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Scottish Independence Referendum 2


Henry

Should Scotland be an independent country?  

271 members have voted

  1. 1. Should Scotland be an independent country?

    • Yes
      196
    • No
      75


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You didn't, but the clear implication was that you think I am a moron who cannot distinguish between "politics, football and religion." If however you were not making that accusation then I will be very happy to hear it from you.

 

 

Depends if you were serious in calling him a complete contradiction i.e. were you engaging in light satire or serious debate? :)

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Depends if you were serious in calling him a complete contradiction i.e. were you engaging in light satire or serious debate? :)

:)

 

Well I have plenty of time on my hands today so we can keep this up for as long as you like, but since you are employing the old Platonic dialectic style of constantly questioning me, in the hope my point implodes on me through my own words, then which of the two styles do you think I was engaging in?

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You sir are a complete contradiction.

 

:laughing:

 

A lassie I once dated said something similar. You are not trying to 'come onto me' are you?

 

I am not really, I am just someone who thinks for himself.

 

Hence you tend to end up with a variety of opinions, rather than one of the pre-packed identities and opinion-sets which dominate the west of scotland (the two main ones are aligned with each of the arse cheek football clubs).

 

The result is that you can empathise with everyone, but everyone is deeply suspicious of you :laughing:

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Cavey, seriously, your 'peado' chat is brutal. You've tried to get it going for about 10 people on here. Not only is it pointless you're not even funny with it. Carry on though man, if it stops you fucking banging on about trainers like some Aberdonian Imelda Marcos with brain damage

 

'Paedo'

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  • 1 month later...

 

Bank of England governor Mark Carney insisted yesterday that it would be economically possible for an independent Scotland to share the pound.

But he said that didn’t mean it would be “politically desirable”.
Carney reignited the currency debate while appearing before Westminster’s treasury committee ahead of the publication of the SNP’s growth commission report on Friday.
It is expected to change the party’s policy by backing the creation of a Scottish currency.
The Yes campaign controversially proposed a currency union ahead of the 2014 referendum.
The move that was widely seen as a key reason for their defeat – after George Osborne, who was chancellor at the time, said he would veto it.
Carney was asked yesterday whether he believed a currency union also required a political union.
He replied: “No, from the strict economics it doesn’t”.
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Does anyone actually have an appetite for another one of these?

 

I don't think so. But the SNP are duty bound to talk about it / bang the drum every so often, so it looks like there is a point to them.

 

Seems like Sturgeon is reigniting, reactivating or relaunching the notion every second month.

 

Ultimately they want "independent" Scotland to be run from Brussels, while they prance about Edinburgh looking and feeling important.

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