AhabsOtherLeg wrote:Gnostic, all the points you made in that post are very good points, and I shall adress them when I am sober myself.
Well, uh... that took a bit longer than I had anticipated, but here we go!
gnosticheresy_2 wrote:I think of the UK like an onion
Me too, that's why I cry when I see them cutting it to bits. (I mean unnecessary spending cuts, obviously, not regions or constituent countries being allowed to govern themselves separately or even federally, which I'm all in favour of as you might have gathered).
with the City of London Corporation at its heart
It's more like a diseased appendix, but I see what you're saying.
gnosticheresy_2 wrote:While I'd love to think that peeling off one layer will result in the scenario you outline, I think it'll take more than that to effect fundamental change.
It'll be a start, though. A start that will never otherwise be allowed to happen if the UK retains it's current form forever.
gnosticheresy_2 wrote:So say Scotland votes for independence (assuming no fraud, which is a big assume considering the stakes).
This is why the SNP (and me as well) don't really want the UK Electoral Commision involved. I don't consider it a trustworthy body due to it's failure to investigate postal voting fraud in numerous UK elections, and it's refusal to investigate Peter Cruddas and Sarah Southern over their clear breaches of party funding laws, as revealed by the Sunday Times in it's sting. There's no excuse for their decision not to investigate proven breaches of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000, which fall within their remit. They just don't want to.
I would like to see the referendum administered by either the Electoral Management Board in Scotland, or by an international body, maybe the UN's Election Observation people. Hell, even the EU's electoral watchdog would be preferable. I can imagine the huff the UK government would go in if we asked for that, though, so a compromise has been reached - both the Electoral Commision and the Electoral Management Board will take part.
The part to be played by MI5 (and GCHQ) has not yet been finalised. They'll have to be careful though, more careful than they have been in a long time, and more competent too. What if deliberate planned fraud by agents of the UK state was exposed in advance of the referendum? The Yes vote would skyrocket.
I wish we never introduced electronic vote counting up here. It was a disaster in the 2007 Parliamentary elections. In the recent council elections the machines in Glasgow went offline for 15 minutes, and had to be rebooted. How anyone is supposed to be confident of a fair result where computers are involved is beyond me. They are
wide open to abuses.
gnosticheresy_2 wrote:There is no way on gods earth the US will allow strategic radar sites or undersea monitoring to simply be taken offline, so in or out of NATO is largely irrelevant regarding this point.
True. Of course, I am worried about that side of things, but it is hardly likely to make anyone vote No on the day. "We cannae dae it, Washington says Naw!"
Whatever they might get up to undercover, or behind closed doors with the UK government, is impossible to predict, so I can't let it affect my actions or beliefs in any way.
gnosticheresy_2 wrote:But I can easily forsee a scenario along the lines of "Sorry Mr Salmond, it's going to take at least 15 years to move the nukes + decommission and decontaminate the facilities (you wouldn't want bonny Scottish babies getting cancer now would you?). What's that? You want them gone sooner? And how exactly do you propose to force us to do that?"
It might well take fifteen years, but at the moment it's never going to happen at all, so it would still be a clear improvement on the status quo.
gnosticheresy_2 wrote:resurgent Welsh nationalism/ English regionalism. Peeling back the onion, the more layers fall away the harder it is to conceal what sits at the centre. This will also probably work the other way as London/SE gets increasingly resentful of the "subsidy" it provides those workshy northern monkeys those noble savages of the northern wasteland (and Wales).
I feel sorry for (and Wales) most of all. It seems like (and Wales) is swiftly becoming it's official title.
"Where you from?"
"And Wales. Boyo."
I'm going to say something controversial now - English nationalism isn't necessarily a bad thing (nor is Welsh). Whenever I see a British fascist (and they are all very much
British, aren't they?) there is usually a Union flag somewhere nearby, not the flag of any of the UK's constituent nations. It's only recently that English fascists have adopted the Cross of St. George as their banner, and it's only been since they started pretending to be civic groups and mainstream non-violent political parties (EDL, BNP, British Freedom Party, um, UKIP to an extent - it's full of old NF guys - etc). Before that, in the NF days, it was always the Union flag they adored, with the ocassional Red Hand of Ulster thrown in. From Belfast to Bangor to Barnsley to Bonnybridge, our neo-Nazis all seem to worship the Union and the Empire.
It's why they have traditionally had such a loathing of lefty nationalist groups from the "Celtic Fringe" like Plaid Cymru and the SNP, and of course Sinn Fein. The far right seems to believe in the UK concept (and shout about it) more than anybody else. What is it about it that appeals to them so much?
Could it be that "English" nationalism only became so toxic and frightening because all the healthier and more democratic expressions of it (such as demands for an English Parliament, etc.) were deliberately suppressed by the UK state in the interests of promoting Britishness? Why are there so few neo-Nazis in Scotland, Ireland and Wales proportionally to England, and near zero support for their aims or values?
Let me illustrate the point. Here's an EDL demo in Brighton, a generally progressive and peaceful town:

Here's a Scottish Defence League demo in Glasgow, which doesn't have much of a reputation for peacefulness or progressiveness. The police were there to protect them from the public.

I know they bus their trogs around from all over the country, but why did the SDL just never take off here? At all? I'm not saying "the English" are any more prone to fascism than us (they're not), I'm just saying many folk in England might feel they are not allowed to express their own English national identity
in England, and they might want to, so they end up frustrated, and then coralled into these overtly and oppressively "British" groups. Not that they'd all be out morris dancing otherwise, but it does make me wonder.
Anyway, that wasn't even related to what you said, so i'll shut up.
gnosticheresy_2 wrote:-as an addendum to this, Northern Island moves towards full autonomy with a Catholic majority population making the prospect of a united Ireland something to be taken seriously (I expect this to happen btw, sooner or later, and I expect for the first time in 1000 years no one in England will really care).
Yeah, even Mad Dog Adair has admitted this will happen. Even the DUP have said they will soon have to court the "Catholic vote" if they want to hold onto power. Unfortunately, I think the UK government will still want to stay in nominal control of Ulster, though, because it strengthens their claim on Rockall. It's still all about the oil, sadly.
gnosticheresy_2 wrote:However, the slow unwinding of neo-liberalism in one of it's heartland states isn't going to be unopposed, and it's here that we'll see the real power structures becoming exposed as they desperately try and keep the wheels turning. What will happen at this point? I don't know, I would expect a doubling down on (English) nationalism, attacks on immigrants, the poor, even more restricted movement and speech - all the usual suspects in other words. Fun times
But all of this is already happening, and I don't see the Union doing much to prevent it, just as I've never seen Scottish Labour MPs doing much to improve England's fortunes, either financially or socially (or Scotland's, for that matter). Their removal from the UK Parliament won't be any great loss to anybody (except Labour).
What I mean is, I don't think England will move right after Scottish independence. I think it will move left.
"The universe is 40 billion light years across and every inch of it would kill you if you went there. That is the position of the universe with regard to human life."