The world's most-read Scottish politics website

Wings Over Scotland


Once upon a time in the West

Posted on March 16, 2012 by

We were struck by a little parable in the Scotsman today, penned by our favourite teller of fireside morality tales Michael Kelly. (Who, as attentive readers will know, only fails to grace our “Zany Comedy Relief” links column due to the lack of any central hub address for his contributions to the paper.)

In what we could most charitably describe as a “there but for the grace of God” scenario, the man whose chairmanship of Celtic took it to within hours of the fate that’s currently befalling Rangers reiterated the tired old lie about how Scotland needs both of the Old Firm, but in the course of the article he also passed on an interesting fact we hadn’t previously known.

“Rangers were once before in financial difficulty. It was in the 1920’s when my grandfather, James Kelly (a former Scotland centre-half), was chairman of Celtic. Rangers had a temporary cash flow problem and their board came out to his house in Blantyre to explain the problem and seek help. Celtic gave them an unconditional short-term loan. The fact that Rangers felt able to ask and that Celtic willingly responded indicates that both clubs were aware of their inter-dependence.”

We couldn’t help but find the 1920s football situation strikingly analogous to the modern political one. Rangers and Celtic are supposedly the bitterest of rivals, and their fans treat each other like diametrically opposed poles, with honour and virtue the sole property of one side and bigotry and hatred found exclusively on the other. Yet when it comes to the crunch, the institutions themselves know which side their bread is buttered, and unhesitatingly come together in their mutual interest. Remind you of any two big political parties at all?

Kelly’s piece sent our minds back to a terrific graphic novel we read back in the late 1980s. Penned by the acclaimed Northern Irish writer Garth Ennis (who’d later go on to write the hugely successful Preacher series), Troubled Souls portrayed the story of two young men on either side of the sectarian conflict.

The key event in the book’s climax is when the IRA footsoldier Damian McWilliams meets his commander on a hill overlooking Belfast and is horrified to learn that the purpose of their rendezvous is to meet the local UVF and cosily arrange the exploitation of the city’s population to the two groups’ mutual benefit.


His illusions of a great moral war shattered, McWilliams runs off and kidnaps the Protestant character, Tom Boyd (who he’s previously intimidated into assisting with a fatal bombing), and the two men talk while holed up overnight in a remote shack.

Enough spoilers already. Buy the book. But we wonder how many Labour and Tory supporters these days are experiencing similar emotions, as they watch their two parties, still proclaiming in public to exist on the opposite ends of the political spectrum (though most vaguely intelligent people saw through that fiction years ago), snuggling up cosily together in the Lords and the Commons to protect their narrow self-interest at the expense of Scotland?

When it came to the crunch, Celtic bailed out Rangers to protect their mutual feasting on the lifeblood of Scottish football. And rest assured, when it comes to the crunch in the independence debate, Labour and the Tories will put their arms around each other’s shoulders on the same stage and do their utmost to prop each other up, by ensuring that regular Tory governments in Westminster maintain the illusion of conflict. Orwell foresaw such a future for politics only too clearly in “1984” (Chapter XVII):

War, however, is no longer the desperate, annihilating struggle that it was in the early decades of the twentieth century. It is a warfare of limited aims between combatants who are unable to destroy one another, have no material cause for fighting and are not divided by any genuine ideological difference.

Far in advance of the rest of the UK, Scotland is showing signs of waking up to the reality of Labour and the Tories’ true relationship to each other, which is why they’re both frantically pulling out all the stops to preserve the status quo that gives both of them their power. Michael Kelly, consciously or otherwise, is talking about more than one Old Firm.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

15 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Kenny Campbell

Rangers and Celtic are in a partnership, not quite a cartel but as near as they can get to it. As a Gers fan mysefl I always struggled with sharing the same logo on the shirts e.g CR Smith
The players from both clubs picking up their new cars from Arnold Clark or whoever. In most cases the players shared photo op's and in some cases went into business together. Only the tools in the seats thought there was any real rivalry above what went on , on the field.
There is actually an underlying conspiracy theory that at times they have shared the spoils to keep attendances up. I say that as a Rangers fan, like professional wrestlers, its all about the business side.

Kenny Campbell

BTW I don't think Celtic or the SPL need Rangers to survive but it does make it easier in some ways. My concern if they were to fold is that a lots of people would be lost to football and take up something else, its not the only game in town now. I am quite bizarrely enthralled by the idea of starting from 0 again in 3rd division…if we ended up in SPL it would be an anti climax.
I'm sure Nick Clegg thinks the same sort of thing once this Westminster government falls.

tom

Terrific piece, but permit me to go off topic: I see from the Irish Examiner that oil has been found offshore around Cork. I hope the Irish are aware of what a disaster this is for them. They will probably be poorer as a result, their economy will flounder due to to instability in crude oil prices, and what will they do when it runs out?
A national catastrophe!

Kenny Campbell

Oil off the coast of Ireland…I fear for their airports,,,,,,,

MajorBloodnok

…and mysteriously redrawn marine boundaries…

Longshanker

'Old Firm' kind of tells you something, without having to refer to 1920s folklore, to realise the symbiotic nature of the relationship.
Yes, the unholy alliance will come together to protect the milking of the northern cash cow which helps maintain their respective ideologies.
Independence's biggest bugbear is your average Scots Jock – of which I consider myself to be the most unspectacularly average.
You like your charts, I take it you've seen this one:
link to ipsos-mori.com
Yes, having a proper referendum to look forward to is exciting. I'm still in the camp of AhDinnaeKen – link to wp.me
Convincing the Scots that the SNP can be trusted with real power is a Sisyphean struggle for a mostly one man party.
And yes. I still believe that the spectacular – and welcome in context – result for the SNP in 2011 was a reflection of what Scots are against and not so much what they're for.
For more Hate blinded idiocy  link to ahdinnaeken.wordpress.com
Regards
 
 
 
 

David Briggs

'Longshanker' is as welcome as a pair of Jehovah's Witnesses at the front door.
One innocently clicks onto a blog and 'Aw naw …….it's Longshanker' we exclaim.
Don't you have a someone else to pick on rather than we downtrodden Scots?
Off course we're what's left of the 'British Empire' and there isn't much left to complain about.
LOL!
 

Longshanker

RevStu
Link spamming will stop. Apologies. Have asked you to let me know before though. Consider me telt. 
I notice you're not commenting regarding the link to the poll and it's conclusions though. Curiously  unlike you.
David Briggs
Homogeneous  back slapping and whoop whooping when someone says something you agree with is all very well. But things are different in the real world. And comments on the British Empire. Que?
 
As for picking on downtrodden Scots.
RevStu doesn't take prisoners, so what are you bleating about?
Reminds me of some of the less savoury paranoia which pours out of certain parts of the West coast of Scotland from time to time.

douglas clark

Longshanker,
David Briggs may have come across this on your website: 
<blockquote>link to ahdinnaeken.wordpress.com;
and he might have thought it was serious comment. Which it clearly is not. It is an attempt at satire and it fails.
In very general terms you are playing a Casandra like role to the politics of Scottish Independence. It is, perhaps, unsurprising that Nationalists see you as a fool.
If you want to play the satirist – and you are not A Swift – it seems to me that you have to up your game a bit.
Just saying.
 
 

Longshanker

douglas
 
…he might have thought it was serious comment.
Sound of laughter trying hard not to be derisive fades into background.
 
… you are playing a Casandra like role…
I don't believe me.
 
 It is, perhaps, unsurprising that Nationalists see you as a fool.
 
You speak for them do you? More laughter, snorting etc.
 
If you want to play the satirist…
 
No, I'll stick to playing the Nationalists fool. Nice label – cheers. 
(Tries hard not to pish self laughing now)
Just saying
Just laughing
 
Regards.
NB. I'll not post the link, but you should check out my piece which takes an in-depth serious look at the future of a 'joyless', 'thoughtcrime free' independent Scotland. You're there already. Well done.
 

Seasick Dave

From Longshanker:
And yes. I still believe that the spectacular – and welcome in context – result for the SNP in 2011 was a reflection of what Scots are against and not so much what they're for.
——
You reckon?
Not for me or my English wife; we voted SNP for positive reasons.
Same for my elderly parents who were first time SNP voters.
BTW, a vote for Independence is not a vote for the SNP.

MajorBloodnok

…and the way things are going in the rUK (NHS and road privatisations, tax perks for the rich, pay cuts for the poor, illegal wars, etc.) not to mention the mature and civilised attitudes being displayed by all of the Unionist parties (irony), there will be more and more positive reasons to vote for Independence (and possibly also the SNP).

Longshanker

You reckon?
The almost total wipeout of the Judas like LibBents kind of suggests it – so yes, I do reckon.
 
…we voted SNP for positive reasons.
 
I'm pretty sure that most of the people who voted SNP did. I see it as a positive thing that the LibBents and Labouring Party got uncompromisingly 'telt' by the Scots. The Unholy Alliance have reaped what their complacency sowed.
 
BTW, a vote for Independence is not a vote for the SNP.
Correct.


  • About

    Wings Over Scotland is a (mainly) Scottish political media digest and monitor, which also offers its own commentary. (More)

    Stats: 6,670 Posts, 1,202,799 Comments

  • Recent Posts

  • Archives

  • Categories

  • Tags

  • Recent Comments

    • George Ferguson on The Long Unravelling: “I was surprised Flynn didn’t know that Ross donated one of his salaries to charity when questioned on the Sunday…Nov 21, 19:41
    • Zander Tait on The Long Unravelling: “And, of course, let’s not forget the double salary, double staff and double expenses. There are few more impressive sights…Nov 21, 19:17
    • George Ferguson on The Long Unravelling: “Stephen Flynn finding out that double jobbing motivated by naked ambition is not a good look especially when sitting politicians…Nov 21, 19:09
    • Stevie on The Long Unravelling: “Actually, people have been asking for decades what happened to huge donations left to the SNP in deceased willsNov 21, 18:45
    • Al Dossary on The Long Unravelling: “Cant watch that and Danny Haiphong / Mark Sleboda at the same time unfortunately……..Nov 21, 18:33
    • twathater on The Long Unravelling: “NO he”s just a fucking corrupt moron elected by imbecilesNov 21, 18:25
    • Mia on The Long Unravelling: ““Close Holrood” No. I have a much better solution: get a political party to stand on a manifesto to: gain…Nov 21, 18:23
    • twathater on The Long Unravelling: “I vote Alan that we get rid of the BIGGER more incompetent and more corrupt WM parliament and while we…Nov 21, 18:23
    • robertkknight on The Long Unravelling: “Then vote to get rid of Westminster – job done surely?Nov 21, 18:11
    • gregor on The Long Unravelling: “Zero One: Zero One: Welcome To The Future (instrumental): https://tinyurl.com/bdepyrzd #RealityWinsNov 21, 18:07
    • Mia on The Long Unravelling: “I would say both. A plant and deliberately promoted beyond his abilities (the same as Yousaf and I would say…Nov 21, 17:54
    • gregor on The Long Unravelling: “Elon Musk: You can measure intelligence by its ability to predict the future: “The right metric for intelligence is probably…Nov 21, 17:39
    • gregor on The Long Unravelling: “Gilbert O’Sullivan: Himself: Nothing Rhymed: “If I give up the seat I’ve been saving To some elderly lady or man…Nov 21, 16:54
    • Breeks on The Long Unravelling: “Judge Nap also has a livestream with Col Douglas Macgregor scheduled for 21:00… Probably don’t want to miss that…. www.youtube.com/watch?v=KPJmh_bAxlANov 21, 16:51
    • Breeks on The Long Unravelling: “www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILxOPAH1bVw As Jeffrey Sachs says, the warrant’s issue is also a measure of how impotent and isolated the US has…Nov 21, 16:47
    • Dan on The Long Unravelling: “After another afternoon working on a tractor on a hillside in freezing temps I pondered this. One positive to keep…Nov 21, 16:39
    • Robert Hughes on The Long Unravelling: “can I call you at the nursery , or are children not allowed phone calls ?Nov 21, 16:28
    • gregor on The Long Unravelling: “re. “So what’s your excuse, gregor? No excuse – I’m gonna forever-hammer (publicly expose and dismantle, with zero physical violence)…Nov 21, 16:16
    • diabloandco on The Long Unravelling: “Both!Nov 21, 15:13
    • bobo bunny on The Long Unravelling: “Its the Scottish Parliaments fault people take drugs – how did you work that out? WM fought against safe spaces…Nov 21, 15:06
    • James on The Long Unravelling: “*sigh* Scotland’s Imaginary Debt; In 2022-23 Scotland raised £87.5bn in tax which goes directly to Westminster. However, the Scottish Government…Nov 21, 15:01
    • bobo bunny on The Long Unravelling: “I would say both. How he can claim to be for independance is beyond my comprehension. The continuity candidate, at…Nov 21, 15:00
    • James on The Long Unravelling: “Ha! Not a chance of that happening. For obvious reasons.Nov 21, 14:57
    • bobo bunny on The Long Unravelling: “It’s a fact. do your researchNov 21, 14:56
    • James on The Long Unravelling: “He’s the first president [elect] to have made such vows since Jack Kennedy. They sorted it though….Nov 21, 14:54
    • Republicofscotland on The Long Unravelling: “The foreign country of England which controls Scotland via our Vichy government – (SNP) and a plethora of House Jock,…Nov 21, 14:33
    • Alan Austin on The Long Unravelling: “No James but paying for one shit parliament is cheaper than paying for twoNov 21, 14:27
    • Anthem on The Long Unravelling: “You talk some mince man.Nov 21, 14:23
    • Republicofscotland on The Long Unravelling: “The jenno-sidal monsters squatting in another folks country, have called the ICC anti-Semitic – that sentence is wheeled out whenever…Nov 21, 14:10
    • Republicofscotland on The Long Unravelling: “Meanwhile, the ICC has issued an arrest warrant for the head of the evil occupying regime in the Levant -…Nov 21, 14:08
  • A tall tale



↑ Top
114
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x