At least all acts of Holyrood's parliament were scrutinised by elected members in a proper manner, rather than the 800 strong mess of criminals, unelected political appointees, bishops and a few experts whom no-one elected.
Actually, no Parliament scrutinises Acts of Parliament, Jim - not even the Scottish one. A Parliamentary Bill, be that in Edinburgh or Westminister, is scrutinised and passed by the elected MPs or MSPs, after which it is passed to the relevant authority for signature. In Westminster, that is the monarch. In Scotland that is, surprise, surprise, the monarch.
What happens in Westminster (and various other national Parliaments - but not those of Scotland or Wales) is that the Bill is also scrutinised by a second (or higher) chamber. It's final shape still remains in the hands of the primary chamber.