Dunwoody has not only been the role model for our neighbors to the south but has spread its religion of "I, Me, Mine" across the pond. In Spain, the Catalan separatist movement has been re-energized by the economic crisis as Catalonia sees itself as net donor supporting the economically weaker areas whilst sharing equally in the harsh austerity programs. They want to keep their wealth in Catalonia and to hell with the rest of Spain.
Catalonia announced a snap election potentially opening the way for the
country’s most economically important region to declare independence.
“The hour has come to exercise our right to self rule,” said Artur Mas,
Catalonia’s president.
Under the current fiscal system, Catalonia collects taxes from its
residents, but turns them over to the central government, which then
disburses a designated amount to each region to pay for public salaries,
social services, infrastructure and the like. In 2009, the latest year
for which figures are available, Catalonia provided 19.49% of the
federal government’s tax revenue, yet received only 14.03% of the
state’s spending.
Previously, Mas had called for a fiscal reform that would enable his government to
collect its own taxes and turn over a designated amount to the central
state (rather than the other way around). The courts struck this down silencing all moderate voices in the region.
He is not alone in his separatist views. “We have no other option since our will has been totally ignored” says
Soledat Balaguer, a member of the secretariat of the Catalan National
Assembly. “Catalonia needs to be its own state.”
Sound familiar?