I realise that Prof D.
I think the cynicism is seen in those who now support exit from the EU portraying this a being a risk in 2014, on the basis that if we wanted to stay in the EU we should say No to independence - so we said No and are now faced with the risk of exiting the EU because of factionalism in very the Tory party who tried to scare us that we'd be out of the EU if we said Yes to independence.
Of course, but you can simply turn that around - namely those people who are pro-EU and also pro-Indpendence which would necessarily have meant leaving the EU, even if that was temporary.
I've always though that there are two positions which make no great sense to me - to be pro-EU (i.e. supporting the idea of being part of a larger enterprise with some necessary loss of local sovereignty) and also pro-independence. It just doesn't make sense.
Likewise to be anti-EU (i.e mustn't let anything get in the way of local sovereignty) yet fight tooth and nail to prevent a part of the UK having more sovereignty through independence.
Both seem totally inconsistent.
I am anti-independence and pro-EU - an entirely consistent position as I loath petty nationalism and want to break down and blur national borders through better cooperation and integration and I certainly don't support creating new border where ones don't currently exist.