ChatterBank0 min ago
If The Rest Of The Country Had A Vote On Scottish Independence ….
88 Answers
…. do you think the ‘Ayes’ would have it?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by naomi24. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You'd be surprised.
Many people in the rest of the UK, especially in England, are fed up to hear the Scots whinging on about their lot and about how much better off they'd be not having to share "their" oil with the rest of the nation. They are also fed up with the Scottish Assembly passing all sorts of measures which see their citizens save cash (free prescriptions, free university tuition, etc.) whilst the outrageous "Barnett formula" sees far more cash per capita allocated to the Scots than the English.
There is not much in the Union for England. If anything there should be a referendum on whether England wants to remain part of the UK. At least, for the English, independence would solve the problem of whether the majority of people in the UK should continue to be subject to ever increasing interference from Brussels/Strasbourg.
Many people in the rest of the UK, especially in England, are fed up to hear the Scots whinging on about their lot and about how much better off they'd be not having to share "their" oil with the rest of the nation. They are also fed up with the Scottish Assembly passing all sorts of measures which see their citizens save cash (free prescriptions, free university tuition, etc.) whilst the outrageous "Barnett formula" sees far more cash per capita allocated to the Scots than the English.
There is not much in the Union for England. If anything there should be a referendum on whether England wants to remain part of the UK. At least, for the English, independence would solve the problem of whether the majority of people in the UK should continue to be subject to ever increasing interference from Brussels/Strasbourg.
Scotland is not a Principality (if for no other reason than there is not a “Prince of Scotland). Nor is it an independent nation State (or we would not be having the referendum in a couple of weeks time). Since 1707, when it joined England to form the Kingdom of Great Britain (which subsequently went on to become the United Kingdom), it has been simply an area of the UK.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.