Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Dirty Tricks in the Scottish Campaign
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWhy that? Where would the change in status quo then be coming from?Last edited by ahinton; 10-09-14, 15:00.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIt's OK matey
apparently a woman is going to have a baby
which will make everyone in Scotland vote NO
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post... the Scots Nats, namely the Tartan Tories ...
The SNP are a largely left-of-centre party, with a few right-of-centre policies to encourage growth. You may not have noticed that their main planks in support for independence is to end 'undemocratic Tory rule in Scotland' and to remove Trident from the Clyde. Hardly likely to enthuse Tories north of the border.
A label such as "Tartan Tories' is as patently absurd as, say, 'Tartan Trotskyites'!
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostThat's like something out of a Scottish Labour Party leaflet in the 1970s!
The SNP are a largely left-of-centre party, with a few right-of-centre policies to encourage growth. You may not have noticed that their main planks in support for independence is to end 'undemocratic Tory rule in Scotland' and to remove Trident from the Clyde. Hardly likely to enthuse Tories north of the border.
A label such as "Tartan Tories' is as patently absurd as, say, 'Tartan Trotskyites'!
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWhich therefore only goes to demonstrate how far to the right the putative political centre of politics has drifted in the meantime!
To return to what presumably gave rise to member P.G. Tipps' remark - namely the question of who might be held responsible for the maintenance of which status quo - it would not seem to matter as much as the fact and consequences of the status quo itself.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostThat's like something out of a Scottish Labour Party leaflet in the 1970s!
The SNP are a largely left-of-centre party, with a few right-of-centre policies to encourage growth. You may not have noticed that their main planks in support for independence is to end 'undemocratic Tory rule in Scotland' and to remove Trident from the Clyde. Hardly likely to enthuse Tories north of the border.
A label such as "Tartan Tories' is as patently absurd as, say, 'Tartan Trotskyites'!
(or they might be perfectly content - 'They might be Tories but they're our Tories')
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The question of whose Tories are whose in Scotland or elsewhere seems to me to have less relevance to the referendum discussions than the argument that the single most influential factor likely to influence members of the Scottish electorate to vote "Yes" next week is a profound and still growing discontent with and distrust of the Westminster government - not just the present one but any and all of them - in terms of their perceived and actual ability and willingness to represent the interests of Scotland and the Scottish population.
That said, did anyone really expect clean tricks in this campaign?...Last edited by ahinton; 11-09-14, 11:59.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostThe question of whose Tories are whose in Scotland or elsewhere seems to me to have less relevance to the referendum discussions than the argument that the single most influential factor likely to influence members of the Scottish electorate to vote "Yes" next week is a profound and still growing discontent with and distrust of the Westminster government - not just the present one but any and all of them - in terms of their perceived and actual ability and willingness to represent the interests of Scotland and the Scottish population.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostSurely you don't think that those of us who normally live south of the border do not also have "a profound and still growing discontent with and distrust of the Westminster government"!
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostOK - we get what we vote for, that's the argument - but a lot of what happens as a result is really rather poor, and often biased towards a geographically favoured part of the UK.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostShould a "Yes" vote win the day next week, that Scottish electorate will eventually find itself echoing the "we get what we vote for" argument, although whether with chagrin or pride will remain to be seen.
I seem to recall similar wishes being made for counties - such as Yorkshire.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostIn some ways "Yes" would be very adventurous, and seemingly positive in the short term, yet in other ways one might think "Be careful of what you wish for."
I seem to recall similar wishes being made for counties - such as Yorkshire.
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post...or even Herefordshire, which in living memory was merged with Worcestershire as "Hereford & Worcester" but, once the Worcester side of it had syphoned off most of the advantages of this arrangement, it split in two again.
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