geni said:
England isn't a homogenous nation (the indepandance for conwall people are getting on my nerves at the monment).
I think they're a bit odd too, but I try not to be judgmental.
geni said:
A very small and largly ignored vioce on the world stage. Scotland has a lower population (by about 300K) than Denmark. Britan is a G8 memebr and has a UN veto. Denamark has?
I'd be interested to hear from some of the Danes here as to whether they'd prefer to be one of the German Länder rather than an independent EU state. If not, why not?
geni said:
Attendance at SNP conferences including sessions which were not open to the media but attended by members only. The preponderance of republican views is blatantly obvious, but there is also a perception that this isn't a vote-winner, and that even if SNP members favour republicanism, it is actually a matter for a popular referendum, not something to be imposed by a party which just happened to have it on its manifesto.
If you want a source for the specific "Republican Rose" stuff, try any anti-SNP Scottish newspaper either when Roseanna was first elected to parliament, or elected deputy leader of the SNP.
Faith-based schools are generally seen as divisive, but in Scotland opposing them is equivalent to opposing Catholic schools, and the Irish Catholic population has a lot of political clout and guards its right to its own schools jealously.
In fact, a couple of elections ago a (Catholic) neighbour said to my mother, "you wouldn't vote SNP, would you - they'd close the Catholic schools!" This as a daft point, as my mother isn't a Catholic and doesn't care tuppence if they close the Catholic schools. However, it was the mantra the Labour canvassers had been instructed to spout on every Catholic doorstep.
As so often the case, it was a lie with a grain of truth in it. Most of the SNP would dearly love to see the Catholic schools closed, but recognises that politically this cannot be achieved in any other way but persuading the Catholic population itself to vote to end the system.
geni said:
Wrong example. Eastern europena states were never part of Russia to sart with.
I don't follow you. Scotland was an independent state until 1707.
geni said:
You already do thanks the the PR regional system. Admitedly this amounts to smeg all but that wouldn't change much.
Not true. Scotalnd's interests are frequently sold down the river to achieve benefits for England. Historically, Scotland would never have lost her steel industry as an independent country, because there were EU rules to protect countries' single steel-making plants. More recently, the fishing deals were extremely detrimental to Scottish interests, but Scotland had no say, being "represented" by a UK minister who seldom even bothered to go to the meetings. It just wasn't a big enough issue in UK terms. I'm talking about a seat in the Council of Ministers, not any piffling regional representation.
geni said:
I have though about the issues I view all nationalism as separatism.
Just out of interest, what would be your optimum solution for state structure? Presumably you'd want to subsume Britain in a Greater Europe? But why stop at that? One world state is your only rational choice. But then, the regions become equivalent to countries. So how do you divide them up?
geni said:
So instead of being small and outvoted in the UK you want to be even smaller and more outvoted in the EU
This is where we agree to disagree, I think. The structure of the EU is much more favourable to states the size of Scotland than the incorporating union.
But a great deal of this is emotional. I don't necessarily expect an English person, secure as a manber of the dominant nationality, to see things the same way. That was why my question about being anti-SNP was directed to Mummymonkey (and other Scots). I'm interested to hear from other people in the same situation who don't experience the same emotional response. The nearest one gets to this from English people is to gauge their reaction to joining the Euro and becoming part of a United States of Europe (with strict one-citizen-one-vote). Then, it's amazing how many people who hate separatism seem to start singing another tune.
Rolfe.