Now, about the money.
//It’s the uk gov that funds Scotland the same gov that funds England//
Not entirely, it isn’t. The 2016 Scotland Act gave Scotland the power to raise income tax. However, the Scottish Government raised £941 million less than expected in devolved income taxes in 2017/18 (figures from HMRC). Scotland’s economy grew more slowly than the rest of the UK, hitting tax receipts and leaving the Scottish Government with a shortfall in funding. But because of the risk sharing mechanism in the jointly agreed fiscal framework, the shortfall will be offset by a £737 million increase to the block grant funded by the UK Government. The £204m difference will have to be met by Scotland either my raising taxes or cutting expenditure.
However, overall, the budget deficit in Scotland is over four times that of the UK as a whole (>8% compared to just under 2% for the UK). But more than that, in 2017-18 (the latest figures I can find but I don’t believe they have altered substantially since) government spending per head in Scotland was 113% of the UK average whereas revenue per head was only 95% of the UK average. All this (and much, much more) can be found in this Institute for Fiscal Studies report:
https://www.ifs.org.uk/publications/13287
So whilst it’s very true that all UK taxpayers fund Scotland’s spending to a large degree, that funding is heavily subsidised by English taxpayers since Scottish taxpayers do not contribute enough to support Scotland’s profligacy. Whilst I don’t expect my description of huge lorryloads of £5 notes heading up the M6 nightly to be taken too literally, whichever way you cut it, Scotland is subsidised to a huge degree principally by English taxpayers. This shortfall will have to be made up from somewhere else should Ms Sturgeon’s wishes come true and as far as I can see she hasn't fully explained how that will happen. Whilst I have some sympathy for Scots like middlemarch I’m afraid that 45% of Scots who voted last Thursday cast their votes for the SNP and the FPTP system gave them 45 seats. If they were not happy with Labour or not happy with the Tories and cast their votes that way because of that, they cannot be too surprised if a single issue party like the SNP starts bellowing from the rooftops that the Scots “overwhelmingly support” their main policy.