Thursday, February 24, 2022

The invasion of Ukraine

So I'm sitting down to write this at 4.30am, when most people in Scotland are fast asleep and will be unaware for another couple of hours that a Russian invasion of Ukraine appears to be underway.  It reminds me vaguely of being half-asleep in the middle of the night, with the TV on with the sound down, when the Gulf War began in early 1991 - I think there was snow on the ground that night as well. 

I think we all have to show a bit of humility and admit that we can only guess exactly what the trajectory of this story is.  A family member asked me a few hours ago whether I thought this was the beginning of some sort of 'world war', and I scoffed at the idea - but, there again, almost no-one recognised the significance of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand when it happened in 1914.  What I can say with a degree of confidence, however, is that whatever occurs is not going to be Alex Salmond's fault, in spite of the absurd efforts of the political and media establishment to pin the blame on him.  Why is there an Alex Salmond Show on a Russian state-funded TV channel? Ultimately it's because our own London-run/London-regulated media has failed to make space for the important alternative perspective the programme represents - a perspective which has almost nothing to do with Russia, incidentally.  

If that space existed, no-one would need to turn to RT and this whole question would be an irrelevance.  My own personal experience chimes with that - I was interviewed on RT last year, and I must have been interviewed on Radio Sputnik somewhere between six and eight times over the years.  By contrast, I've only been interviewed on Scottish/UK mainstream media three times (twice by the BBC and once by the Bauer radio network - and the latter was on the subject of poppies).  That doesn't mean I'm a Russian stooge - I've simply taken the opportunities that were actually offered to me and that's how it's played out.  I know other people in the pro-independence alternative media, aside from a chosen handful of regular 'safe' contributors, have encountered similar disinterest (if it's possible to encounter disinterest) from the domestic MSM.  If you deny a group of people with certain beliefs a voice and a platform, then you must look to your own conscience if they're offered a different platform and you happen to disapprove of it.

For once in my life, I would actually agree with something that Boris Johnson said yesterday - that freedom of speech means that politicians should not get to decide to take TV stations off the air.  Do we think, for example, that other countries would have been justified in shutting down the BBC World Service's operations at moments in history when the United Kingdom was a military aggressor - most obviously during the Suez Crisis in 1956, or during the illegal invasion of Iraq in 2003?  And if we don't think that, what actually is the distinction we're drawing?

I also thought it was rather unedifying to see Nicola Sturgeon and Ian Blackford trying to distance the SNP from the man who actually led the party for just under one-quarter of its existence to date.  Indeed, there was only a gap of a few days between Alex Salmond ceasing to be the SNP's Foreign Affairs spokesman and Ian Blackford becoming the SNP's Westminster group leader in 2017.

Lastly, a word on what it means to be a supporter of self-determination when we look at Ukraine.  It inescapably means that Ukraine has an inalienable right to independence from Russia, and that we must view President Putin's denial of Ukraine's right to exist with outrage.  But it also means that Crimea and the Russian-speaking parts of eastern Ukraine have the right to leave the Ukrainian state, and even to unify with Russia, if they freely choose to do so. It's not good enough to mutter the words "territorial integrity" as if that's some sort of magic wand that makes the right of a people to self-determination disappear in a puff of smoke.  That said, the exercise of self-determination is rarely, if ever, going to look like a military invasion from an external actor with its own self-interest firmly in mind.

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Please bear with me as I continue promoting Scot Goes Pop's fundraising drive.  Opinion polls are so expensive that since I started commissioning them, fundraising has almost become like painting the Forth Bridge.  If you'd like to help this blog continue for another year, or to help us commission another full-scale poll like the six we've commissioned over the last two years, here are the various options for donating...

Via the Scot Goes Pop polling fundraiser for 2021-22, which I set up in the autumn and is part-funded.

If you prefer to donate directly, that can be done via Paypal or bank transfer:  

My Paypal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Or email me for my bank details.  (My contact email address is different from my Paypal address, and can be found in the sidebar of the desktop version of the site, or on my Twitter profile.) 

Sunday, February 20, 2022

Team Muirhead scale the Scolympic heights - which is more than can be said for the Mirror and the Express...

First of all, huge congratulations to Eve Muirhead and her team for securing what will undoubtedly be regarded as one of the all-time great Scottish sporting achievements.  I'm sure I was one of many tens of thousands who stayed up to watch the whole game against Japan in the wee small hours.  However, if you'll forgive the shameless self-indulgence, I really must take a moment to mark the fact that the Olympic curling over the last couple of weeks has also unexpectedly provided me with a little highlight of my own blogging career.  

As long-term readers will know, I genuinely am a big curling fan.  I think it probably goes back to the fact that there seemed to be someone in the BBC Scotland hierarchy when I was growing up in the early 90s who was sympathetic towards curling and used to make generous space in the schedules for highlights packages from events like the Scottish Junior Championships.  (Those days are long gone, sadly.)  So I was exposed to the sport back then, and since around 1999 I've been religiously glued to either Eurosport or the World Curling channel on YouTube every November, March and April, when 99% of people probably don't have a clue anything is even happening.  I've been to the Scottish finals day in Perth a few times, and I remember in 2016 a very nice chap from UK Sport approached me in Braehead when I was practically the only spectator (an exaggeration, but only a slight one) for the Norway v Sweden men's semi-final in the European Championships, and said "bit of a disappointing turnout, isn't it?"  So I think it's reasonable to say I'm not exactly a fair-weather fan, unlike the jingoistic Brit journalists who jump on the curling bandwagon for a couple of days every four years and then immediately forget the sport even exists.

Yes, Douglas Dickie of the Mirror, and yes, David Walker of the Daily Express, I'm looking at you.  Thanks to James Sellars on Twitter, I've only just found out that my occasional wind-up tweets about "Scottish and European curling" and "Scolympic silver medals" have triggered no fewer than two barking mad articles in national newspaper websites - one in the Mirror yesterday entitled 'Scottish nationalists hijack Team GB curling silver medal for divisive agenda', (which cluelessly uses a photo of David Murdoch's silver medal-winning team from eight years ago!) and one in the Express way back on 8th February entitled 'Nationalist blogger slammed for 'hate-filled' anti-British comment on the Winter Olympics', with the sub-heading 'James Kelly, who is a pro-independence blogger and says he is an elected member of Alba's National Executive Committee, was criticised for his tweet about curling'.  Even better, the Express went to all the trouble of getting a Scottish Conservative spokesperson to make an official comment about my tweet.

Words fail me.  I've finally made the big time now, and it's all thanks to the Roarin' Game.  It's  amazing, isn't it?  Think of all the deadly serious topics I've covered at length on this blog over the years, from gun control to the death penalty, from Covid to the destruction of devolution.  Not even the remotest flicker of interest from the mainstream media.  But a bit of throwaway banter on Twitter about the indisputable fact that the "British curling team" are all Scottish, and it's like the end of civilisation as we know it.

One day, someone will write a book about the fascinating psychological phenomenon of a minority winter sport proving to be more "triggering" for the Brit Nat hordes than practically any other subject I can think of.  The Express noted that I was heavily criticised for my tweet, which is perfectly true, but what they didn't bother mentioning is that almost all of the criticisms came from borderline-fascists, many of whom seemed to think I couldn't be Scottish because I have an Irish surname.  "Is dat royt, James?" was a particular highlight.  Blair McDougall must be so proud.

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Please bear with me as I continue promoting Scot Goes Pop's fundraising drive.  Opinion polls are so expensive that since I started commissioning them, fundraising has almost become like painting the Forth Bridge.  If you'd like to help this blog continue for another year, or to help us commission another full-scale poll like the six we've commissioned over the last two years, here are the various options for donating...

Via the Scot Goes Pop polling fundraiser for 2021-22, which I set up in the autumn and is part-funded.

If you prefer to donate directly, that can be done via Paypal or bank transfer:  

My Paypal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Or email me for my bank details.  (My contact email address is different from my Paypal address, and can be found in the sidebar of the desktop version of the site, or on my Twitter profile.)