I see you are marking your own homework which in terms of Spud doing the same as regards his racism you advised against but then thinking consistently as regards yourself vs others is not one of your stronger points. It's perfectly possible to think independence is important but that a referendum may be better in more than a year.
Not at all, and I really fail to see any connection with Spud's comments on Susan Hussey.
I'm simply providing some insight into the broader polling beyond the headline. Only when you look at a range of questions relating not just to a hypothetic vote tomorrow, but to when (or if) people want a referendum and the importance people think independence has do you get a truer picture.
So let's look at the importance question a little more, as you brought it up in your post. As far as I'm aware this is the standard Ipsos 'issues' monitor question, that they have used for decades. Basically, unprompted (and that is important) they ask people two questions:
What do you see as the most important issue facing Scotland/the UK (delete as applicable) today?
What do you see as other important issues facing Scotland/the UK (delete as applicable) today?
Because it is unprompted respondents can say whatever they like and can provide as many 'other' issues as they want, albeit only one 'most important' issue. The unprompted nature is important as prompting can increase the impression of importance compared to leaving it entirely up to the respondent. And the results are usually a combined value from the two questions, and therefore overall results go way beyond 100% as high proportions of people may see inflation and NHS and education and independence as important.
So the results.
Well interestingly Independence comes top of the 'most important' category, but still just 15% of people say it is the most important issue (hence 85% don't). A further 9% cite it as another important issue, combining to the 23% total (with rounding). So actually 77% don't see it as important - and there is no limit to the number of issues that they could see as important.
Also interestingly (and this is different to some of the other issues) - a greater proportion of people who think it important think it is the most important issue. So to paraphrase, largely either it is your number one issue or you don't care about it at all. Which is a lot like Brexit - a small minority were obsessed with the EU, most simply didn't see it as an issue.
More interesting still - when you force people into a IndyRef2 voting intention 56% say 'Yes', but the cross tabs on the tables tell us whether these people actually think independence is an important issue (or the most important) - and the data show that just 36% of people who say they'd vote 'yes' in a referendum actually think independence is either the most important issue or an important issue. That means that nigh on two thirds of 'yes' indyref voters don't consider independence to be an important issue facing Scotland.
So to summarise - from the data, not from what you might want to be the case.
About 77% of people do not think independence is an important issue facing Scotland, most people don't want a referendum any time soon, but if you ask a forced choice question about a hypothetical referendum tomorrow (that they don't want and don't think is important) 56% say they vote 'Yes'.