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United Kingdom News Politics

Scotland Votes No To Independence 474

An anonymous reader sends this news from the BBC: Scotland voters decided to remain part of the United Kingdom on Friday, rejecting independence in a historic referendum. The decision prevented a rupture of a 307-year union with England, bringing a huge sigh of relief to the British political establishment. Scots voted 55.3 percent to 44.7 percent against independence in a vote that saw an unprecedented turnout. "Like millions of other people, I am delighted," Prime Minister David Cameron said in a speech outside 10 Downing Street on Friday morning. "It would have broken my heart to see our United Kingdom come to an end." Cameron promised new powers for Scotland in the wake of the vote, but also warned that millions of voices in England must also be heard, calling for a "balanced settlement" that would deliver more power to England, Wales and Northern Ireland. (Somewhat related: according to a Reuters poll, one in four Americans want their state to secede from the union.)
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Scotland Votes No To Independence

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  • Everyone loses (Score:5, Interesting)

    by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) * on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:00AM (#47944953) Homepage Journal

    Everyone seems to have lost here. The Scottish will get screwed when the politicians renege on all the promises they made, and the rUK will get screwed when the politicians half deliver those promises at their expense. The question won't go away and will come back round in 15-20 years. The UK will as a whole remain very conservative and averse to change.

    I'm not Scottish but I feel very sad today.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      15-20 years should be enough for England to divest itself sufficiently from Scotland so when they vote for independence next time, it will not matter.

      • Re:Everyone loses (Score:5, Interesting)

        by JosKarith ( 757063 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:35AM (#47945323)
        It was about 30 years since the last referendum on independance. In 30 years time Salmond will be long dead and the North Sea oil will have run out. Unless Scotland magically comes up with some other means of funding itself then independance will be a death sentence for them.
        • Re:Everyone loses (Score:5, Interesting)

          by xfizik ( 3491039 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @10:13AM (#47945767)
          In 30 years, the way things are going the UK proper may as well be bankrupt, socially and racially divided, a shadow of its former glory, and Scotland might regret having not voted yes, even if their oil runs out.
          • Re:Everyone loses (Score:5, Informative)

            by Xest ( 935314 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @11:52AM (#47947031)

            Yeah, and aliens could land too, and there will be nuclear war, and the world will end also!

            Oh wait, you were being serious? You used the words "the way things are going" but that's not actually the way things are going. Based on current trajectories the UK is showing the healthiest growth of just about all rich Western economies and it's doing so whilst maintaining a reduction in deficit too.

            Further, a number of studies suggest it's likely to see itself increase in global rankings overtaking France, and maybe even Germany in the next 20 years:

            http://www.theguardian.com/bus... [theguardian.com]

            http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/busi... [bbc.co.uk]

            So yeah, you may be right, maybe something drastic will happen and things will go into reverse again, but that's not what the current figures suggest so any such possibility is merely unfounded speculation.

            Yeah, sure, Scotland could've chosen not to be part of that and that would've been their decision, but I think most Scots saw through the nationalist pessimism towards the UK and recognised that for all our faults, maybe things aren't so bad - we're growing faster than anyone else in the G7 and seeing drastic declines in unemployment to boot - find me a country without political issues, but as far as ours go they're pretty small fry compared to some of the issues some countries are having, we've been growing well for well over a year now and some of our neighbours are still slipping in and out of recession - right now and for the foreseeable future the UK is still a pretty good place to be.

            Faster political change would be nice, many people think it's not happening at all, but it is. In recent years we've seen things like the exposure of the expenses scandal, we've seen the closeness of phone hacking and the political classes, we've seen an alternative voting system referendum that was lost, exposure of sexual abuse in parliament, we've seen a coalition for the first time in 60 years- now many people will view all these things are negatives, things that ended badly, didn't turn out well, but they're not, they're all part of a bigger picture- the tide is turning against entrenched Westminster, in the last 50 years most of those things listed above would've been unthinkable, the fact they're happening is evidence that the vested minorities that've had so much power for so long in Westminster are losing their grip. I'm normally a cynical, pessimistic person myself, but since I started to take a step back on this issue and piece it all together, rather than look at individual events in isolation, as well as looking at the wider world in general (i.e. the arab spring) it seems pretty clear that politicians are losing power to the people as part of a long slow, probably multi-decade process - it's slow but it's happening, and I'm optimistic that Westminster cannot and will not be able to carry on with business as usual for much longer- they're already faltering and I fully suspect that this independence referendum is another nail in the coffin for the old way of doing things.

            God only knows I've hated my country long enough and thought about leaving enough times (thankfully I can easily obtain dual citizenship through my partner, or just make use of our EU membership to fuck off elsewhere in the EU) but right now I think the signs are good, I think change is happening, it's painfully slow but I'm not convinced this is something that you can fix overnight, I think it takes almost a generational change in politicians (which might explain why there has been some progress already- I believe last election that far more than half the MPs that were elected were completely new) but it's happening, and we're getting there.

            • Re:Everyone loses (Score:5, Interesting)

              by drsquare ( 530038 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @12:08PM (#47947213)

              Healthy growth? Wages plummeting, zero-hours contracts proliferating, real jobs replaced by involuntary 'self employment', debts soaring, bailiffs doing record business, food banks struggling to keep up with demand. If this is healthy growth I'd love to know what you consider unhealthy.

              GDP is only of real relevance to economists and politicians. Ireland has a high GDP but its people still have to mass-emigrate because there is no work there.

          • by swb ( 14022 )

            The way things are going? I thought the UK already was bankrupt, socially and racially divided and a shadow of its former glory.

        • by bigpat ( 158134 )
          The alternative you suggest is that once the oil runs out that the rest of the UK will be providing Scotland with more money in government services than the Scots pay in taxes. That doesn't seem to be a viable or sustainable alternative either. Either way the Scots need a sustainable economy in Scotland and shouldn't be dependent on the taxpayers of England and Wales to prop them up. That isn't a plan. Sustainable economic and political unions are about mutual benefits not dependency.
        • by ebcdic ( 39948 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @10:31AM (#47946019)

          There has never been a referendum on independence in Scotland before. There were two referendums on devolution: the one in 1979 was narrowly in favour but failed because it did not reach the required 40% of the electorate, and the one in 1997 succeeded, establishing the Scottish Parliament.

    • Re:Everyone loses (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:10AM (#47945035)

      The Scottish will get screwed when the politicians renege on all the promises they made

      Why would they renege, other than in some fantasy you've invented? Westminster has already set out the timeline for the new Scotland Bill to be written and presented to Parliament.

      As for the rUK "losing" the only logical conclusion is for a federalised Union, where England gains it's own parliament and everyone, including Wales & Northern Ireland, get a similar set of devolved powers. That's both fair, a positive outcome for everyone in the UK, and neatly solved the West Lothian Question (because all sitting Westminster MP's become federal MP's, only dealing with federal issues).

      • He's probably an American who thinks Mel Gibson makes documentaries.

      • Re:Everyone loses (Score:5, Insightful)

        by TangoMargarine ( 1617195 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @10:13AM (#47945771) Journal

        The Scottish will get screwed when the politicians renege on all the promises they made

        Why would they renege,

        I'm sorry, are you asking why a politician would lie?

      • Right and who pays for all that government? The tax payers do. Smart people want government consolidation that reduces taxes not increases them.

        The only good thing about more government is that they spend more time fighting over who does what which slows down everything. Yes slow governments are a good thing.

        It is the big issues in the USA. We have something like 500 different sales tax rates paid to just as many different agencies all of which need funding to take our money.

        Some things you want separat

      • Why would they renege, other than in some fantasy you've invented? Westminster has already set out the timeline for the new Scotland Bill to be written and presented to Parliament.

        What makes you think Parliament will go along with the Prime Minister's promises?

      • by tchdab1 ( 164848 )

        Why would they renege? Because they can, because they haven't yet delivered, because there is now nothing forcing them to deliver, and because they historically misrepresent both what they promised previously and what they are actually doing.
        Don't believe an aggressive negotiator unless you are inspecting their actual deliverables.

    • They already allowed Scotland's previous demands for their own parliament. Why would they renege?
      • Re:Everyone loses (Score:4, Insightful)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) * on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:33AM (#47945299) Homepage Journal

        Because it was all vague promises about more money and other favours, which can easily be backed out of. They threw them in at the last moment when it looked like the vote might be yes.

        The Tories and Lib Dems hardly have a good track record on delivering promises, especially for Scotland. Besides which the government might change before they happen, in which case the new lot won't want to commit to expensive promises made by the last lot.

        • Re:Everyone loses (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Sockatume ( 732728 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @10:11AM (#47945743)

          It's not Scotland that'll keep them in line, it's Northern Ireland and Wales. If they renege, then perhaps there won't be another Scottish referendum to worry about, but it'd certainly fire up the seperatist movements in the rest of the union. The only way to avoid that is to both keep their promises to the Scots, and to make similar offers to the other nations.

          Federalism's coming.

    • Re:Everyone loses (Score:5, Informative)

      by BarbaraHudson ( 3785311 ) <barbara.jane.hud ... minus physicist> on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:20AM (#47945149) Journal

      Actually, experience up here in Kanuckistan seems to indicate that everyone will win (if by "everyone" we mean everyone who isn't a politician or a dyed-in-the-wool separatist).

      We've had two referendums, and they proved one thing - change IS possible. The separatist movement here has burned itself out, the generation who were pushing for it being seen as burned-out old farts. Go back to the UK in 40 years and tell me that everyone lost.

      • by c ( 8461 )

        The separatist movement here has burned itself out, the generation who were pushing for it being seen as burned-out old farts. Go back to the UK in 40 years and tell me that everyone lost.

        From what I read of the demographics, it's mainly the younger generation of Scots that supported separation. They're pretty much at the stage of Quebec in the 70's.

        • Re:Everyone loses (Score:5, Insightful)

          by BarbaraHudson ( 3785311 ) <barbara.jane.hud ... minus physicist> on Friday September 19, 2014 @10:08AM (#47945709) Journal

          The problem with relying for support for separation from the younger generation, as Quebec separatists found out, is that the younger generation gets jobs, gets invested in the status quo, and then think "separatists - they're just young punks who don't know anything about real life."

          And the next "younger generation" sees separation as something for old farts. Uncool.

          The reality is that there's more people in the RoC (Rest of Canada) who would vote to kick Quebec out than there are Quebecers willing to pull the trigger on separation. You can only make a "knife to the throat" threat so many times before the other party says "don't let the door hit you in the ass on the way out."

          • by c ( 8461 )

            The problem with relying for support for separation from the younger generation...

            Well, yes. It still takes at least a generation for them to work it out of their system. 40 years might do it, but seeing where we are now in Canada I think it's going to take another 20 or so before we can really feel comfortable that separation is truly dead.

            The reality is that there's more people in the RoC (Rest of Canada) who would vote to kick Quebec out than there are Quebecers willing to pull the trigger on separation.

      • Kanuckistan? That's Canada, right?

        Canada isn't a country. It became mostly a country in the 1980s but in my not-so-humble opinion, no country is a real country if they use the leader of some other country as their head of state.

        You are a subject of the Brits so long as you put the Queen on your money and let her roll around in your lands acting as though she owns the place -- which she does.

        By a thread, Canada isn't a country. Cut that last thread and you can finally be a real country.

    • Promises that, I would point out, were made by people without the authority to make them. The only body with the authority to make those bodies was parliament and the only body that can honour them is parliament - and it could equally refuse. Tory backbenchers have already indicated they don't approve of the status quo (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/scottish-independence/11098825/David-Cameron-faces-Tory-bloodbath-over-unfair-cash-for-Scotland.html). Those promises were never more than (and never c
    • Re:Everyone loses (Score:5, Interesting)

      by jc42 ( 318812 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @10:59AM (#47946373) Homepage Journal

      Actually, there's quite a lot of history in various parts of the world when parts of a political entity split off. Sometimes this is done peacefully, sometimes it involves serious fighting and wars. An interesting recent case was in Switzerland, where in 1978 the Canton of Bern split, with the northern part forming the new Canton of Jura. You can read a lot about it online, including a couple of wikipedia articles. It's fairly well encoded in Swiss law, where similar votes happen every few years, typically involving a municipality with a large population that wants to secede from its canton and join another. The typical reason for such splits is as in Scotland, where the people in an area feel poorly served by the government, and think they can do better as part of a different county/state/whatever, or perhaps as an independent unit as Jura did.

      Here in the US, we had a similar vote in 1863, which resulted in the new state of West Virginia being formed. This is often presented as part of the Civil War split off of the Confederacy. Historians tend to interpret it as more of a case of the western population feeling poorly treated by the remote state government in Richmond, which collect taxes in the mountains, but provided few government services in return. West Virginia did apply to the federal government for statehood, which was ratified after a few years. Unlike the Southern secession, this was done without (further) warfare. A funny aspect of the story is that now, several counties in the northeast of West Virginia have openly discussed seceding and joining either Virginia or Maryland, for pretty much the same reasons. Unlike Switzerland, though, the US doesn't have much in the way of official laws that deal with such political reorganization and redrawing of political boundaries.

      The story in Scotland may work out as it often does in Switzerland, where many of the votes for secession fail. The reason is that the referendum functions as a "wake-up call" to the government. It's typical for a lot of public discussion to happen, and the government(s) make promises to fix the problems that triggered the referendum. Sometimes, as people have suggested here, the government reneges on its promises. This will be followed by another vote a few years later, which will often succeed. Or the government may fix many of the problems, which will satisfy the voters and repeated votes will fail.

      The Scots would probably do well to continue discussing the issues publicly, and keep the London government aware that they can't continue to get away with everything without repercussions.

  • Civil war (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:08AM (#47945017)

    In any other part of the world the next step would be riots followed by civil war.

    Mostly the reaction seems to be a big "oh well" and a "let's move on".

    • Re:Civil war (Score:5, Informative)

      by mu51c10rd ( 187182 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:27AM (#47945233)

      The vote was a 55-45 margin...and conducted in a safe manner without much in the way to dispute. No reason for riots nor civil war. I also don't think enough was on the line for anyone in Scotland to feel motivated to take up arms. Remember northern Ireland and the IRA? How did that work out for the common person?

    • Re:Civil war (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Sockatume ( 732728 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:57AM (#47945561)

      Sure, like how the close-run US elections in 2000 resulted in the Great Californian Succession and the Annexing of North Dakota, followed by two decades of brutal guerilla warfare lead by crack teams of Canadian mercenaries. Every time a democratic decision goes the down to the wire, society immediately collapses.

      When you have fair democratic decision making in a timely and open fashion, people live with the result. Maybe not happily, and maybe not without division, but life goes on. Where you hold fixed elections in an effort to get an oppressed populace off your back, then you have a civil war.

  • But nobody is taking my Whiskey from me!
  • Hmm... (Score:4, Funny)

    by Mister Transistor ( 259842 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:12AM (#47945053) Journal

    (Somewhat related: according to a Reuters poll, one in four Americans want their state to secede from the union.)

    Didn't South Park point out that 1 in 4 Americans are idiots?

    • (Somewhat related: according to a Reuters poll, one in four Americans want their state to secede from the union.)

      Didn't South Park point out that 1 in 4 Americans are idiots?

      At least in polls they are. Ask any question, no matter how stupid and one in four Americans will support it. I think it is safe to say: One in four Americans are either idiots or trolling. I could believe either or even both.

      Too bad there is so low support for independence though. I think US politics would work better if the states could have their own two party separation and could try different legislation and FAIL instead of being bailed out. Europe has it's share of "challenged" southern states, but it

      • I think it is safe to say: One in four Americans are either idiots or trolling. I could believe either or even both.

        I love lying to survey takers. If someone wants to waste my time asking me stupid questions, I'll waste his with stupid answers.

        I especially love lying to push-pollers. "Why yes, I do favor a candidate who eats babies and pours toxic chemicals down his toilet. What I can't stand are politicians who write federal legislation exempting politicians from the do-no-call list."

    • Well 25% of the population does have an IQ at or below 90.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      (Somewhat related: according to a Reuters poll, one in four Americans want their state to secede from the union.)

      Didn't South Park point out that 1 in 4 Americans are idiots?

      Actually, Obama upped that to 50+%

      Twice.

      Gitmo closed yet?

      When's that "pivot to jobs" gonna happen?

      Warrantless wiretaps stopped yet?

      How about that reset with Russia?

      Dropping bombs on Libya is NOT "hostilities"!

      Syrians crossed that red line yet?

      Iraq is so safe now that Obama's declared victory.

      When's tee time?

      King Putt!

      • Somewhere, Fox News is missing a viewer...

        Give it a rest, already. He won, get over it.

      • Re:Hmm... (Score:4, Informative)

        by blue9steel ( 2758287 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @10:16AM (#47945821)

        Gitmo closed yet?

        Like him or hate him, I hardly think you can blame Gitmo staying open on him. Congress basically refused to allow him to close it.

  • Canada & Quebec (Score:5, Insightful)

    by B5_geek ( 638928 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:15AM (#47945087)

    I wonder if this will silence or encourage the separatists that want Quebec to leave Canada?

    • by dk20 ( 914954 )

      I wonder if this will just encourage the leaders of Scotland to hold another referendum, just like Quebec and its "neverendum's"

      Those "leaders" clearly dont represent the majority, but sit there waiting for "the right moment" to separate, but yet they plan to keep Canadian passports, Canadian currency, etc. I bet they probably want to keep the transfer payments flowing as well?

      So a separate country, but in name only?

      Why be a premier when you can be a prime minister?

    • by gatkinso ( 15975 )

      I thought that whole thing basically lost steam in the 1970's.

    • by c ( 8461 )

      I wonder if this will silence or encourage the separatists that want Quebec to leave Canada?

      Encourage.

      The margins are way too close. If it would've been more like 75% against, the Quebec separatists might have taken a bit of a morale hit, but 55% ? That's a "Please Play Again" for a separatist. The 1980 referendum was 59% against and it certainly didn't stop them.

      The real question is whether the Scots are going to be smart enough to tar and feather the next bunch of politicians that decide they want to run

  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:20AM (#47945153) Journal
    Seriously, England said that they would do better. Hopefully, they will mean it.
    • by Cederic ( 9623 )

      What the fuck? England hasn't done a thing. England has been entirely disenfranchised throughout this whole fucking affair.

      About the only thing the people living in England have been given is the chance to hand even more fucking cash over to people living in Scotland.

  • by gatkinso ( 15975 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:26AM (#47945227)

    For the UK - they remain united.

    For Scotland - they get greater autonomy without the pain of going it alone.

    For the Scottish people - their heritage and nationality received much attention (hell I didn't know there WAS a Scottish flag before this). They proved them selves to be paragons of peaceful demonstration and democracy.

    For the Britons - the Welsh and Irish nationalities in the UK benefit from greater recognition as well. The English too!

    The UK is an amazing and interesting union - and all should be proud to be a part. And who knows... maybe the next generation will decide Yes.

    Such is the take of this American anyway.

    • This is a loss for all the flagmakers who were gearing up to produce whatever the new UK flag would be. How often do you get the chance to sell a new flag to everybody in a nation?

    • by bigpat ( 158134 )
      I think what you say is mostly true, but as an American I do wish the UK would drop the K part. I don't believe government and tax supported Kings and Queens have any place in the modern world. Fairy tales told to children sure, why not. But if you want to call yourself King, Queen or Princess or whatever, then go ahead, but don't prop them up with taxpayer money.
      • There are probably a lot of people in both Scotland and the rest of the UK who agree with you! Interestingly there were no plans for an independent Scotland to give up the monarchy. The Queen would've remained their Head of State, as she is for Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

        Incidentally, the Union of the Crowns predates the Union of the Parliaments.
  • by BigDaveyL ( 1548821 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:31AM (#47945273) Homepage
    FFFRRRRREEEEEDDDDDOOOOMMMM!
  • by rapiddescent ( 572442 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:34AM (#47945307)

    As a Scot living through the referendum, it has been a sea of optimism and YES flags and events. Many people, including myself woke up this morning very disappointed but also wondering how did this happen:

    One of the biggest revelations was that The over-65's swung it for No [lordashcroftpolls.com] whilst all age groups from 16 to 55 voted for independence. one of the key elements of the YES campaign is that none of the media TV channels or daily newspapers supported independence and so Scots could only get information from the internet. Twitter, websites such as Bella Caledonia [bellacaledonia.org.uk], Wings over Scotland [wingsoverscotland.com] have been on the only places to find real information that hadn't been skewed heavily in favour of the No campaign.

    The over-65's are the least internet connected and the most trustworthy of the BBC, even though the BBC has been accused of bias in an academic study [thedrum.com] from a survey of their entire news output over a 6 month period.

    Also, the over-65's have the shortest time stake in this. plus have had the trappings of gold plated pensions that the generation behind them cannot look forward to. It's a disgusting state of affairs and as a Scot I am embarrassed for my country.

    • by genghisjahn ( 1344927 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:37AM (#47945345) Homepage
      It is possible that they looked the issue over and decided to vote No. Just because some over 65 disagrees with you does not mean they are fools.
    • by TheMathemagician ( 2515102 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:43AM (#47945411)
      But the SNP already shifted the goalposts by allowing 16-17 year olds to vote (knowing they'd be big YES voters) even though voting age in the UK is 18. They even got the year 2014 selected as it's the 700th anniversary of Bannockburn. You rigged the game in your favour and STILL lost quite clearly, now is the time to STFU.
      • by drew870mitchell ( 2523490 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:59AM (#47945579)

        I'm not quite so sure 16-17 year olds can be written off as a horde of yesbots. I recall NPR reporting yesterday that the teenage demographic surprised most with how 'No' they were, and they interviewed a couple who made clear they were decently informed of the issues. Expanding the voter pool to include more rightful citizens, who are going to spend the rest of their lives affected by this decision, is not 'rigging the game'.

        • by inhuman_4 ( 1294516 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @11:50AM (#47947011)
          The problem with have with giving 16 year olds the right to vote is that it was a one time thing. If Scottish government had come out and said that 16 is an appropriate voting age, and kept that age for all votes then that is okay.

          But they didn't do that. They only set the age at 16 for this vote because they believed that the younger crowd would vote yes, which is the way they wanted. Whether or not young people actually voted yes doesn't change the fact that the Scottish government played fast and loose with the democratic system. I don't really see how this is any different than the gerrymandering that goes on the in the US.
        • by Xest ( 935314 )

          Well the 16 and 17 grouping voted 72% for yes, but the 18 - 24 bracket voted by a majority for no so they were in fact just a bunch of yes bots- when the reality of personal finances, seeking full time work, having a family etc. really comes into play at age 18+ the result massively swung back towards no.

          The problem with letting them vote is that by and large pretty much none of them have experience of mortgages and so forth so don't understand the impact increases to cost of borrowing and so forth could ha

    • Not being Scottish, I have to say that I'm relieved. Granted, if I lived there I'd probably have voted Yes. But from the outside? How would that split have worked out in the end? The UK would swing wildly right... Quickly get involved in lots of wars, crack down on "terrorists" etc... Scotland would have swung wildly left, and quickly bankrupted themselves with social programs. Balance is a good thing, even if you're currently getting the short end of the stick.

      I'd like to say that perhaps the powers that b

    • by Cederic ( 9623 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:57AM (#47945549) Journal

      Maybe the over 65s are the ones that aren't taken in by the lies, misdirection and naive optimism of the fishy politicians in the SNP?

      Perhaps they remembered that although Scotland didn't vote in the current Government, it did vote in the previous one which caused many of the current economic problems.

      Could they even have noticed that despite all the calls of bullying the only bullies in the debate were members of the SNP?

      Or possibly you're right, and it was all just media bias and an inability for the propaganda to reach them.

    • Why are you presenting one guy's personal poll of only 2000 people as the election result? It's only got a dozen people in some of the age bins, for God's sake.

      And even then the 18-25 year-olds voted no!

    • by u38cg ( 607297 )
      >>wondering how did this happen

      Because you looked at the polls and the betting markets and you thought you knew better. Once again, you were wrong. Remember a guy called Kerry?

    • by xfizik ( 3491039 )
      It seemed like the over-65's were more concerned about their pensions with all the threats of financial pressure coming from London. Their concern was not unjustified, but it's sad that the concept of independence and sovereignty boils down to mere money for some (or most) people.
      • by IamTheRealMike ( 537420 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @10:55AM (#47946305)

        it's sad that the concept of independence and sovereignty boils down to mere money for some (or most) people.

        Why? Scotland is not oppressed, it does not have severe racial/religious/ethnic divides with the rest of the UK. It was not conquered by England. Nobody has family members that have died because of the Union. In fact the Union has been ruled by Scottish PM's twice in recent history.

        That makes splitting it out into a new country a largely technical matter of economics and future government policy. It's quite dry stuff. The Yes campaign chose to ignore this and attempted to whip up a notion of Scottish exceptionalism through the constant "fairer better society" rhetoric, but ultimately they lost because when people asked questions about the technical details of why Scotland would be better and whether it'd be worth the cost, they had no answers. Given that the primary impact of independence would be economic, this lack of planning proved fatal.

        • by xfizik ( 3491039 )
          Does one have to be oppressed to want independence? Do children leave parents' nests to live on their own because they are oppressed or because it's natural to want to live independently?
          • Ouch. I've seen quite a few family breakup analogies, but this is the first time I saw Scotland be the child instead of the spouse.

            If we're going analogise a country to a person, actually I'd say it's pretty natural to seek out unions even though they involve giving up some independence. That's why people get married. That's why the EU keeps growing. Even the most perfect couples don't always agree all the time, but they find ways to figure it out because it's better together than apart. Divorces are univer

    • by IamTheRealMike ( 537420 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @10:30AM (#47946003)

      This reminds me the well known Americanism, "reality has a liberal bias".

      I followed the BBC's coverage quite carefully and did not see any bias. What I did see is a lot of ardent highly emotional yes supporters interpret the stream of stories about the campaign as being against yes and therefore the authors must be biased. So let's take a look at your link about this "academic study" that claims to scientifically assess the bias of the BBC:

      The study found that, overall, there was a greater total number of ‘No statements’ compared to Yes; a tendency for expert advice against independence to be more common; a tendency for reports to begin and end with statements favouring the No campaign; and a very strong pattern of associating the Yes campaign arguments and evidence with the personal wishes of Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond. Taken together, the coverage was considered to be more favourable for the No campaign.

      Well fuck me. The evidence of this bias is that "expert advice against independence was more common"? Seriously? Did this guy even think before writing this so-called academic study? Here's another explanation: maybe expert opinion was against independence because it didn't make much sense?

      What about "associating the Yes campaign arguments and evidence with the personal wishes of Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond"? The entire independence campaign can be summed up as the personal wish of Alex Salmond. He devoted his entire career to Scottish independence. He led the party that called for it. It has been his project since day one. No surprise that disentangling the arguments and evidence from his personal wishes is so hard, especially because the yes campaign was so lacking in detail and substance.

      Last reason to see the BBC as biased, "a greater total number of ‘No statements’ compared to Yes". Well, that doesn't surprise me in the slightest. The entire yes campaign can be summed up as repeating over and over that everything will be better post-yes because Salmond says so and anyone who disagrees is a scaremonger. That was the entire argument for independence. If you're a journalist there's only so many times you can publish this viewpoint as a story before it stops being news. The arguments against independence on the other hand were complex and multi-faceted. There was the currency union issue of course, but also the question of how the EU would react, whether there'd be border controls, how assets would be split up, whether the oil projections were really accurate and then the steady stream of people either with expertise or in highly placed positions coming out against yes. There was lots to write about, new stories every day.

      Given that state of affairs, I don't see how the media could possibly have published more articles that were pro-yes than pro-no simply because the yes side had nothing to say.

      Also, the over-65's have the shortest time stake in this. plus have had the trappings of gold plated pensions that the generation behind them cannot look forward to. It's a disgusting state of affairs and as a Scot I am embarrassed for my country.

      I'm embarrassed for your country too, partly because of absurd arguments like the ones you just deployed - essentially saying that old people can't use the internet and therefore must be stupid and uninformed. Perhaps you should take the next logical step and argue for their disenfranchisement too.

    • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @11:00AM (#47946379) Journal

      Those foolish over-65s.
      They voted reflexively, after reviewing trivial issues like:
      - the SNP's assurances that Scotland would be a member of NATO and the EU were completely wrong (both the EU and NATO rebuffed the 'automatic membership' that the SNP was asserting they were entitled to)
      - losing their currency (The British public was 2/3 against letting Scotland keep the pound. The Exchequer had said no, and most economists said the 'Sterling Union' proposed by the SNP was a stupid idea)
      - The departure of most major Scottish business southward - hell, even the Royal BANK OF SCOTLAND was leaving if "Yes" won the vote...
      - SNPs domestic agenda that pretty much amounted to a Socialist Utopia funded entirely on North Sea oil that they felt they would automagically inherit without contest (never mind revenues have been falling there for a decade or more)

      Essentially the SNP's platform was "if everyone does what we say should happen, with the most optimistic interpretation of everything possible, nobody disagrees, and Britain pays for everything, it'll all be hunky-dory...probably" was an exercise in extended political farce that only had currency because Cameron (stupidly) gave it credibility.

      Let's remember too that the referendum was NON-BINDING. There was promised a referendum, and then "we would act in the best interests of the Scottish people"....that's all.

      Maybe - as has been abundantly proved in many other contexts - the 16-18s that got to vote were easily swayed by emotions, having not thought through the issues seriously and more likely the 65s just barely countered them?

      FWIW, I think this would be a brilliant time to do as some conservative MP suggested and re-write the 1707 Act of Union to enfranchise each 'kingdom' within the UK equally, and no longer allow a bunch of whingers in Glasgow to play the tune.
      I admire much about Scotland, but this referendum seemed to be playing to their stupid side.

  • Funny (Score:2, Insightful)

    Prime Minister David Cameron said in a speech outside 10 Downing Street on Friday morning. "It would have broken my heart to see our United Kingdom come to an end."

    A heart, he no doubt had stolen from a Welsh, Irish, or Scottish street urchin.

    • Nah, he gets Rupert Murdoch's hand-me-downs. Murdoch long ago gave up on free-range urchin hearts - he now farms them in a huge facility under Slough.

  • Too bad (Score:5, Interesting)

    by plopez ( 54068 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @09:55AM (#47945525) Journal

    They could have told the EU to get out. After seeing what lack of control of your own currency did to Greece, Italy, and Spain I've come to the conclusion the tight economic binding which is the EU is a bad idea. There are also no firewalls. It creates a situation where a country as small as Greece, Italy, or Spain can threaten to take down the entire global economy.

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

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