What’s
haunting Europe?
Secession
- you can't see it, you can't smell it, you can't touch it. But when it's
there, strange stuff happens: Huge numbers of police in combat gear appear out
of nowhere, driving camouflaged armored vehicles, making you wonder where all
the equipment is coming from, sirens howl, shrill bullhorns scream commands,
whole streets, especially around school buildings, are sealed off, tear gas and
rubber bullets are shot. Only there’s no opponent there at all. Eerie.
Due to
there being no opponents, the combat troops come down hard on peaceful people
who are congregating at these school buildings for a harmless vote, yell at
them, drag them away and beat them up. And this despite the fact that the
object of the vote is anything but aggressive or harmful. Moreover, it is
impossible to avoid the eerie impression that the more the voters withdraw, the
harder the police strike out; the further the voters move away, the more
forcefully they draw the police after them; and the police become most brutal
when the people want only one thing, namely to be left alone. When, that is to
say, they behave in such a way that they can’t possibly collide with the armed
troops – or only if these troops and their commanders claim a ‘right’ not to
leave the people alone, to disturb them, to oppress them, to subjugate them and
to impose their will on them.
Now, of
course, as every child knows, no one has the right to disturb, harass,
subjugate or impose their will on others. Which is why the violent police and
their state employers invent mysterious reasons why people who want to be left
alone are in the wrong, and why they, who want to subjugate them, are in the
right. It’s not by chance that the word ‘law’ or ‘rights’ comes up repeatedly
in these arguments. For example, it’s said that the constitutional ‘legal
system’ only permits secession if the ‘constitutional state’ in question allows
for this. So-called ‘constitutional lawyers’ and also ‘international law
practitioners’ explain with professional self-importance that only states can
be ‘subjects of international law’, i.e. it is up to them alone to determine
whether someone has the ‘right’ to split off and organise themselves elsewhere.
If someone does this without the state’s blessing, they infringe ‘rights.’
However, the fact that these ‘rights’ are enacted by none other than the states
themselves makes this more like a grim joke.
Real
rights, however, are to be found on the side of secession. Not because there’s
anything like a solemnly conferred positive right to secession, but rather, put
much more simply and negatively: because secession doesn’t hurt anyone, doesn’t
harass anyone, doesn’t subjugate anyone and doesn’t impose its will on anyone,
so there’s no justification whatsoever for accusing it of infringing rights. Secession
is right because it doesn’t commit any injustice.
And so
it cannot be an injustice if the UK leaves the EU, Catalonia leaves Spain,
Venice leaves Italy, or if you, dear readers, want to leave any coercive
organisation, for example the Federal Republic of Germany, and organise
yourselves in a different way.
Translated
from eigentümlich frei, where the original article was published on 10th
December 2017.