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Lt Col Charlie Brown
3
3
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Will Ireland be far behind?
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
>1 y
Lt Col Charlie Brown This Could be a Return to Sectarian Strife. Hopefully Not.
(1)
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1SG Civil Affairs Specialist
1SG (Join to see)
>1 y
Northern Ireland, you mean? Ireland has been independent for almost a century.
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PO3 Donald Murphy
PO3 Donald Murphy
>1 y
No - Ireland will not be behind. Northern is Protestant, Southern is Catholic.
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SSG Dale London
SSG Dale London
>1 y
1SG (Join to see) - Correction: they WERE independent until they joined the EU. Now its Brussels calling the shots instead of Whitehall and Westminster.
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1SG Civil Affairs Specialist
2
2
0
They are welcome to try independence again... because it has worked so well for them in the past.
(2)
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SSG Dale London
SSG Dale London
>1 y
The problem with the Scots is that as soon as they win anything they start fighting with themselves over it. It kind of amazing to watch -- and a little depressing too.
I've been living here for 33 years (with a 2 year gap around the time of the first Gulf War). I love Scotland, and I love the people but they themselves admit they are their own worst enemy.
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MSgt Gerald Orvis
0
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Edited >1 y ago
The Scots have been dreaming of independence ever since their nobility signed it away to the English in 1707 (in return for the London parliament eating Scotland's massive national debt incurred when they tried to establish a colony in Central America in the 1690s. They have fought internally over everything because they used to have three different cultures at odds with each other: The Lowlanders, the Gaelic Highlanders, and the Borderers. King James I and VI eliminated the Borders problem right after he assumed the English throne in 1603. The Highlanders problem was eliminated after the Jacobite rebellion was crushed by clearing the people (except the nobility) from their lands up until 1882. That leaves the Lowlanders, and they fight with each other politically over just about everything. Since the Scots got their own parliament and limited self-rule back, the SNP and others has advocated for cutting ties completely with the British Parliament in London - after all the Scots run their own affairs already. Problem is that the country will quickly become a third-world country (as it was before 1707), since Scotland has nothing but North Sea oil (and the English would dispute that) and tartan tourism, which won't pay the bills. Additionally, the Scots have only one or two regiments in its military establishment, and no navy or air force. How will they defend themselves if Iceland gets aggressive? And, as has been said, if Scotland joins the EU on its own, they will have to deal with the Brussels bureaucracy and see some of their own laws tumbled in favor of EU laws. And there will a real border with England to be dealt with. Although descendents of Scots all over the world are sentimental about Scotland's independence, in reality I don't think it would work out too well for them as far as paying the bills.
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