According to the haphazard logic of Conan Doyle, the dog
that doesn’t bark is supposed to tell you something. Sir Arthur’s glittering career
could probably tell you a lot, were you attentive, about the kinds of creature
a Scot on the make can wind up becoming in a foreign capital.
My dog,
being a lazy hound, just barks in a routine way. Sometimes he says, “I think
that might be trouble. Better have a look”. Mine is not a stupid dog. He is not
often wrong.
Everyone
chases the noise, the racket. Everyone follows the argument they think they
understand. Everyone, furthermore, ends up chasing the heady stench of the argument
placed beneath their noses. That’s not wise, necessarily.
Two of the
grand distractions are called “Scotland” and “England”. No one involved with real
power gives a crap about either. If they mean to prevent a northern fragment
from asserting a democratic right over the southern part, that is simply
because money is at stake.
They’ll
give all the good dogs a feint and a lure, though, with tales of hatred, treaties,
coinage and grannies seized by border patrols. Reason it through. It’s just
offal for the hounds, chum chucked in the water, a means to prevent debate. The
intention is to stop thought.
Meanwhile,
my dog is barking his head off.
He says
that the mistake is to be taken in by those “Blow for the SNP” drolleries. They
are meant – and, my, how well they succeed – to drag you into a muddy dogfight.
My mutt invites you to wonder what is going on in the meantime in your country.
A game
rigged before it even begins. Notice, for example, how no point offered has
anything to do with the point at hand while they talk currency theory. For
example: who has legal title over Scotland’s assets?
Some
nights, when the wind is up, my dog just prowls the house, looking for trouble.