I think history has an effect that we can't ignore but ancient grudges are uninteresting to me. It's an accident of history has gat certain places end up with the accoutrements and decorations of a country. This is why the comparison of Maidenhead to Scotland by May is a category error. I also think that just because those attributes exist in Scotland is not sufficient reason for independence.
I would be much happier if we had had a 60% threshold for change on our previous referendums and indeed this one should it happen. And also that people are very clear on whether referendums are advisory or not. I would argue that with a higher threshold you have a much better case for making them binding.
I also find the idea that if you think something will be disastrous, your right to fight against that is somehow invalidated by a referendum, bizarre. But then we seem to have reduced political discussion and an understanding of our democratic process done to calling names. The entirety of the next few years are going to be just more echo chamber politics.
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Of course history cannot determine a nation's future, NS -thankfully, if one looks at Northern Ireland as an example.
The blood soaked past is no example for any succeeding generation.
We've had our fair share of blood as well, both from invader and internal struggles. In many ways they shaped who we are today.
The character of our nation, our attitude to issues which differ from those in Westminster - two examples being the centre-left nature of our mainstream politics and our more open attitude to immigration, for example.
We are what we are.
I've argued before that, had the religious, legal, educational and social structures been subsumed into those of the 'UK' in 1707, the nationhood of Scotland would have gradually died or morphed into the realms of tradition.
They were not, and, despite Empire and clearances offering opportunities for advancement - many of those unwilling opportunities - that undercurrent of nationhood persisted.
I suppose the flames were ignited, not on a shortbread tin, but in the fields of Flanders and the shipyards of the Clyde in 1916-19.
Churchill's sending of tanks into Glasgow,manned with English troops, the Scots being confined to barracks, didn't help the situation.
Since then that current of nationhood has risen exponentially.
Regardless of any second referendum, with a strong, legislative Holyrood, the divisions in the union will not go away, and the simmering estrangement which would exist as the years go on, regardless of which governments are in power, is not healthy for either side of the border.
We can't reverse history: Holyrood exists and will always seek more power regardless of which party governs it - that's the natural state of a small nation in bed with a larger one.
Independence will be tough - no tartan utopia - but in the long run, better for both sides of the border.