顯示具有 National identity 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章
顯示具有 National identity 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章

2026年5月15日 星期五

The Ultimate Guest Privilege: Legislating Away the Concept of "Foreigner"

 

The Ultimate Guest Privilege: Legislating Away the Concept of "Foreigner"

In the ancestral savanna, a stranger wandering into the tribe’s territory usually met one of two fates: a spear to the chest or a wary integration into the bottom of the social hierarchy. Human nature is fundamentally territorial, yet we have reached a level of civilizational irony where we now invite the guests not just to dinner, but to rewrite the house rules.

The election of Q Manivannan—an Indian national on a temporary student visa—to the Scottish Parliament in 2026 is a fascinating biological and political anomaly. Through the 2024 Scottish Law Change, the Scottish Green Party has effectively declared that "belonging" is no longer a matter of blood, soil, or even long-term commitment. It is a matter of paperwork.

From an evolutionary standpoint, this is a daring, perhaps reckless, experiment in "reciprocal altruism." Scotland is betting that by treating a transient visitor as a tribal elder (an MSP), they will foster a new kind of hyper-inclusive loyalty. However, the cynical observer notes that this isn't just about kindness; it’s about a fading power’s desperate attempt to remain relevant. The UK has long maintained "Commonwealth Exceptions," a ghost of the British Empire where former subjects retain the right to rule their former masters. It’s a submissive psychological loop: the aging patriarch, sensing his strength is gone, allows the neighborhood children to manage his estate just to keep the house from feeling empty.

By allowing someone on a time-limited visa to legislate for permanent residents, Scotland has decoupled "power" from "consequence." If the laws passed by a student MSP turn out to be disastrous, the legislator can simply finish their degree and fly home, leaving the "Old Scots" to deal with the fallout. It is the ultimate guest privilege: the right to redecorate the hotel room and leave the bill for the permanent tenants. It’s a brilliant display of modern virtue—and a terrifying departure from the basic human instinct that those who make the rules should have to live under them forever.