Jump to content

Log in or register to remove this advert

What effect would scottish independence have on the UK tree industry?


daltontrees
 Share

Recommended Posts

Serious questions.

I'm English, can I just ask how Westminster differs in the way it governs Scottish people to the way it governs the English?

I get the fact you are a different country and don't want to be told what to do by Westminster.

Is that the only reason?

 

I think I am asking what your leaders will do differently if you go independent?

There will still be hard decisions to make.

You will still have winners and losers in Scotland. Will this be an easier pill to swallow only because your own nationals have made the decision?

The news only show the headline grabbing stories; no pound, no EC, oil running out.

I may have missed the bits where they explain you will be better off because ... Usually when someone tried to answer this the debate turns into a squabble and no one is any the wiser.

 

If you do go on your own I wish you well.

It will be difficult to please everyone though.

 

I hope I've not offended anyone, that was not my intention. If you do answer can you keep it simple'ish please. Like a list of pros and cons,

and you have to be honest not cherry pick.

And no kicking off either!

I have learned more from this thread than anywhere else.

Thanks Rich

 

 

Sent from my GT-S5839i using Arbtalk mobile app

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Log in or register to remove this advert

  • Replies 305
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

Delusional, reality check in order methinks, if this is the general opinion of the pro independence lot they are in for a shock if they win.:biggrin:

 

 

Not general opinion Geoff, just mine, probably best if you just ignore it.👍

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not general opinion Geoff, just mine, probably best if you just ignore it.👍

 

Think about it this way.

 

Many years ago when the old Milk Marketing Boards were under threat, the head of ours always used this analogy.

 

Take a single twig, you can snap it no bother. But bind it together with a bunch of other twigs and see if you can snap it then.

 

It's a good analogy I think!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Think about it this way.

 

 

 

Many years ago when the old Milk Marketing Boards were under threat, the head of ours always used this analogy.

 

 

 

Take a single twig, you can snap it no bother. But bind it together with a bunch of other twigs and see if you can snap it then.

 

 

 

It's a good analogy I think!

 

 

It's a good analogy, and very easy to see how it can work with twigs.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Serious questions.

I'm English, can I just ask how Westminster differs in the way it governs Scottish people to the way it governs the English?

I get the fact you are a different country and don't want to be told what to do by Westminster.

Is that the only reason?

 

Nearly twenty years ago a vast majority of the people of Northern Ireland decided that giving some power to the guys with the guns in return for peace was a good trade off.

 

Whether that was a sensible thing to do or not could be (and over here is) debated long and hard with no definitive answer. What is very plain however, is that the country was better governed direct from Westminster.

 

The only thing that saves the day a bit is that we are now the most subsidised region of the UK but even with that level of subsidy we're still lagging way behind the rest in just about every economic measure.

 

Scotland should pay heed!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not general opinion Geoff, just mine, probably best if you just ignore it.👍

It is one of teh great attractions of independence that Scotland would do away with nuclear weapons and would not participate in the expensive and blood-soaked invasions of Iraq/Afghanistan that make Britain a target for hatred form so many parts of the world. And the cost saving of a revised bit-part stance on the world stage would be enormous. What's the benefit really of being a big hitter politically as long as you have a sound economy? It's just politicians beating their metaphorical chests in the jungel clearing that is world politics.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Serious questions.

I'm English, can I just ask how Westminster differs in the way it governs Scottish people to the way it governs the English?

I get the fact you are a different country and don't want to be told what to do by Westminster.

Is that the only reason?

 

 

Personally I don't see that even as one of the reasons. And the following poitns are personal views also, an individual scot's perspective.

 

Scotland would like to diverge its economy and society from that of England. It aspires to be able to manipulate the economy differently from how Westminster manipulates it. The current parliament with its SNP majority has aligned the government deprtments around its five Strategic Objectives that it says underpins its Purpose and describes the kind of Scotland it wants to live in - a Scotland that is Wealthier and Fairer, Smarter, Healthier, Safer and Stronger. It then brings its every action and decision back to one or more of those. Whehther it achieves it or not is a different matter, but it really is quite refreshing to be able to point to its manifesto and judge its progress.

 

The scottish parliament is 'unicameral', decisions made in the parliament are final, there is no House of Lords of hereditary or politically appointed peers to interfere with the will of the peoples' elected representatives. The parliament has partial proportional representation so that parties like the greens (and even the tories) are able to have a say and a seat at the table. It's really quite a civilised advance on the UK system.

 

And after me saying on here that it shouldn't be about individuals, quite frankly I cringe when I see William Hague representing Britain abroad, or that buffoon Michael Goave meddling with the education system, and (personally) I find Cameron slimy, disingenuous and he might as well be on Mars for all he means to me. We would like the right to choose our own slimy gits, thanks, and to be able to get rid of them when they don't do our bidding. As for Cameron-clone-Clegg, the U-turn meister, oddly I think his party is doing some good in holdiing the fascist elements of the coalition in check, but he does seem to have sold (no, given away) the LDP jerseys to get his snout in the trough.

 

I have held my tongue when the opposition to nationalism has cropped up on the Forum, I see England as having a deeply unsavoury nationalistic aspect (as evidenced by UKIP) which but for the lack of proportional representation would probably have a good few MPs by now. They want to get out of Europe. So do some of the tories. I would rather be in an independent scotland applying to get into the EU than be dragged under by a UK trying to get out of it.

 

Independence could be a nightmare, it could go badly wrong at first, but like a boy named Sue, it would have to get tough or die. Scots are tough. I think it would be OK in the long run. When you've no-one to blame but yourself it makes you a man.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It is one of teh great attractions of independence that Scotland would do away with nuclear weapons and would not participate in the expensive and blood-soaked invasions of Iraq/Afghanistan that make Britain a target for hatred form so many parts of the world. And the cost saving of a revised bit-part stance on the world stage would be enormous. What's the benefit really of being a big hitter politically as long as you have a sound economy? It's just politicians beating their metaphorical chests in the jungel clearing that is world politics.

 

Salmond has said he will allow USA nuclear armed submarines to dock in an independent Scotland on a 'we wont ask, you don't tell us if there's missiles on board' basis.

 

He wants to be part of NATO, but this wont happen because Scotland would be the first NATO member in history to ask for nuclear weapons to be removed from their country. NATO simply wouldn't allow it. The UK's nuclear submarine fleet would be moved to the east coast of the USA and Scotland would not get into NATO leaving us defenceless and having no influence what so ever in NATO foreign policy. His policy on nuclear arms is not credible.

 

Re Iraq/Afghanistan, if you think it's bad having the USA and it's western allies running the world just now, just wait until you see a world dominated by China.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You are assuming that once independence happens that the SNP (and Salmond) will be voted in as the governing party.

 

IF independence happens there will an election to decide who governs Scotland.

 

The 4 party system in Scotland might not happen. If all those mp's who vote no decide that the grass is greener in England and want to further there careers( cos it is clearly not about principles anymore for many).

 

In an Independent Scotland we could have new parties with the Scottish people at the centre. You could have an OAP party, a youth party, Disabled party, Business owners party, Workers party, as well as your green party which could then get a larger voice.

 

These parties could then work together to create a fairer, forward looking country.

 

We won't need the stale LAB CON LIB SNP parties.

 

No House of Lords. That should be enough reason to go independent in itself.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Daltontrees, whilst I respect your opinion, and the fact that you expressed it rather eloquently, I fundamentally disagree.

 

Prominence on a world stage is of benefit to the people of Scotland. This is only achievable as part of the UK. When was the last terrorist attack in Scotland?

 

The Tories are in at the moment, and whilst I'm no Tory, I have more time for them than Salmond and Sturgeon. They aren't nearly so evasive or dishonest. Come next general election they might not get in again. Not agreeing with the politics of the party in power is no reason to leave a country, especially when the politics of this country are so mild (try Ukraine for contrast).

 

The two main industries of Scotland (oil and financial sector) are so volatile that basing a countries future on them is lunacy. Oil/gas is in decline and the financial sector is highly mobile. Many will leave in the event of a Yes vote.

 

There are so many reasons to stay part of the UK that I could sit here and type for hours, but I always end up going round and round with Yes voters that my efforts would be best spent on undecided voters. Are there any undecided voters here?!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share


  •  

  • Featured Adverts

About

Arbtalk.co.uk is a hub for the arboriculture industry in the UK.  
If you're just starting out and you need business, equipment, tech or training support you're in the right place.  If you've done it, made it, got a van load of oily t-shirts and have decided to give something back by sharing your knowledge or wisdom,  then you're welcome too.
If you would like to contribute to making this industry more effective and safe then welcome.
Just like a living tree, it'll always be a work in progress.
Please have a look around, sign up, share and contribute the best you have.

See you inside.

The Arbtalk Team

Follow us

Articles

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.