FTFYCleon corrected for Braveheart said:Kidding! Just kidding! Please, put down yourhalberdsClaymores.

Aw, kiss my haggis.![]()
FTFY
(Yes, I know Claymores are typically two handed, but the gif uses the Diablo I convention of animating two handed swords as one handed swords. Sue me.)
You just don't know them well enough. Come and live here for a bit and you will soon change your mind.
Now that is surprising. Every time I've been near London, I've hated it.I did, for 2 years, near London. I loved it.
Now that is surprising. Every time I've been near London, I've hated it.
...snip...
Now I hear all the reasons for not including the SNP in the 2010 debates. Scotland is too small to matter, it would bore the English viewers and they're the people who really count, and so on. Indeed. But the fact remains, the debate was shown in Scotland and watched in Scotland, and gave the LibDems the opportunity to increase their voting share in Scotland by a very significant margin. The SNP, excluded from being able to present their case, saw their vote drop by about the same margin.
Anybody think this was accidental?
Rolfe.
Aw, kiss my haggis.![]()
Really? Did anyone here say that the English viewers were the only ones who count? I guess I missed that. I thought the justification was that it was a debate between the three people most likely to be prime minister. I suppose you could say that the Lib Dems don't stand a realistic chance, but it is at least possible. The SNP aren't fielding candidates in enough constituencies for this even to be possibile in theory.Now I hear all the reasons for not including the SNP in the 2010 debates. Scotland is too small to matter, it would bore the English viewers and they're the people who really count, and so on.
Good old English food!
Darat said:A question for Darat and others who believe that Scottish independence should be approved by a referendum of the entire UK before it happens. Are there any examples you can think of elsewhwere in the worldwhere this has been done? I'm not a great history expert, but I can't think of one.
Couple of things - I do not believe that Scotland's independence should be approved by a referendum of the whole country, what I think should happen is that there needs to be mechanisms agreed by the whole country that allow the likes of Scotland or the Kingdom of Northumberland to become independent from the rest of the UK.
Saying that from where we are now I think if a referendum was held in Scotland tomorrow and a true majority (e.g. a large majority of the population takes part) wanted independence then that should happen.
But it should not be hidden behind spin - what would be happening is that the future of our entire country is being decided by a very small minority of our country. And fundamentally I think not being part of that process is disenfranchising, the 50 odd million people of the UK that will have no say in the future of their country.
As for other examples - I can't think of any countries comparable to the UK that has gone through something like what the SNP wants.
(And am afraid that yet again we have wandered off-topic - this thread was not about Scottish independence but a specific political issue of the UK - and I fear we may be split again.)
Ok cross posting to here, since as you say it's OT for the other thread.
I seem to have misunderstood your position slightly, are you arguing that the UK should have a debate and set rules for if, when, and how a segment of the UK can become independent? This seems to be a bit cart before the horse to me.
Surely step one is for a part of the UK to decide it wants independence, then for the terms and conditions to be agreed? Otherwise you end up in endless pointless hypotheticals like 'what if Devon wants independence, but Cornwall doesn't?'
...snip...
Disagree, in the UK we have different groups of people who want quite different parts of the UK to become independent, an agreed upon mechanism just seems a sensible approach to me.