Scotland's democratic revolution

16 September 2014
(Paul Hackett/Reuters)
Manpreet Sing Makkar poses for a photograph in Calton Hill, Edinburgh on July 16. Manpreet, who is originally from Punjab in India, moved to Scotland in 2001 and is active in the Yes campaign. (Paul Hackett/Reuters)
<p>These are&nbsp;grim times&nbsp;for liberal democracy. Ukrainians ousted their pro-Russian president after months of demonstrations in February, only to see their country dismembered by Moscow's first major military intervention in Eastern Europe since the Prague Spring in 1968. In July, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, emulating Russia's Vladimir Putin and Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdogan, cracked down on civil-society groups and&nbsp;publicly moved&nbsp;toward "illiberal" democracy in Hungary. And in Syria's civil war,&nbsp;more than 191,000&nbsp;people have now died in what began three and a half years ago as a peaceful, pro-democracy movement—the equivalent of a fully loaded 747 passenger plane crashing without survivors every day for 15 months.</p>
Read the full article here: The Atlantic

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