I can't find a link now but I read an article this morning on the Guardian website about the do that Dan Snow organised in Trafalgar Square yesterday. Bob Geldof, Eddie Izzard and various other "celebs" said stuff and the idea basically seemed to be "It is up to you, we won't tell you how to vote but we would really like you to stay". Quite a nice sentiment really and in stark contrast to all of the Better Together campaign headlines of "You will lose this that and the other if you vote Yes". I was listening to Jeremy Vine on Radio 2 (I hate that show but I couldn't get anything else to tune in properly while I was driving) and there were a bunch of people whining about why the English weren't getting a say and those of the opinion "If they want to go then good riddance". People are such tits, it's depressing.
I caught another interesting article about the impact on the Trident program and implications for the US (
Implications for US). I hadn't realised that the SNP said a Yes vote would mean moving the Trident submarines out of Scotland (makes sense when you think about it). If you can't be bothered reading the article the key issue was:
Quote
Acton, whose background is in nuclear physics, said that DC's "nuclear community" was worried about what might happen to Trident, which Alex Salmond, the current First Minister of Scotland and the chief campaigner for independence, has pledged to kick out of their current base on the west coast of Scotland. There is some worry in US nuclear policy circles that Scottish independence could lead to the UK abandoning its nuclear program altogether. America very much doesn't want that, said Acton. "The US is quietly very keen for the UK to remain a nuclear weapon state. They do not want to be the sole nuclear power in Nato." (While France is a nuclear weapon state and an otherwise full member of the Nato command structure, it does not contribute use of its nuclear weapons to the alliance and does not attend meetings of the Nuclear Planning Group.)
The missiles that form the UK's nuclear deterrent are leased from the American Atlantic Squadron pool, which is based at the US naval base at King's Bay, on the Georgia coast, where America houses its own Trident submarines.
Acton thinks there is a possibility that the warheads, and possibly even the submarines, might have to be stored back at King's Bay – at least temporarily – if an independent Scotland goes through with the Scottish National Party's stated policy of ejecting them. "I think it would be an interim solution," he said, "but might end up becoming permanent."
Lots of maybe's and mights in there but you wonder what the English process of finding a new (and welcoming) home for the Trident submarines would be....
It is interesting how it is hotting up and how devolution offers are being thrown at the Scots all of a sudden, are they really going to stick to such promises if No wins? Seems unlikely to me but everything I read is saying devolution to regional control is the way forward throughout the country. A No vote may result in a long hard look at how the country is run but I'm going to be a cynic and say that it will be a case of "As you were". They will go back to focussing on the politics that maintain the status quo and money into already bulging pockets.
Do people think the English politicians have been caught napping? I mean how to you miss the gravity of a vote on independence? I can accept that they have been caught napping on what people outside of London or those engaged in politics might really think.
I'm still on the fence, I'm glad I don't have a vote as it is quite a stark choice with no middle ground and it is interesting reading about the voting strategy of people who were really hoping for devo-max. I would love to see a Yes vote result in a socialist utopia (then I would try to move to Scotland) but that won't happen either way. I now have a vested interest in a No vote - I could do with the exchange rate bouncing back in time for my holiday in the US on Saturday! Lame I know.
This post has been edited by Mezla PigDog: 16 September 2014 - 02:17 PM