You seem quite sure that Scotland will be able to vote for independence and when they will do it they will actually vote in favor of independence...
got any info on the first one and polls on the second ? I was under the impression both were quite uncertain.
We will definitely be able to vote for independence, the British were kind enough to allow us to do so. It is now confirmed in law.
The second point is very uncertain indeed, the majority of polls showing independence running at 30% - 40%, support for the union at 30% - 40% and undecideds in between. There are often polls that will show 60% opposed and the like while some have shown independence to be pretty high too, but I just don't think they're representative of the people I've talked to. The country is neatly divided into thirds.
I have a feeling though that judging by the terrible campaigning by Better Together (the abysmally named No Campaign) they are beginning to run out of steam. Yes Scotland (the Yes Campaign) have basically been doing a rope-a-dope Muhammad Ali style for the last year, getting their grassroots ready and preparing for a huge burst next year. They've been allowing Better Together to come at them with a negative story virtually every single day in Unionist newspapers like The Scotsman, now we know exactly what they're going to say. We know all their attacks - your army won't be strong enough, your currency situation will be uncertain, your position in the EU will be uncertain and... that's about it, beyond some platitudes like "It's not really independence at all is it?". As the First Minister Alex Salmond said in a speech - their stories of scaremongering will shrivel up in the sun when we deal with them in the next few months/early next year. All the Yes Campaign have to do is prove them wrong.
In a
recent article in the Scottish Herald the No Campaign have basically revealed their strategy for the next year - they're not going to change at all, rather they're just going to wait for the White Paper on Scottish Independence to be released in November of this year which will show everyone what independence will look like, then they'll go through it with a fine toothed comb, then tear the Yes Campaign to shreds when they see that the SNP haven't "adequately costed" their policies. They don't actually know that of course - they're just assuming that. They'll be looking at stuff like the pensions policy of an independent Scotland and how much it will cost over "an economic cycle", when the very expression "economic cycle" is very ambiguous. It's very difficult to prepare for stuff like that when independence won't be a reality for the next 5 years or so. Basically, the No Campaign is going to set the SNP and the Yes Campaign impossible tests on mindnumbingly boring but important sounding subjects and then fail them. What a lovely positive case for the union, I'm sure that'll really get through to people.
I have actually become dangerously optimistic in the last month or so, prior to now I was depressed and certain that we would fail. The unrelenting negativity has finally buckled in the last week or so when they started running scare-stories about how we'd face increased mobile phone charges in the event of independence (really now) and even a Conservative politician in the Scottish Parliament (rare I know) said "this is getting a bit silly". It has become known that people within Better Together privately refer to the organisation as "Project Fear", which has led to much satire from Nationalists. People don't respond well to unrelenting negativity, and that's all the only stuff folk are really hearing nowadays. They aren't exactly going on the Better Together website and reading their "positive" stuff about how "we fought Fascism together" and subjugated a quarter of the Earth's surface or something, they're reading stuff in The Scotsman or The Daily Record or the Daily Express about how Aliens are going to invade and force Shetland to become independent at raygunpoint if
Alex Salmond's SNP booooo.... hisss.... succeed in their plans for "separation". It just doesn't work. A positive campaign is nearly always more successful than the negative one, and I think as people's dissatisfaction with Westminster grows and the campaign finally kicks in we will gain support.
To paraphrase the words of John Paul Jones, Scottish founder of the United States Navy, "We have not yet begun to fight."