Rodabod wrote:I don't think I'm too fussed, even though my mother's side of the family all vote the Scottish National Party and want an independent Scotland.
I don't like to see Scotland become anglisised though, which Edinburgh obviously is in areas.
I dunno, when you compare scotland to Wales and Eire, the English did a damned good job of exterminating scottish language and culture. Gaelic has become a financially sustained language, predominantley due to the west-coast bias in scottish politics. This does little except turn scotland into a pitiful 'living history' museum for the benefit of misty-eyed tourists. A good chunk of the country never spoke it. Coming from a Northeast/Northern Isles backgound, it pains me to see my taxes being poured into the propagation of Gaelic, just to give those on the West-Coast a greater sense of identity with a hertitage they never had. Lowland Scots and Doric are pretty much gone. There are few, if any native speakers of Gaelic around. In Wales there are many for whom Welsh is their first lanuage.
When it comes to capitalising on the north sea oil money, we've pretty much missed the boat. The oil companies are just scrabbling around trying to make the dregs economically viable. The scarcity and rising price of oil are all that maintains it.
I'm not sure if independence would be worth the hassle. It would be great to believe that scotland could stand alone like Norway and be a strong and affluent state. Having visited Norway, I can see many reasons why this would never happen. Norwegians seem to have a greater sense of fairness, social justice and patriotism (by patriotism I mean beyond drinking whisky and calling the English cunts) than we have here. Rural communities are supported regardless of cost, and there is greater sense of community throughout. For those of us living outwith the central belt, independence would simply mean the transition from an insensitive urbanised Westminister bias to our politics, to an insenitive urbanised Edinburgh/Glasgow bias. The net result would be negligible. Though it might be a good wake-up call to see just how corrupt our glorious Nationalist politicians are when they grasped the reigns of power.
scotland has pretty much cast itself as the plucky underdog of nations, professional losers and noble savages. Being the fluffers of Westminister seems to be our natural station. Why rock the boat?
I dunno.