Scotland nearer to independence
It seems increasingly likely Scotland will vote for independence in September and become a separate nation state. Most people in England and Wales don't seem too bothered at the moment. Maybe that will change between now and September's ballot. Not that it will make any difference because only Scottish residents get to vote
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A lot of people have asked why is Scotland being given this ballot, including on this site. Well, if you believe in democracy then you must also believe in the right to self determination. The question then becomes at what point must people be granted their right through a ballot? And this is a practical question. There has to be some verifiable means to measure the level of pressure for separation. In the case of Scotland that pressure reached a tipping point in 2011 when the Scottish people voted-in the Scottish Nationalist Party with a "landslide" majority in the Scottish Parliament.
So the answer to the "why?" question is... there is no other democratic option At best the other options are delay and obfuscation; at worst denial and oppression. And, as we know from history and what's going on right now in various countries, the end game there is violence and possible civil war.
History also shows us that nation states are not fixed and permanent. Nothing is forever. And no generation can bind future generations.
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So what will these islands look like after the split? Obviously, the United Kingdom will become the Former United Kingdom - or FUK - and Hadrian's Wall will need to be rebuilt to keep out those wild-eyed and dangerous hairy men in skirts...
More seriously, both sides are now engaging in the political battle that will dominate UK politics over the next 7 months. Recently the UK govt removed a financial problem by accepting liability for all debt, which would remain with England and Wales if Scotland votes "yes". Alex Salmond, the SNP Leader and Scotland's First Minister, claimed this means Scotland will get to keep the pound with a simple tie-in to Bank of England oversight. Well, no. The fact is Salmond has made hundreds of pages of assumptions in his White Paper and two weeks ago Mark Carney, the Canadian Governor of the Bank of England, had a meeting with him to correct a few of those assumptions
Scotland's economic viability as an independent nation is absolutely dependent on EU membership. There are several problems here that Salmond hasn't dealt with. First, EU membership terms would be much less favourable - no rebate for example - and there'd be a commitment to join the Euro. But Scotland wants to retain the pound - which is a bedrock of its financial plan - so how could it do this and not join the Euro? And retaining the pound means Scotland would not have control over its tax and spend policies - a major purpose of separation - because final say on those would be with our friendly Canadian Mark Carney, not Alex Salmond And how is this all going to work if the promised referendum on EU membership ends up with England, Wales and Northern Ireland leaving the EU?
And what will happen to the Union Jack? And the BBC? And, and... So many questions...
*this is an update to an earlier blog here http://www.gayauthors.org/forums/blog/504/entry-13245-scottish-independence/ *
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