belatedly it must be said, but well nevertheless) to the activities of the Catalan government in the independence process. España Global, the public diplomacy wing of the Spanish Foreign Ministry, has published a 73-page document, in English as well as Spanish, refuting the  claims made by the secessionists. It can be downloaded here. In particular it lists 45 examples of Fake and Fact, including:

Spain doesn’t let Catalonia vote
It is not true that the Catalans cannot exercise their right to vote under the same conditions as the rest of the Spanish people. Indeed, since 1977 the Catalans have voted at
  • 10 municipal elections
  • 12 regional elections
  • 13 general elections to the Spanish Parliament
  • 7 European elections
  • 2 referendums on their autonomy
  • 4 national referendums

The right to vote is exercised by universal suffrage and is guaranteed for the whole of the nation’s citizens. In the referendum to approve the Statute of Catalonia, the participation was 48.85. In the referendum to ratify the European Constitution in 2005 only 26% of the Catalans voted “no”. There are legal channels at Congress to reform the Constitution.
The independence movement is a peaceful movement
As with all movements, there are sections and politicians favouring secession who stick to peaceful means. There have been sectors that have taken on a radical form and have been involved in violent actions. An example of this was the disorderly siege of the Department of Economy of the Generalitat de Cataluña in Barcelona on 20th September 2017 when a crowd obstructed the movement of the judicial commission and of the members of the State Security Forces and Corps, damaging police vehicles and resorting to insults and obscene language. These facts are pending assessment and consequently it will be the judges who will be in charge of assessing whether or not there was sedition or rebellion.
The secessionist prisoners are political prisoners
This is false. Obviously, there are no political prisoners in Spain. No Catalan politicians have been prosecuted for their ideas. Every day, pro-independence leaders – including the President of the Government of Catalonia – express themselves freely in the media, some even from jail.
The accused are being prosecuted for crimes that are defined in Spain’s Criminal Code and they are being tried with all of the guarantees offered by a democratic State under the rule of law. No intergovernmental organization in the sphere of human rights, and no NGO active in this same sphere (such as Amnesty International or Human Rights Watch) have recognized these persons as political prisoners or prisoners of conscience, despite having criticized their lengthy provisional detention pending their trial.
The UN recognises the right of peoples to self-determination
The UN and International Law recognises the right to self-determination of people when these have been oppressed peoples or colonies, which is not this case Catalonia forms part of Spain, it is recognised as one of its regions, it has its own institutions, it is a bilingual society and it forms part of a Rule of Law as is the Spanish one, which ranks among the 20 full democracies in the world.
The United Nations Secretary General declared, in an interview with the newspaper El Mundo 30 10 2015 that Catalonia was not included in the type of territories to which the UN could guarantee the right of self-determination. Besides, the UN does not admit the right of self-determination in democratic states such as the Spanish one, notwithstanding the so called internal self-determination in language rights, culture, education, etc.
We independents represent the majority
The surveys vary from month to month one of the most recent was conducted by the Autonomous University of Barcelona (at the end of 2018 and gave  46.1% to the supporters of independence,  46.2% to those who would prefer to continue being a part of Spain. Election results have shown that 45%-47% of voters are in favour of Independence (39% in a recent general election).
During the day on which the (illegal) referendum on self-determination took place, police action resulted in injuries to more than a thousand people
Without going into the subject of how many people suffered contusions of some kind during that day, it must be highlighted that only three people were hospitalized with injuries directly resulting from police charges. 48 hours later, only one of these people was still in hospital.
The 1 October ‘referendum’ resulted in a democratic mandate in favour of Catalonia’s independence
Turnout in the “referendum” which was annulled by Spain’s Constitutional Court, was of 38% according to data provided by its organizers (the Generalitat or Catalan regional government). This was subsequently corrected upwards by five points, placing it at 43% (by the Generalitat which provided no explanations), and the percentage of “Yes” votes was 90.18%.
However, there is no reason to grant any credibility to these data, which are totally unverifiable, especially when the Catalan regional government – in the absence of an electoral board – made available, on the very day of the referendum, the possibility of an “open census”, so that anyone was able to vote repeatedly and at different locations. (Which was indeed the case, and can be verified from different sources, including audiovisual material.)

Friday 23 August 2019

"Fuck Spain" and the Catalan Minister of Agriculture

Teresa Jordà (ERC) is the Catalan Councillor for Agriculture. She is not the sharpest knife in the box.
In July last year she horrified Spanish doctors by recommending the consumption of raw milk, tweeting “The biological value and taste of raw cow’s milk is spectacular”.
Now she recommends Catalan craft beer labelled “Fuck Spain”.

Sources (Spanish)
Crónica Global
(An ERC minister has the doctors up in arms by recommending raw milk)
(Teresa Jordà recommends drinking beer labelled “Fuck Spain”)



Wednesday 7 August 2019

British Green MEP supports Catalan supremacy

Gina Dowding is a former NHS health promotion worker, a former Green member of Lancaster City and Lancashire County Councils. Now she is a Green MEP for North-West England.
Fracking (a procedure for extracting oil without mining) is a controversial issue in Lancashire and the north-west, and in 2017 she was found guilty of blocking a road in an environmentalist anti-fracking protest. Whatever may be the depth of her knowledge of geology and the petroleum industry, and I can make no comment on that, she has apparently discovered a hitherto unannounced knowledge of European affairs and boasts of her association with Europe’s nationalists.
“It’s incredibly exciting because the Greens are now the fourth largest group in the European Parliament, and part of the Progressive Regionalists, which includes the SNP [Scottish nationalists] and Plaid Cymru [Welsh nationalists], also the Catalonians, and a small party from Lithuania.
The people that she quaintly refers to as “the Catalonians” are in fact ERC, the coup-mongering racial supremacists, with roots in 1930s fascism that I have mentioned here before (though I have not yet dealt with the party’s penchant for paedophilia). A couple of their political stars:
Heribert Barrera “I do not claim that a country should have a pure race but there is a genetic distribution in the Catalan population that is statistically different from that of the sub-Saharan population for example.” 
Oriol Junqueras “There are three states – only three! – where it has proved impossible to group all the population in a single genetic group. In Italy; in Germany, following the old linguistic border between maritime and continental Germany; and in the Spanish state*, between Spaniards and Catalans … In particular, the Catalans are genetically closer to the French than to the Spaniards; closer to the Italians than the Portuguese, and a bit close to the Swiss. Whereas the Spaniards present greater closeness to the Portuguese than to the Catalans and very little with the French. Curious …”
*Catalan nationalists have a profound, neurotic horror of the word “Spain” and refuse to utter it. They always talk of “the Spanish state”.
Curious indeed, and “incredibly exciting” company for a Green who associates with people who advocate racial supremacy and ran a coup d’état in 2017 against a democratic, constitutional government, for which they will spend a long time in jail when they are inevitably found guilty of treason next month. A coup that their fervent followers have vowed to repeat.


“Populism is playing to people’s worst instincts - fear, anger and blame,” says Gina Dowding. Not that she can imagine her nice “Catalonian” friends ever doing such a thing of course.







The photos show the two Jordis standing on a captured police car, trashed by the mob that they have incited, and the car itself with the arms and ammunition stolen.




Sadly too, Dowding has fallen into the linguistic trap of Catalan nationalism. She speaks of the SNP, Plaid Cymru and a small party from Lithuania, but of “the Catalonians” as if there were no others. Of course there are, but supremacists recognise none but their own. For a start, there is Ciudadanos MEP Jordi Cañas and I daresay that there are others from other parties. Also, there is the Catalan socialist Josep Borrell, the new High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and former President of the European Parliament. But for our Green Lady from Lancashire, only rebels, rabble-rousers and racists, the sort of people who manhandle schoolchildren in classrooms and spy on schoolchildren in playgrounds, count as “the Catalonians”.
When it comes down to it, and whatever yarns they may spin about internationalism, the Greens are localists and protectionists, which is why they are able to get on so well with the Catalan secessionists. As Dowding puts it, “I’m pro-EU but I don’t think we should have more and more integration, just more co-operation … The EU is a union of countries, not a country in itself.”

She is also apparently knowledgeable about the Middle East, international trade policy and immigration, as well as geology and Spanish politics, though her views on those matters are of no concern here.


Sources
(English)
This blog
Lancaster Guardian
(Spanish)
Libertad Digital
(Oriol Junqueras; “The Catalans are genetically closer to the French than to the Spaniards”)
La Gaceta
(What’s going on with ERC and paedophilia?)




Sunday 4 August 2019

Politics can damage your health



Politics can damage your health, at least if you get mixed up in defying legal constitutional authority. This is Artur Mas, former premier of Catalonia, ageing over nine years. And this is even though he has made a lot of money and has mysteriously kept out of prison.

Source (Spanish/Catalan)
Dolça Catalunya

El prusés destroza físicamente a Astut Mas

(The independence process physically destroys Astute Mas (he once used the word "astute" to refer to himself))

Thursday 1 August 2019

The Guardian and Catalonia


The Guardian tells the world that in Barcelona “wild boar are jostling tourists and raiding rubbish bins”. This is a stretch, to be polite. Yes, wild boar do come down from the Collserola park into town occasionally. This is a curious fact, but to suggest that the city is alive with the beasts threatening tourists on the Rambla and jostling them outside the Sagrada Familia is simply not true. Tourists hardly ever venture into the few parts of town where they are to be found. Pretty well everyone who lives in the upper part of town near the edge of the park has never seen one in the streets and would be astounded to do so. Moreover, this article is of no topical interest. It is a rehash of one that appeared in La Vanguardia on 1 May 2018.
The Guardian does not tell the world that the Catalan government has been spying on children in school playgrounds to find what language they speak.
The Guardian does not tell the world that Catalan premier Quim Torra has been fined a total of €8,500 for failing to maintain the neutrality of his government institutions during the election campaign in the spring by sending politically loaded pro-independence emails to public officials and by refusing to remove pro-independence symbols from government buildings
Torra made a mockery of the Electoral Commission's ruling
by replacing the yellow ribbon with a white one


Source (Spanish)
(Quim Torra says that he will not pay the fines imposed by a “repressive body” like the Central Electoral Commission)