boaby
Posts: 2788
Joined: 29/12/2006 From: Aberdeenshire
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So, it's on. SNP, SSP, Greens, Solidarity at the big kick off in Edinburgh today. Salmond's brief speech managed to include a few historical significant phrases: "community of the realm" - medieval term developed, ironically for Salmond, in England. Used first in Scotland in correspondence with England during the succession problems after 1286 to make it clear to the English that the plurality of the Scottish people were involved in the decision making processes ocurring in the absence of a monarch. The term was used by Robert I to lend legitimacy to his regime after his usurpation. The term then came to represent a politically powerfully body from which consent was required to be given in order to change fundamentally the size, shape and integrity of the realm. "Self-evident truth" - well hello Mr. President. 1776 and all that. And the link between the two: "declaration" Various scholars have tried with little success to suggest that the letter known as the "Declaration of Arbroath" influenced the writing of the "Declaration of Independence". The two are, however, linked in such writings and the news media's coverage of such. Along with stuff like tartan day - April 6 - in yankdom falling not by accident on the date of issue of Arbroath. Today the YES Scotland campaign launched a declaration of its own. Mucho symbolism. Not much concrete, the only thing said wich one could say we can take as a definite in an independent Scotland, from what was said, is a determination to do without nukes. But then this is natural. An independent Scotland should be as blank a page as possible. A few self-evident truths ought to do it. If this debate affords significant time and energy to discussions of, for example, what corporation tax might be in Scotland the debate is missing the point. This should be about debating whether a Scottish state should be re-created in which stuff like corporation tax can be debated and altered according to a democratic process. Talking about levels of corporation tax in a possibly independent country is putting cart before horse. Attempting to get a majority of Scots to sign up to an independent country that is built on a foundation heavily influenced by the political preferences of a section of the political community is a fools errand. "Here's a country: it's democratic, it has a body of law that has developed over a millenium. Go and make of it what you will." That's about the only argument that can work. I think. If the majority think more can be made of Scotland within the UK than has been hitherto and could be if she were independent then that's that.
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"Aberdonians, and with some degree of purpose and right on their side, have absolute contempt for Glasgow. There is a side of Aberdonians who, let's be absolutely honest about this, feel so superior to Glasgow that you can measure it by the yard."
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