Rolfe
Adult human female
You can't logically stop there, but must be promoting a single world government. No wonder you're not too keen on Scottish self determination.
We went the full 12 rounds on this one at the time of the previous referendum, mainly with Soapy Sam I believe. He was an utterly impractical fan of one world government and blind to all the complications.
It seems to me there are only two basic ways of achieving this. One is the classic top-down method which has been tried before and doubtless will be tried again, where a power with colonial ambitions attempts to conquer or annexe the entire world. This is not a future I view with any favour at all.
The other is something generally akin to the EU, where numerous small states agree to pool their common interests at international level. I quite fancy that, but how do we get there? One crucial point is that large powerful states actually hinder this objective, as they're more interested in securing their own power base than in mutually beneficial co-operation. In this scenario the individual state-units need to be small enough individually not to be able to pose a serious threat to the others.
Of course government has to come in layers. I don't want to have to contact someone in Peking about the malfunctioning street light outside my house. A one world government couldn't do away with state-sized groupings for sheer practicality. Also, people do have loyalty and attachment to their own nation state, it's in the nature of the beast and you won't change that in a hurry. So at this level smaller states that aren't over-powerful and have the incentive to work with their similarly-sized neighbours are preferable. It has been estimated that around 5 million people is about right, funnily enough. I could live with that.
The idea that amicable one world government can be achieved by large states gobbling up the smaller ones and assimilating them is to my mind fanciful. When it's been tried before it's been a recipe for conflict and outright wars. Go small and co-operate seems a much better bet.
And then there's the present day to deal with. None of us is likely to see one world government in our lifetimes. We live in a world of nation states which co-operate with each other to a greater or lesser extent. Borders are a fact. Why is the one between Scotland and England so unthinkable in this context? Five million people isn't even small for a state, it's medium-sized. (Small is Iceland, Luxembourg, Malta etc.) There are many independent states of this size doing well and the states high up the happiness index are strikingly similar to Scotland in terms of both size and location. They also have powerful neighbours but they don't let these powerful neighbours take all their decisions for them, or hand over all their assets to them to get pocket money in exchange.
It seems that for some people it's fine if you're already an independent state of about 5 million people managing your own domestic and international affairs, but if you're an essentially identical grouping which doesn't happen to be an independent state at the moment they'll call you all sorts of evil Nazi names simply for aspiring to that pretty unremarkable status.