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European constitution: why I am too stupid to vote 'yes'

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  • European constitution: why I am too stupid to vote 'yes'

    The London News Review, UK
    May 24 2005

    European constitution: why I am too stupid to vote 'yes'
    May 25, 2005



    The most peculiar thing about this whole European constitution in-out
    referendum yes-no-maybe business is how supremely ignorant most
    people are as to what any of it actually means. And I speak as one of
    the ignorant. I'm shamefully unaware of what the constitution
    contains, implies, commits us to - but I suspect the blame can't all
    be laid at my door.

    Because while I may be a thicko when it comes to the European
    constitution, in the general scheme of things I'm a) relatively
    un-thick; and b) reasonably up to speed with what's in the news. For
    the last 4 weeks or so a large part of my job has been to read the
    newspapers, I fairly often watch the news on TV, I sometimes catch
    Newsnight and Question Time - and yet I still don't really know what
    the hell the European constitution actually IS.

    And I may be flattering my stupid (and lazy) self, but if I don't
    really know what it's all about, there must be a wopping great wedge
    of Britain that knows as little or less than I do. And we're talking
    about a referendum here. A referendum which is meant to gauge my
    opinion. But my opinion on what?

    And I don't think I'm learning a whole lot from the debate itself.
    Just witness the way the matter is thrashed out on TV: with
    pro-consitution and anti-constitution lobby groups trying to convince
    the public that their interpretation of the constitution is the
    correct one. `No, the constitution means this' - `on the contrary, it
    means the opposite' - so am I meant to make up my mind based upon
    someone else's interpretation of something I don't understand myself?

    It's not like the fox-hunting debate. At least with that you knew
    roughly what the deal is: you either think it's an okay thing for
    grown men and women to chase animals to their death in the name of
    entertainment and 'tradition', or you don't.Obviously I'm being a bit
    flippant there... but my point is this: you can listen to the
    arguments of pro-hunt and anti-hunt activists, and at least know what
    it is, at some fundamental level, that they're banging on about.

    Not so with the constitution. If someone said to me: `all European
    countries have to have the same flag' at least I'd know what I was
    meant to have an opinion about. As it is, I feel like I'm meant to
    have an opinion about a bunch of other people's opinions.

    And I don't want to be told what to think. I want to be told what to
    think about.

    It all smacks of a rushed job. I feel like I'm being hustled. It's a
    bit too much like the New Labour anti-terror laws, which skidded
    through parliament on a slick of ignorance. A bit like the
    anti-hunting laws, come to think of it...

    What's needed is a discussion of specifics. Actual graspable issues.
    An example that springs to mind is the issue of Turkey joining
    Europe. In France, the small matter of the Armenian genocide has been
    brought up within the referendum debate:

    The Armenian community in France, some 400,000-strong, has been
    expected to lean towards a 'no' vote as a means to stop Turkey's
    accession. Community leaders have insisted that France urge Turkey to
    acknowledge the 1915 genocide which left an estimated 1 - 1.5 million
    Armenians dead, as part of the accession talks.
    Obviously that's a massively emotive issue, but at least it is
    understandable. The Armenians are still pissed off at the Turks for
    slaughtering them in their hundreds of thousands. Okay - so let's
    talk about it, see if we can't find a solution. Find one. And move
    on.

    This is the level at which the consitution debate has to be
    conducted: at the level of the particular. We need to address
    particular fears, particular hopes, particular wants, and particular
    problems. Only then can there be any kind of intelligent and
    transparent progress.

    In the meantime, vote NO. Unless you happen to know what the hell
    this is all about, and think the consitution is a good thing, in
    which case vote YES. And if that's the case, perhaps you could
    explain it to me. Because I'm stumped.


    http://www.lnreview.co.uk/news/005074.php
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