I guess it just depends which way you look at it. I am Scottish first and British second and proud of both. There is nowhere in the world I would rather stay and I have bee fortunate enough to see quite a lot of it.thinfourth wrote:I belive there is no right side to nationalism
It is a dogma that teaches you to hate people you have never met and be proud in things you never did.
I currently work in a country that really does hate outsiders, not at a personnel level but at a national level. They firmly believe that all jobs, money, assets should belong to them regardless of the fact they neither have the expertise or knowledge to manage the assets. And despite the picture portrayed here we are a world away from the worst I have experienced in my travels.
That being said the situation is far from ideal and it saddens me that our once great little country once renown for its hospitality and friendship has descended into this pointless mire.
I agree that the mindset starts in the playground, some grow out of it and embrace the cultural mix of our small corner of the world and some don't.
And just to add balance I have experienced similar treatment south of the border on several occasions when staying with friends and family. Bedford was the worst of it but it didn't really bother me even though it resulted in a rather tense hour running through a strange town trying to avoid getting caught so it isn't endemic to Scotland. The current political climate just seems to bring it to the fore which detracts from the real issues we face.
IMHO the independence debate is used as deflection to hide how ineffective the Scottish Parliament really is. They bicker and squabble about everything and accomplish very little when there is so much they really need to focus on.