SwingsitlikeHogan
Major Champion
There's two problems with this....
1) according to a leading Scottish publication - although most Scots "want" devo max, the vast majority of those that want it don't actually understand what it is..... are we as a nation really that desperate to "govern" ourselves that we're prepared to vote for ANYTHING, even if we don't actually know what it is, other than the status quo?!!?
2) devo max is a SHAM.... it's having our cake & eating it... it says, we'll have all of the best bits, but not the messy and/or expensive bits... it gives us more "power", yet leaves the SNP and it's supporters free to whinge for the next 20 years about Westminster.......
C'mon folks - we've either got the cajones to stand on our own and accept ALL that entails (one things for sure - it won't be the panacea that the SNP have us believe), or we don't. Why go for a halfway house?
I have nothing against independence...... but surely we need the full facts, warts'n'all, in front of us before we go rushing to a YES vote. Anything else is really troubling...... after all - poor planning only gets you to one place in life, nomatter the situation
This is good - so let me get this straight..... you don't trust Westminster but you'd trust the SNP who have no plan whatsoever for the practicalities of independence or the affordability of all of their promises?... merely the word of Alex Salmond and his band of merry men/women that things will be just super, and let's not worry about such trivialities??!!?:rofl:
I actually agree with all of the above. My point about RD and the BT campaign is that there seems to be an assumption that a NO will not result in the status quo but additional powers - towards devo max (whatever that is).
At the moment voters seem to be faced with a YES campaign unclear about consequences and "whatabouteries" and a NO campaign unwilling or unable to answer "whattheneries".
The YES campaign will not be willing or able to answer all questions about what will happen after a YES - but they have to be honest on that and can only ask for a big bit of self-belief and faith. The BT campaign likewise will not define what will happen next after a NO - but if they can't promise anything new then just say that and promise the status quo. Problem is for BT I'm guessing that the status quo will be under pressure from voters in England re the Barnett formula and the West Lothian question.