campbell wrote:The Daily Record guy was actually spot on...8 minutes of expert legal debate was tough enough on the grey matter...imagine 18 months of it while the legal eagles rack up cracking fee notes trying to work out whether Scotland is allowed to act upon a "Yes" vote or not.
You couldn't make it up.
This. Only mention of it in this thread so far I reckon, but something on my mind.
It's sort of like a divorce. In divorce, do both parties take away with them exactly what they put in?
The oil / energy / etc don't belong to Scotland, they belong to Britain.
Even if 100% of the Scottish population votes yes, what about the English / Welsh / N Irish, who also part own all of these things?
I fail to see how a yes vote in a very small percentage of British people can remove so much from Britain.
Plus, we'd have to take good with bad, so any agreement that was made would have to include national debt.
AS is very, very good at knowing what to do to get the vote (hence SNP getting in in the first place).
The SNP did some clever things, and no one really wanted any of the others in, so they were already looking like a good bet.
On top of that, he managed to get the interest of those who probably don't often vote. He pulled the Braveheart card.
They used to say in video games, if you could get women to buy them, you'd do very, very well. AS is the Nintendo of Scottish politics.
I'm concerned mostly about the uneducated Braveheart vote. To me, it seems like a vote for ruining the country, not for being proud of it.
It's kinda like an argument I once had with a vegan (ok, I was winding them up a bit...)
My argument was that vegans wanted to reduce the number of animals in the world, possibly driving things like cows and pigs to extinction.
There wouldn't be fields and fields of them if we didn't eat and wear them..
Oddly, the vegan in question didn't like me pointing out that sentencing most of the cattle in the world to death because they are no longer required, and the land should be used to grow seed rape, or flowers or something didn't go down well
When that day comes around, i'll vote no.
