Nobody would accuse this book of being unbiased. It is a one-sided account of the reasons why Catalonia is on an unavoidable course towards secession. Nary a line will the reader find towards exploring the opposing view. Published through ctaloniapress.com as an educational aid to bolster the independentist agenda, it contains some minor typos, unverified statements, contradictions and - especially - omissions.
Some main ideas are repeated ad nauseam :
a) Spain and Catalonia as two de facto separate nations. This would explain the irate attitude of these writers against anything that even remotely sounds like integration efforts into Spanish culture, be it of immigrants or in education.
b) Spain is never a sum of nations but a monolithic bullnecked block. It is labeled, at best, either as deaf to Catalan aspirations or unable to understand its claims . More often than not Spain is a "colonizer", an oppressor, "anti-democartic" and a "plunderer". I removed one star from my review just based on this insulting and superior tone. Especially noted Ramon Tremosa i Balcells' article "The view from Brussels" where he rants against the burden lazy despotic Spain represents to Catalonia , that most "Sacandinavian of nations" in the Mediterranean.
c) The US and Europe should quickly recognize Catalonia as an estate. No questions. (This was when the US was led by Obama). To that end, the authors pile praise upon praise on Brussels and the USA even dredging up the US Constitution,
d) Independence is not ultimately based on language or genetics or even economics. It is a desire born out of a feeling of being Catalan with superior, more European values and a will to self-determination than the rest of the nations that integrate Spain.
e) Who knew? Picasso was Catalan after all.
The reader will be left wondering how this jives with other articles that emphasize the thriving of Catalan culture, business, media and institutions. All the writers in the book are invariably cautious not to ever pretend than Catalonia and the rest of Spain are still deeply connected. Some articles opt for a patronizing tone towards Madrid and any attempt to negotiate further. Never mind the millions of Spaniards, Catalan and otherwise, that actually disagree with the authors. They will have to be assimilated is the reader's guess, into a new State. Probably by using "catalanizaton", a joyous process by which you seamlessly blend into your new country and learn about its rich culture.
Most of the arguments come down to money though. The premise is that Catalonia supplies the Spanish State with and un-proportionate amount of revenue while being denied its share of the infrastructure and services. The reasons for this disparity are left unclear as are the details. Catalunya has the largest GRP in Spain and it is about average in unemployment level. Madrid itself actually receives a lot less than it receives as well -as stated in the very charts the authors provide but selectively comment on. This shuffling of resources does occur in most countries but the authors all seem to agree that the Spanish government has an unshakeable embedded hatred of Catalans. At least they'd love for you to believe that. Or that they are woefully underrepresented. Or that the economic crisis "dragged" Catalonia down when they should have been at the level of Denmark. The Olympics did not ,apparently, showcase Barcelona -and only Barcelona- as they should have . They also seem baffled by odd facts like the radial structure that connects Madrid, the capital, with the periphery. May be a ring structure would be more suitable? If they were Scotland they'd probably complain about London's distance.
The legal dilemma is, may be, the only nugget of reasonable claims here. It is a total disservice to the reader that this possibility of a legal means is immediately dismissed. Spain has an "indissoluble unity" spelled out in the Constitution. This is the obvious interpretation by the Supreme Court which makes any referendum illegal - and not the perceived bias of the "highly politicized" Supreme Court justices as the authors hint. Spain could change its Constitution to allow for divisibility, or not but wouldn't it be at least pave the way ? . The Canadian constitution stops short of that very notion for example. If a nation decided to become independent the Constitution should allow for a clear procedure as long as that divisibility is transferred to the splitting nation. Of course the referendum should allow -to be consistent- with the divisibility of Catalunya itself. If a town in Aragon or a province like Tarragona decided to stay in Spain; or if the Balearic Islands decided to form its own nation based on their insularity, the new nation should also allow for that. Not only do the authors refuse to contemplate those rights but make some territorial claims within France and other kingdoms of Spain, most notably Aragon and Valencia. Anywhere where Catalan is spoken. Similar linguistic/genetic arguments are hardly rational or democratic.
Some look elsewhere for examples of successful integration bringing examples like the U.S. Constitution, Scotland within the U.K, and the Quebecois in Canada. Never mind that for every dollar New Jersey in the U.S. pays to the Federal budget they get .88 back while poverty stricken Mississippi gets three dollars for every one they contribute. This is a solidarity pact, not a difference in culture. There might be a time when the tables are inverted. "Even if Spain was the wealthiest nation in the world, Catalans would demand independence" said Oriol Junqueras. He is correct. This shouldn't be about money, but that's the main argument repeated in almost every article in the book. This is because the underlying reasoning against this matching of resources is that the rest of Spain has a different "business model", shorthand for a culture of hand-outs and laziness. The Catalan business model is a network of local relationships. Is it? Catalonia has had a hefty share of corruption cases entirely homemade. Another model Madrid is apparently in the grips of is the French centralized model. Let's forget recent claims by the same soundbite-producing Junqueras that the Catalans are genetically more related to the French.
Another oft-repeated story in this book is that of the siege of Barcelona by the troops of Phillip V as a result of the Succesion War. The fact that one chapter "Our Sept 11th" tries to make parallels between the attack in New York and this siege should be a good indication of how heavy-handed the metaphors are. These articles practically beg for the goodwill of Brussels and Washington to further their cause by drawing far-fetched parallels like these. Again, the reader might be forgiven for coming out as ignorant as before about the circumstances of this siege if not the result; the disappearance -till recently- of the Catalan Courts, a shame to be sure, but a shame corrected. It is a shame because the Catalans Courts were truly a wonder of legislative autonomy and advanced legislation. The concept of "nation" as engendered by citizenry comes about during the napoleonic wars when national armies are formed for the first time. The reader is led to imagine a fully formed democratic state in happy harmony with the world before the siege. A state banned forever that only now can resurface. History is always written by the "winners" it is said. i wonder if the Spanish people were really winners in this particular war. If anything, I am looking forward to learn more about Catalonia before this events.
In conclusion, if financial , historical and legal reasons are not enough , it really comes down to an emotion, a feeling of being Catalan (and European) to the exclusion of being Spanish as well . The whole book takes pains making it "crystal clear" this identity is incompatible with a concert of nations under one federalist administration. The only way to make this apparent is by reducing the nation of Spain to a deaf oppressor in the best tradition of nationalistic demonization, one that "belittles and underestimates" , one that "colonially exploits" .
Personally, I would welcome a secession referendum in which Spain and Catalonia define the terms beforehand. I am not opposed to an independent nation even though I see a lot more advantages to a common land. I think making Spain more Catalan is not a bad thing at all and it is dumb to deny the amazing contributions that the rest of Spain has made to Catalonia's cultural and economic wealth from flamenco to Picasso. This union has not erased local cultures and languages, on the contrary, they've thrived and they've found further protections in that very government that these authors find so rancid. It seems the end of that effort is at hand along with other troubled fractures. After the end of communism as an European ideology, the eruption of a bottled up nationalist war in the Balkan states, the Greek collapse, Brexit and the resurgence of right-wing xenophobic parties everywhere from Hungary to France or , gasp, the U.S., as a "punishment" vote, here it is again, nationalism as a political opportunity.