Hey Owlbread, if Scotland became independent which side of the mountains would be better to live in in your opinion?
Well, I think Scotland is a very diverse place with lots of unique regions and places in it so it would be wise to travel the country before you decide to roost in a particular nest. I mean, the big cities in the central belt (Glasgow, Edinburgh, all the Strathclyde towns) do it for a lot of people, they're great cities, though lots of people enjoy the lowland countryside in places like the Scottish borders or Dumfries and Galloway, Ayrshire and stuff (where RedKing's ancestors are from I understand). Some venture into the rugged Highlands, a place where you literally have some of the best walks in existence on your doorstep. Then you've got the North East, a lowland area but again very beautiful with the great, grim, grey city of Aberdeen. I haven't even talked about the glorious Western Isles or the Northern Isles yet, two extremely different locations; the Western Isles are a bit like the Highlands but shrunk with a ray gun of some kind and shaven bald. Orkney and Shetland (the North) are much flatter, but totally different in culture and still very beautiful. South of that you've got the harsh wastelands of Caithness and Cape Wrath, pretty awesome places, adjoining the Highlands through ancient lands of Sutherland, so called because the Vikings came through that way. From their perspective the top of Britain was the South. I live in the lower part of the Highlands personally, but I've lived in the cities and the only conclusion I can really give you is whatever tickles your fancy.
You also have to consider stuff like the local cultures and what suits you best. People from the North East are going to be extremely different from people from Glasgow or Edinburgh, who will be even more different still from people in the Highlands or the Western Isles. Regional accents, dialects, customs, social attitudes - you can see a lot of diversity in this country. You will experience a huge change in lifestyle if you move from Edinburgh to Glasgow or vice versa. Edinburgh was once called the Athens of the North for its Greek revival architecture and culture, but I personally find it a bit snooty. Glasgow is just one big, lovely diamond in the rough. I could talk for hours on this little subject (I love our regional accents and stuff) so you can see why I've tried to talk about it in a more general way.
The only thing that I would say to you is don't consider Dundee. Give it 10 years until Brian Cox is finished with it, right now going shopping there is like living through the movie "The Name of the Rose".