In 1707, Scotland’s ruling elite opted for union with Great Britain against the wishes of most citizens.
They didn't opt for Union with Great Britain. They opted for Union with England. That Union between Scotland and England (and Wales) formed a new country - Great Britain, which became the greatest free trade area in the world. There was no such country as Great Britain beforehand because the merger of Scotland and England formed it.
It's about time that ignorant Yanks like Margolis (who think they all it all but then come out with schoolchild errors like that) learnt the difference between England and Great Britain (the Scots and Welsh actually find it offensive when England and Great Britain are seen as one and the same).
As for the fact that that most Scots were against the Union with England. I daresay that most English were against it, too, because they were effectively bailing out a poor, bankrupt, backward nation.
Along came the British and cleverly offered to reimburse the losses of Scotland’s ruling class if it would vote for union with Britain.
Along came the ENGLISH and cleverly offered to reimburse the losses of Scotland’s ruling class if it would vote for union with ENGLAND.
Ordinary Scots bear a deep, historic grudge against London’s ruling class which, like its colleagues in Washington, has lost all touch with the common man and local issues.
And yet Scotland has done well out of the Union. The Union has made Scotland wealthy. It reaped profits from the Empire, of which the Scots were very much willing participants. Scotland would never have become a great nation were it not for its Union with England and Wales.
Traditionally to the left, Scots have never forgiven PM Margaret Thatcher for wiping out much of their nation’s old heavy industry and mines that while inefficient provided large number of good jobs. Many want revenge.
Anyone would think it was just Scottish miners that Thatcher, rightly, put out of work. But countless thousands of English, Welsh and Northern Irish miners also suffered under Thatcher, yet there is no huge clamour in those countries to secede from the Union. There's no point keeping industries like coal mining going just to keep people in jobs if those industries aren't beneficial to the British economy at all.
The Scots might join the European Union and resume their close historic ties to France.
If Scotland rejoins the EUSSR then it would NOT be an independent nation. It would just have swapped elected rule from London for UNelected rule from Brussels. It would be ruled by unelected foreign bureaucrats in Brussels who care not one iota about Scotland. Scotland would be nothing more than a small, cold, rocky province of the liberal German Empire (it would not be a sovereign state, just a mere EUSSR province, and a small one at that) which, due to its small size, would have little influence within the EU and would find itself having less MEPs in the EUSSR parliament than Member States like Czech Republic, Slovakia and Austria.
Within the UK the Scots are part of the third-biggest Member State of the EUSSR, and are able to have a lot of clout within the EUSSR. But, as a separate state, they will suddenly find themselves with little influence and have less power than most of the other Member States.
Britain would loses its nuclear submarine bases in Scotland and be forced to relocate them further south.
That's no problem. I think Torquay is one of those places that have been muted for the new site of the nuclear deterrent in the unlikely event that the Scots vote for "independence".
And an independent Scotland would lose thousands of shipbuilding jobs. Currently, thousands of Scots are employed in places like Rosyth and on the Clyde to help construct the Royal Navy's new warships. But if Scotland became independent all those shipbuilders would lose their jobs because no Royal Navy ships will suddenly be built in Scotland as Britain doesn't allow Royal Navy ships to be built abroad. It's no wonder that when Salmond attended the Naming Ceremony for HMS Queen Elizabeth earlier this year he was booed loudly by some of the shipbuilders who know they will lose their jobs if Scotland became "independent".
If the Scots hit new oil or gas deposits in the North Sea, the Brits will be livid.
The British could also find new oil or gas deposits in the North Sea (by the way, most of the North Sea gas fields are in ENGLISH waters, not Scottish waters, and an independent Scotland would have to say bye bye to most of the gas). There's no reason as to why all new oil and gas discoveries would be in Scottish waters.
And that article doesn't mention the fact that Scotland is only able to take up all the North Sea oil thanks to huge subsidies from the English. An independent Scotland may struggle to subsidise its oil industry.
Not only that, but there is a huge amount of shale gas under England that the government are planning on fracking. There are 1,300 trillion cubic feet of the stuff under Northern England alone. Not to mention the huge amount of coal that still lies under England soil, and which will take centuries to dig up. All those abandoned coal mines lying about England, Wales and Northern Ireland could easily be opened up again.
Independence for Scotland is more an emotional than a practical issue. To the devil with the bean counters and toff politicians in London. Sharpen the broadswords and break out the whiskey. The spirits of Robert the Bruce and William Wallace are rising.
It's okay saying that, but you don't have to live with the enormous consequences of an independent Scotland.
It has been pointed out to the Scots time and again in recent days the enormous damage their economy will suffer should they vote for independence. Big Scottish companies like RBS, Clydesdale Bank and Standard Life have said they will move out of Scotland and go to England should Scotland break away. The supermarkets have warned that food prices and prices of other goods will rise sharply should Scotland become independent. An independent Scotland would hurt Scotland economically and politically more than it will hurt anyone else, so it's important that the Scots don't listen to all the romantic Braveheart claptrap spouted by Yanks on the other side of the Pond who know next to nothing about Scotland and barely give it a thought for 340 days of the year and that they remember the dangers that an economic Scotland would bring to Scotland. Economic reality, not romantic Braveheart cobblers, is what the Scots need to bear in mind.