Dizzy socks
Well-Known Member
What do y'all think? yay, or nay?
A definate Nay from me.
A definate Nay from me.
id like to move to scotland to take advantage of no sunday trading laws!
Get yourself to the Hebrides, nothing does anything there on a Sunday!
On the subject of independence.....no thanks. I'm a scot who happens to also be British, and I like it like that!
Who wants wee Eck. As our leader?![]()
Och nay, the noo!
I don't really think its a country I'd wish to continue living in.
Most small countries which are successful have a small public sector. In Scotland its very bloated, a third of all employees, and I don't think thats sustainable, as the manufacturing sector is poor and shored up by the state. I don't think a non-renewable resource such as oil is enough, long-term. A lot of parts of the country are very poor and have extremely high unemployment/sickness/disability levels with poor diet and health and endemic. The transport infrastructure just isn't there, when you compare it to other European countries, and the way of working and attitude to work in Scotland hasn't shown so far that theres a liklihood of good management of large public sector initiatives.
We already pay more tax to live here, in terms of higher levels of Council tax. I think whats most likely to happen is that we will pay taxes directly in Scotland, and end up paying maybe 3 or 5% more for the "privelege" of living here and being told we're greedy to resent it and force fed tv programmes about Sean Connery and how wonderful being Scottish is.
Im unsure, on one hand it would be nice to get rid of the imbalance it causes in politics south of the border, the wineing chippy ones ,the ones drunk on subsidy from the English tax payer like students and free prescriptions ,I don't really think its a country I'd wish to continue living in.
Most small countries which are successful have a small public sector. In Scotland its very bloated, a third of all employees, and I don't think thats sustainable, as the manufacturing sector is poor and shored up by the state. I don't think a non-renewable resource such as oil is enough, long-term. A lot of parts of the country are very poor and have extremely high unemployment/sickness/disability levels with poor diet and health and endemic. The transport infrastructure just isn't there, when you compare it to other European countries, and the way of working and attitude to work in Scotland hasn't shown so far that theres a liklihood of good management of large public sector initiatives.
We already pay more tax to live here, in terms of higher levels of Council tax. I think whats most likely to happen is that we will pay taxes directly in Scotland, and end up paying maybe 3 or 5% more for the "privelege" of living here and being told we're greedy to resent it and force fed tv programmes about Sean Connery and how wonderful being Scottish is.
Im sure things will change after the referendum whichever way the vote goes !a no vote will focus westminster to ask about tax and spending the west lothian question and unfunded benifits that scots enjoy over the other regions of the uk, A yes vote ,well it will be great untill the money runs out....Its an interesting issue for us Scots, for many of us its a heart over head decision. Our hearts say yes to independence but our heads say no. I have yet to meet anyone in Scotland who actually supports independence, no one has given us any information about how it will work, how we will finance ourselves in the long run or anything so why would we say yes. The polls are already showing the majority prefer to remain as part of the UK. I vote SNP but, like many who vote SNP, its not for independence but because they give us a credible option away from the usual 3 parties. For me personally, I like being part of the UK, it has worked so far. Scotland has not lost its identity through the union and never will. We have the best of both worlds now, why change it? It the English I feel sorry for in this, we have a government here in Scotland prepared to make essential things like prescription charges free of charge for example, yet Westminster refuses to do the same for England. I know what side of the Border I'll be staying on...don't care if the weather is pants!