Tuesday, April 30, 2024

WHEN GREAT SOCIETIES DECLINE

 

In life all things change, usually quite gradually. The cataclysmic upheavals seen in America in 1775 or in France in 1789 were exceptional, though they were matched by the Bolshevik coup in Russia in 1917 and the election of Hitler’s Nazis in Germany in 1933. The inevitability of eventual substantial, evolutionary change cannot be avoided, yet sometimes it goes in an unfavourable direction. After all, Persia, Egypt, Greece, Rome, Spain and the Ottomans famously declined and fell. I would like to draw contemporary parallels from modern Russia and from my native Scotland.



                                Yasmine Naghdi as Odette/Odile in Swan Lake

A few days ago, I had the delight of attending with friends a cinema relay from Covent Garden of Tchaikovsky’s celebrated ballet Swan Lake. The supremely elegant dancing, the ravishing music and the magical ambiance were entirely Russian. How civilised and moving it all was! The 19th century and early 20th century saw a glittering Russian culture embracing giants like Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Pushkin and Chekhov; music was graced by Borodin and Mussorgsky. This culture flourished in exile, with Rachmaninoff and Stravinsky in music and Diaghilev’s Ballet Russes enchanting the dance. Even under Communism, the cultural flame did not die with Prokofiev and Shostakovich in music, Eisenstein revolutionizing film, Pasternak and Solzhenitsyn producing novels of global significance. In all, a wonderful legacy.



                                                               

        
Leo Tolstoy

                                                                 Boris Pasternak

But look at Russia now, the least regarded nation in the world, abhorred, isolated and despised! Her leaders and their heartless ideology carry a heavy burden of guilt. Under Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin the Russian aristocracy and liberal elements were persecuted and exiled. Prosperous peasants were dispossessed and starved, notably in Ukraine (4m dead in the man-made Holodomor famine of 1933-4), political dissidents were ruthlessly suppressed and executed. WW2 Victory by 1945 made the regime impregnable, even though Stalin died in 1953, and most of his henchmen removed, to be followed in time by the vulgarly ruthless Khrushchev and the imperialistic Brezhnev, who successfully entered the space race and brought a modicum of prosperity to the Russian masses.



                                  Joseph Stalin

 

                                                                            Nikita Khrushchev           

Vladimir Putin

                                 

Relations with the West were uneasy, despite a brief glimmer of tolerance with Gorbachov, the USSR finally disintegrated, riven by its own contradictions, ushering in a period of anarchy under Yeltsin. A strongman and ex-secret policeman, Vladimir Putin, initially steadied the society and economy from 1999. Tragically he has made bad even worse. A fantasist and a killer, he mounted an entirely unprovoked attack on the newly independent Ukraine. The descent to the gutter has been unrelenting, suppression of all creative art, crude nationalism demanding a recreation of Tsarist Russia, the worst popular instincts mobilized, opponents murdered, often in the guise of “accidents, untimely illnesses, and unexplained suicides or defenestrations”. Many thousand young Russian and Ukrainian soldiers have perished in this wholly unjustifiable conflict. Currently the tide of war is moving in favour of the Russians with their huge weight in numbers and their air superiority; but their entire enterprise is morally bankrupt and will never be forgiven. Russia, with no doubt millions of her quite innocent citizens, has lost the respect of the civilised world and will not be re-admitted to the top table in the West, her dreams of Empire forever shattered.

………………….

 



The stirring annual Edinburgh military Tattoo

But what could all this possibly have to do with Scotland? Well, think about some parallels. Scotland too has a proud cultural legacy. Edinburgh, dubbed “The Athens of the North” was the centre of the 18th Century Scottish Enlightenment, a brilliant circle including David Hume, the empirical philosopher par excellence, Adam Smith, father of modern economics and Thomas Reid, founder of the Scottish philosophic school of Common-sense. Do not forget the great biographer James Boswell nor the matchless poet Robert Burns, painter Allan Ramsay, nor the peerless architect Robert Adam. The 19th century saw the flourishing of Walter Scott, poet and inventor of the historical novel, painter Raeburn, florid historian Thomas Carlyle, novelists R L Stevenson and Conan Doyle, not to mention dramatist J. M. Barrie and idiosyncratic modern poet Hugh MacDiarmid.. Quite a gathering of talent!


David Hume



                                                                 Sir Walter Scott

Politically Scotland was pre--1914 a Liberal stronghold with prime ministers Lord Rosebery and Henry Campbell-Bannerman but it soon revolved towards Labour with worthies like Kier Hardie, Ramsay Macdonald and Arthur Henderson. The Tories held on to their support holding a majority of Scottish seats in Westminster in Eden’s 1955 administration. Then Tony Blair’s ministry 1997-2007 had many prominent Scots – Gordon Brown, Derry Irvine, Robin Cook, Alistair Darling and Donald Dewar, who became the first First Minister when her devolved Parliament was reconvened (adjourned since 1707!) in 1999. So far, so conventional. Scottishness was not boasted about, rather it was quietly accepted, and many Scots prospered within the UK.

All this changed with the explosion of the cult of Nationalism in the early 2000s and the rise of the SNP. Like class war in Russia, Scottish Independence became an ideology not a mere policy. Previously Scottish nationalism was a rather forlorn gentlemanly cause, espoused by figures like Sir Compton Mackenzie and by romantic intellectuals winning the odd by-election but basically a protest vote. Suddenly it displaced Labour as the creed of “Weegies and their Wains” (Glaswegians and their Kids) and other working-class constituencies. The race to the bottom was begun when in 2007 the SNP became the largest party in the Scottish Assembly and in 2011 it achieved an overall majority, (69 seats) all under Alex Salmond. The SNP lost the crucial independence referendum in 2014 and Salmond resigned, to be succeeded by Nicola Sturgeon who was a well-established First Minister from 2014 to 2023. Her style was fanatically fixated on Independence, secretive and Anglophobic and she wowed the chip-on-the-shoulder nationalist mob. She suddenly resigned under a cloud, as police investigation into the SNP ‘s finances gathered pace. Her successor was Humza Yousaf, Scottish born and bred, of Pakistani Moslem origins, who was politically less adept, and who blundered over his alliance with the Leftie Greens. Humza resigned today facing votes of confidence and persistent ridicule.

It has to be said that the SNP leadership carries a rather mixed reputation for honesty and good sense. Alex Salmond was tried and acquitted for sexual misconduct including rape.in 2018. Also, his regular programme later, on the Russia Today TV Channel, was heavily criticised – it ceased with the Ukraine invasion. He left the SNP to found the ultra-Nationalist fantasy party Alba. Nicola Sturgeon dabbled in gender politics, maybe unwisely, and her reputation was damaged when her husband was charged with embezzlement of SNP funds. Humza Yousaf has been naïve in some of his dealings, but is presumably straight, though there is a recent cloud over his brother-in-law in Dundee about alleged extortion and a fatal defenestration / suicide. Plummeting moral standards and a ghastly drug-culture are the bane of beautiful Scotland, the worst in Europe. What a shameful political inheritance!

Alex Salmond

 
Nicola Sturgeon


Hamza Yousaf

 

SMD

29.04.24

Text copyright © Sidney Donald 2024

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