So vote leave should have got the crystal balls out and known how the negotiations would pan out? In 2014 the SNP couldn't tell what your currency would be and what control they would have over it. Sorry Gordon this is double standards.
To a degree I'll concede that, but I'd mention the Brexit nonsense: the trumpeted £350,000,000 a week for the NHS (not sure if this includes here since the NHS here is separate from that in E&W), the xenophobia surrounding immigration that didn't play out here in Scotland and, of course, that UKIP aren't an issue here either.
If the unionist parties had a majority, a vote could take place after 2020. I think indyref2 will be advisory, could be wrong.
In Holyrood? Seems unlikely as things stand.
Vote leave had a case, vote remain had a case. They can't tell you everything that will happen because there are known unknowns.
I don't recall a Leave case that didn't involve lies or unappealing politicians talking about issues that were germane to Scotland.
So you want remain in the EU market but leave the UK market because you don't like the government. You like the French / German ones then?
Why would we need to leave any markets if staying involved in them would be mutually beneficial.
And end freedom of movement between rUK and Scotland?
Why would that be a result beyond the same basic checks that apply when going to France? Presumably this would be part of any agreement between Scotland and the UK, and no doubt the forthcoming arrangement in Ireland will give clues.
So you will want to raise taxes presenting a good case for doing so, but will leave that to someone else.
As is the case now in the UK: we elect politicians to do this stuff and if we don't like what they do we can vote to remove them.
How do you know the Scottish people won't vote in a centre-right austerity party, like the SNP?
I don't, but then I suspect internal Scottish politics would shift post-independence, especially for the SNP - but that would be an internal choice for the people of Scotland whereas the shift away from the traditional unionist parties here means we have a Westminster government UK government that doesn't reflect the political climate here in Scotland.
The 'now' refers to setting a date now.
Nicola Sturgeon has already suggested a window for this.