“That’s simply denying that Spain has a problem that is not going to fade away.”
First, I am not denying that there’s a problem. I was just pointing out that rejecting secession and establishing hard limits to negotiations with the separatists would be a perfectly valid position and strategy, and that that seems to be precisely the view of the majority of the Spanish population and also of their democratically-elected representatives (MPs and PM included). You could choose to apply the exact same logic to the other side of the argument, and ask the separatists to admit that there is a problem (namely, that Spain as a whole rejects secession), and to accept that the unity of Spain is non-negotiable…
Second, why are you so sure this problem “is not going to fade away”? The Troubles of Northern Ireland ended. Basque terrorism in Spain is no more (and Spain did not give in to demands of independence from the Basque Country). Catalan secessionism swelled in the last few years for a number of reasons, and it may as well deflate in the next decade. (In fact, there is at the moment an encouraging surge of Spanish pride and a defiant attitude from non-separatists in Catalonia who were, until now, afraid to speak up).
“You have disclosed the real spanish soul, which is opposite to what Canada or UK showed us in Quebec and Scotland.”
“The real Spanish soul”? If I had to describe the Spanish “soul” I would throw in many bad things (bullfighting, laziness, unpunctuality, historical complexes, lack of confidence, xenophobia) and lots of good ones (#1 in the world in organ donation; among the very top in blood donation; among the very top in life expectancy; third country in the world to legalise same-sex marriage; safer (less crime) than Switzerland or Germany; lower incarceration rate than the UK or New Zealand; more democratic than France or the US; higher social expenditure than the Netherlands or Luxembourg…). But I don’t think “imposition” or “authoritarianism” are in the “Spanish soul”.
“In Spain, when it comes to the matter of the unity of the State, imposition is the word that applies, rather than conviction.”
Read my answers to arguments #3 and #7 to see why that statement is wrong.
“In that particular matter, Spain is an authoritarian country, ready to abolish fundamental and human rights if necessary.”
See answer above.
“Spain is ready (as it is happening right now), to skip its own laws to face ‘the enemy’.”
Wrong again. Perfectible as they may be, the State, the Parliament and the central government are applying the law. It is the pro-independence block that is sodomising every law when that suits their interests.
Please, mention all those Spanish laws that “Spain” as “skipped” [sic] to fight this “enemy”.
“Letting the people of this territory have their say is mandatory.”
cf my answer to argument #3 again.