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  • Scotland Indyref 2
  • dyna-ti
    Full Member

    I don’t think I get to be the first king of iScotland

    I’d vote for you. No wait, you don’t vote kings in, you’d have to take the throne by force.

    What are your strengths in that department ?

    tjagain
    Full Member

    What are your strengths in that department ?

    Hmmmm – I am taller than Bonnie Prince Charlie?  Better hair than James 6th?  Less pox ridden than Elizabeth the first?  Take less morphine than Queen victoria?

    I am useless with a  sword but they say the pen is mightier than the sword.  trouble is I can hardly use a pen.  will being a keyboard warrier do?

    dyna-ti
    Full Member

    will being a keyboard warrior do?

    I reckon so, keyboards have nasty sharp edges.

    onehundredthidiot
    Full Member

    Can we decree that all statues of TJ1st be based on the pic of him in the train carriage holding aloft a tin of cider.

    gauss1777
    Free Member

    will being a keyboard warrier do?

    You also have a dogged persistence and unwavering faith in your convictions – that must count for something 😉

    tjagain
    Full Member

    Your wish is my command!  As king of Scotland i am the servant of the people

    DSC_0621 by TandemJeremy[/url], on Flickr

    molgrips
    Free Member

    it’s a bit like arguing with a brexiteer

    It’s a lot like it, but don’t say that it really annoys them 😉

    stuey
    Free Member

    Not Mcewans Export. Imposter!

    big_n_daft
    Free Member

    9.1%of UK tax revenue came from Scotland

    8.3% of the UK population live in Scotland

    £10,000 tax per head in Scotland

    £9,200 tax per head, rest of UK

    Remind me, there are higher personal taxes in Scotland to pay for extra devolved spending

    You also seem to be pointing out that Wales and NI are need investment to improve

    What proportion of spending does Barnett allocate per head?

    it’s a bit like arguing with a brexiteer

    Stay “civic” please

    argee
    Full Member

    9.1%of UK tax revenue came from Scotland

    8.3% of the UK population live in Scotland

    £10,000 tax per head in Scotland

    £9,200 tax per head, rest of UK

    : Government Expenditure and Revenue Scotland (GERS)
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-28879267

    Plus you have all the exports especially oil improving the balance of payments so improving the UK economy and of course the Gers figures are deliberately intended to understate the scottish financial position

    big_n_daft
    Free Member

    Plus you have all the exports especially oil improving the balance of payments so improving the UK economy

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2021/dec/08/uk-tax-breaks-for-oil-and-gas-under-scrutiny-from-climate-activists

    These “negative tax flows” totalled £2m in 2015-16 and £359m the following year – more than oil and gas firms paid the UK in tax.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    Yes thats the snapshot now.  Now look at the last 70 years post war?

    also remember that the gers figures deliberately understate scottish revenues.  that’s deliberate as said by the scottish secretary when it was set up

    GERs includes loads of stuff that we have to pay for but do not want and receive no benefit from like nuclear weapons, like aircraft carriers with no aircraft, like dodgy adventurings over seas.  Like all the corruption over PPE etc.

    Look into the numbers properly and you will find out that since the war Scotland has subsidised england hugely.  Yes a few years recently that hs not been the case ( but much lower deficit than GERs will have you believe.

    argee
    Full Member

    I guess you do not even realise you are doing it but you certainly give the impression you believe Scotland is too wee and too poor to be independent

    I’ve got absolutely no impression yet, i live down south now, due to jobs shifting from Scotland to England, same as a load of us had to do, a few of us ended in the south of England, a few more in lovely places like Australia, Nigeria, etc, wherever the work was.

    All the family are still there, they’ll wait out any Yes/No vote until they see the evidence, that’s all the questions i ask, it’s an evidence based vote, same as Brexit was, same as every vote. If i was still up there, i’d wait for the evidence, it doesn’t have to be conclusive, but it does have to have some thought about it.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    Big and daft – you really do live up to your name – balance of payments does not have owt to do with tax take.  Its about exports v imports.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    If i was still up there, i’d wait for the evidence, it doesn’t have to be conclusive, but it does have to have some thought about it.

    Perfectly reasonable – I want better answers on money and defense this time around.

    You do realise all this was published in 2014?

    Your posts really do give the impression you believe the too small too poor too wee line tho.  Perhaps thats not your intent.

    big_n_daft
    Free Member

    Big and daft – you really do live up to your name – balance of payments does not have owt to do with tax take. Its about exports v imports.

    The tax man is subsidising the oil industry which makes them able to export

    Stay “civic”

    argee
    Full Member

    GERs includes loads of stuff that we have to pay for but do not want and receive no benefit from like nuclear weapons, like aircraft carriers with no aircraft, like dodgy adventurings over seas. Like all the corruption over PPE etc.

    And that all gets factored in to any prospectus/campaign/etc, the reality is that the above statements would mean losing a lot of work at Faslane, Scotstoun, Rosyth, Glasgow, etc, etc, again, flip side, that’s votes going to the no side if people feel their job, house and life could change dramatically with independence.

    poly
    Free Member

    gaus – it makes sense, right up until you apply that logic about a union that includes NI…

    For me, it’s just that we have more in common with each other than that which separates us. We’re on an island – it seems sensible to me to all group together. Now, they may be the weakest of weak reasons, but I still get to vote.

    But I do think the big issue, bigger than the currency, is the border precisely because of the “all on the same island together” issue. Given the chaos Brexit made of the Irish border issues, it is the one thing that makes me hesitant.

    big_n_daft
    Free Member

    GERs includes loads of stuff that we have to pay for but do not want and receive no benefit from like nuclear weapons, like aircraft carriers with no aircraft, like dodgy adventurings over seas. Like all the corruption over PPE etc.

    Dodgy UK adventures were often led by Scots in Westminster

    Lots of Scots seem to enjoy a career in the forces and the supporting services

    Etc etc

    tjagain
    Full Member

    the reality is that the above statements would mean losing a lot of work at Faslane, Scotstoun, Rosyth, Glasgow,

    those jobs are hugely expensive to create.  the same money spent on house building  for example would provide a lot more employment and a lot more utility  thats the sort of independence bonus we would have.  More jobs at good wages doing something productive rather than pissing it away playing at bully big baws

    gauss1777
    Free Member

    gaus – it makes sense, right up until you apply that logic about a union that includes NI…

    By the same simple logic, the island of Ireland being one country makes most sense to me. But, I wouldn’t want to offend anyone. I accept it’s a very (perhaps overly) simplistic view.

    dyna-ti
    Full Member

    Stay “civic”

    I nearly choked there. Oh the irony.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    n a leaked memo the then Secretary of State for Scotland Ian Lang wrote “I judge that [GERS] is just what is needed at present in our campaign to maintain the initiative and undermine the other parties. This initiative could score against all of them.”

    some discussion on the limitations of GERs here  I cannot vouch for its accuracy  discussion raises some good points

    The GERS data is ludicrous: Scotland does not generate 60% of the UK’s net fiscal deficit

    Some discussion in the scotsman – an overtly unionist paper ( to make up for the wings link)

    https://www.scotsman.com/news/politics/gers-figures-out-today-what-are-they-2952984

    Wings is a daftie on many things but again some discussion over GERS

    The limitations of GERS

    poly
    Free Member

    By the same simple logic, the island of Ireland being one country makes most sense to me. But, I wouldn’t want to offend anyone. I accept it’s a very (perhaps overly) simplistic view.

    I know, prima facie, with none of the history it seems logical. But the only logical solution is to let the people decide. But when you start pulling that thread… if the Northern Irish can decide why shouldn’t the scots. If the northern Irish chose to stay separate from the Republic of Ireland (whether part of the UK or not) why would it be any weirder if Scotland did the same with its big southern neighbour? And if they chose to have a unified Ireland, that’s the end of the Union anyway so worth reviewing the whole lot. So no matter which way I look at it – whilst geography seems a really logical basis for defining boundaries it just seems to fail. Would we tell the Portuguese they should just merge with Spain, or Canada to USA or Norway to Sweden, or Singapore and Malaysia – because on a map they would be sensible?

    Now it is different because we are (sort of) the same country at the moment. But there’s lots that IS different: Education, Law, Courts, Some bits of Taxation, a layer of government, some bits of culture/language/music etc. But I completely understand some people feel as though the whole of the UK is really one homogenous country and want to keep it that way. That’s not my experience – to me it genuinely is more like a union of nations, and the similarities between England and Scotland are not that much stronger than with many of he EU nations.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    But I completely understand some people feel as though the whole of the UK is really one homogenous country and want to keep it that way.

    It seems to me that that view is held by non scots residents by nad large on here.  the scots residents know see and understand the differences every day

    and the similarities between England and Scotland are not that much stronger than with many of he EU nations.

    Personally I feel closer to the low countries and the scandenavian ones than england – something do do with the political consensus?  mybe just me? I feel no kinship to a country that keeps electing tories

    duckman
    Full Member

    Can we decree that all statues of TJ1st be based on the pic of him in the train carriage holding aloft a tin of cider.

    We could get folk to put old bike helmets instead of cones on his head?

    Moley; comparing pro indy Scots to brexiteers: the too thick argument that doesn’t apparently exist.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    Its nothing like brexit nor are the arguments for it the same – but then you are being deliberately insulting

    intheborders
    Free Member

    For me, it’s just that we have more in common with each other than that which separates us. We’re on an island – it seems sensible to me to all group together. Now, they may be the weakest of weak reasons, but I still get to vote.

    And presumably you vote for the ones the majority of Scots don’t, which is why your happy with the situation?

    gauss1777
    Free Member

    And presumably you vote for the ones the majority of Scots don’t, which is why your happy with the situation?

    I’m unclear what you mean. I always vote and seldom does the person whom I vote for win. I can’t even win a vote in my own home.
    It always puzzles me that most people want more local power and then complain of a postcode lottery when another group has made different choices. I’m more inclined to a more central government, that works for the needs of everyone – but resigned to never getting what I want.

    big_n_daft
    Free Member

    Its nothing like brexit

    It’s exactly like Brexit, you want to reclaim sovereignty, then decide how you are going to use it

    It’s the same “not this” vote to leap into the unknown as Brexit was as everything gets sorted out later and it enables multiple narratives to run at once to play to different concerns regardless of the contradictions (currency, EU membership, taxes, rUK border etc)

    The issue isn’t that it’s a referendum, it’s understanding that it isn’t a vote for a defined future. It’s dump this and deal with the consequences later.

    Let me think, just like Brexit

    poly
    Free Member

    It seems to me that that view is held by non scots residents by nad large on here. the scots residents know see and understand the differences every day

    I know Scots who have been in England for a long time and don’t see the difference.
    I know Scots who live in Scotland and don’t see the difference.
    I know Scots who have never lived south of the border insist it is a different world.
    I know English people who have never even crossed the border tell me that its just the same.
    I know English people who live in Scotland who insist it is a different world.
    I know English people who live in Scotland and don’t see a difference.

    In many ways it depends where in England and where in Scotland you are comparing. Its not like the whole of England is homogenous in itself. Its clear though that a big part of the Scottish population don’t want to leave the UK – and that is a problem. If the vote falls convincingly one way or other its far easier to get on with it.

    It’s exactly like Brexit, you want to reclaim sovereignty, then decide how you are going to use it

    It’s the same “not this” vote to leap into the unknown as Brexit was as everything gets sorted out later and it enables multiple narratives to run at once to play to different concerns regardless of the contradictions (currency, EU membership, taxes, rUK border etc)

    Had someone said there isn’t going to be a white paper this time?
    The issue with Brexit was it meant different things to different people – the white paper presents a clear vision. There are bits of that vision that Indy supporters won’t like (e.g. i suspect a lot of people don’t want to keep the monarchy) but they will accept to get the freedom to then have the power to change those policies at some point in the future. My frustration with Brexit, more than the outcome itself was people could vote yes believing it was a leave EU but stay in EEA, a soft brexit, a harder brexit still in the customs union, a deal, no deal and WT tariffs etc – and then once it was “won” nobody had the balls to say no we need to sort out this fundamental and even parliament didn’t seem to have the ability to decide those things with its new found sovereignty. In contrast my expectation is the Scot Gov are going to lay out their intention, albeit its a plan some of which needs other people to cooperate, and vision.

    I’m not sure sovereignty and self-determination are the same thing.

    big_n_daft
    Free Member

    the white paper presents a clear vision.

    But there will need to be a post independence election, the white paper might be one party’s manifesto (but not necessarily) but they need to win the election to implement.

    So it’s still a leap into the unknown, promises before can’t be cashed after

    Just like Brexit

    BruceWee
    Free Member

    It’s exactly like Brexit

    It’s exactly like Brexit except it’s the opposite.

    Brexit was fueled by England’s desire to become more insular and reclaim past glories.

    Indy is about trying to get back to being a normal country rather than whatever the UK is trying to turn itself into.

    It’s the same “not this” vote to leap into the unknown

    Actually, Indy is about returning to the known rather than stay on the magic unicorn ride the UK is currently on.

    The issue isn’t that it’s a referendum, it’s understanding that it isn’t a vote for a defined future. It’s dump this and deal with the consequences later.

    Indy has a degree of the unknown, yes. Not nearly as much as Brexit fueled Britain has though.

    Let me think, just like Brexit

    Yes, but the complete opposite.

    big_n_daft
    Free Member

    Brexit was fueled by England’s desire to become more insular and reclaim past glories.

    Really, is that what you tell yourself. Nothing to do with a kickback against the status quo by areas essentially abandoned…. And all the other reasons that have lots to do with poverty and feeling forgotten and nothing to do with being insular and some view of a golden age?

    Indy has a degree of the unknown, yes. Not nearly as much as Brexit fueled Britain has though.

    Currency?
    EU membership?
    RUK border?
    NATO membership?
    Etc etc

    Lots more uncertainty by the looks of it

    Yes, but the complete opposite.

    Nope, exactly the same “not this” leap into the unknown, on steroids

    tjagain
    Full Member

    Chaps.  Big and daft s only purpose on this thrad is to belittle and annoy.  I suggest dont feed the troll.

    argee
    Full Member

    I know Scots who have been in England for a long time and don’t see the difference.
    I know Scots who live in Scotland and don’t see the difference.
    I know Scots who have never lived south of the border insist it is a different world.
    I know English people who have never even crossed the border tell me that its just the same.
    I know English people who live in Scotland who insist it is a different world.
    I know English people who live in Scotland and don’t see a difference.

    In many ways it depends where in England and where in Scotland you are comparing. Its not like the whole of England is homogenous in itself. Its clear though that a big part of the Scottish population don’t want to leave the UK – and that is a problem. If the vote falls convincingly one way or other its far easier to get on with it.

    I’ve lived in many places, about 50% of my life in Scotland, and rest in England, mainly the Southwest, reality is that regions have a lot of differences, but in the main, people tend to be similar due to the structure across the countries.

    It’s the same as England isn’t all toryland, it’s just the nature of the demographics we have just now, and how the whole political spectrum turned around over the last decade or so. It’s the same in any town, more affluent areas, or those with a higher average age will be more aligned with Tory policies.

    Anyway, we’ll have a long time until we see any real firm evidence on the independence line, it’s all guesswork just now, and only the extremes at either end have cast their votes already.

    BruceWee
    Free Member

    Really, is that what you tell yourself.

    Yes, that is what I tell myself. In the same way you tell yourself that Brexit and Indy are the same. That’s because these are our opinions.

    Opinions are not facts no matter how much you try to present them like they are.

    Nothing to do with a kickback against the status quo by areas essentially abandoned….

    I’ve never argued against the fact that the roots might be the same, ie, the democratic deficit.

    However, the two movements took very different directions. One decided it wanted to be the best wee country it could be. The other decided it wanted to rule the world again and get rid of the foreigners while it was at it.

    Currency?
    EU membership?
    RUK border?
    NATO membership?
    Etc etc

    Currency: What is the GBPEUR exchange rate going to be in three years time?

    EU membership: What is the UK’s relationship going to be with the EU in three years time?

    rUK border: What is the situation going to be at the Irish border and at the Dover Calais crossing in three years time?

    NATO membership: Given that Boris Johnson is a Russian asset and the UK has no written constitution, what is the UK’s relationship with NATO going to be in three years time?

    Obviously, I can’t just take your word for it so you’ll have to provide proof that all your answers will be 100% guaranteed.

    gauss1777
    Free Member

    Chaps. Big and daft s only purpose on this thrad is to belittle and annoy. I suggest dont feed the troll.

    And there it is again. I am happy to believe that both BruceWee and Big_n_daft are being genuine. Big_n_daft draws parallels with Brexit which ring true with me at least, but rather than provide a reasoned counter argument he is decried as a troll. The independence argument appears little more than smoke and mirrors to many people. As someone suggested above, no one appears to have moved an inch on the subject, despite ~6400 posts.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    Guass – big and daft is not being genuine.  His intent is clear its to belittle and his aim is to get someone to lose their temper.  He deliberately keeps on making the same baseless assertions.  This has been going on for years.  for a while he was deliberately attempting to make me lose my temper on every thread I posted on with his snide comments.  I suppose I should be flattered but actually I find it rather sad

    I have many times refuted his arguments and proven this.  The parallels with brexit are deliberate trolling – he knows it is not true in any way

    i am perfectly happy to debate with anyone on any side of the fence.  I will not feed trolls who’s only intention is to belittle and mock

    gauss1777
    Free Member

    I have many times refuted his arguments and proven this. The parallels with brexit are deliberate trolling – he knows it is not true in any way

    i am perfectly happy to debate with anyone on any side of the fence. I will not feed trolls who’s only intention is to belittle and mock

    Brexit is neither exactly the same as Brexit, nor the exact opposite – but to deny there are strong similarities like big_n_daft suggests, appears incredible.

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