<…>The Pudgedemon idea of a "digital republic" is an utopia.It's pointless.
And yet, as with all this Republic adventure that is based on emotionally driven individuals with not much of a solid rational factual base, and where lies on end pile-up to create an alt-reality, millions from tax payers have been invested into software, so called embassies, and so forth, in a will to keep pushing on a road to nowhere land. Bearing in mind that best case scenario nowadays is that 50% of the Catalan region are in favour of creating a Republic, it leaves out the other 50% who’s against the idea, and who are completely ignored by the Catalan government, and often harassed if they are to show publicly any alignment to being Spanish.
From an economical point of view, the cryptocurrency that is on the table is really yet another source of planned income for the cause, and with that sole objective in mind, the foundations that are at it’s base are weak and far from anything that I would consider trustworthy or with any sort of stability on the horizon.
Currently, the Catalan government has two set of income:
- The official income, derived from official local taxes and Spanish central tax gathering.
- The unofficial charity base line, whereby individual and businessmen that are aligned to the cause contribute through uncontrolled mechanisms to the cause.
The planned cryptocurrency I’s say would start-off on the latter scenario, with aspirations to the former from a self-governed point of view.
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The image is actually a derogatory counter-replica on some football playing field. Catalans are often called “Polish” (Polacos) when one wants to refer to then as a collective in a derogatory tone, being the origin not clear (language related, tight with money, alleged parallelism between Spain/Catalonia during the Spanish Civil war and the Invasion of Poland during the Second World War, etc.).
Regardless, many people that believe that Catalonia should be independent do so because of economic reasons which are all but profound and well analysed in terms of feasibility and consequences.
I personally know cases of people who vote in favour of a Catalan Republic with the hope that, were it to succeed, they would be able to stop paying their mortgage to a bank that resides in Spain. A couple more that I know believe that since Catalonia would not pay it’s debts, then the Republican wonderland would swim in pool of Euros Croats o Catcoins that will make everyone richer.
The fact that the idea is only vouched by 50% of the population of Catalonia (7,5% of the population of Spain), and that Spanish constitution does not currently support the segregation of its territories, makes it a constant source of friction on the day to day encounter of the residents in Catalonia