Thursday, September 18, 2014

SCOTLAND SHOULD PROBABLY JUST SAY NAW

If Scotland was going to be truly independent following the referendum today, creating its own money, deciding its own laws, then I would migrate there today. But I am unpersuaded by Alex Salmond and the empty arguments for independence.

"Give me control of a nation's currency and I care not who makes the laws." - a quotation attributed to Mayer Amschel Rothschild. I have been unable to verify this, but if Rothschild did not say or write this then whoever did is bang on the money, so to speak.

You can only be truly independent when you issue and control your own money. I have not heard any suggestion from Salmond or any other pro-independent about Scotland creating its own money. I did hear just the one caller into a radio debate suggest this, but that is it.

If Scotland uses the Pound then Scotland is beholden to The Bank of England and thus to the British Monarchy.

If Scotland uses the Euro then Scotland is beholden to the European Central Bank and thus to Bilderberg and thus to the British Monarchy.

The United Kingdom is being Balkanized to create a set of mini states powerless to resist the European Union and corporations. We already have a Welsh Assembly, a Parliament in Northern Ireland, a Scottish Parliament, but so far no English Parliament. In case you haven't noticed there is a Parliament of some kind in Brussels. That Parliament already has so much power that The Marsten House is becoming insignificant. Two World Wars were engineered to create that Parliament, the EU and the Euro. All resistance to this new political set up is to be eliminated.

However, I am detecting a definite sense of desperation from the establishment to keep the union. It is possible that Balkanizing the whole of Europe except the United Kingdom is the plan, to eventually make the UK the most powerful state of all the states in Europe, but all beholden to Brussels.

If Scotland votes Yes today then we will see:
1. an English Parliament;
2. relentless Conservative governments in England;
3. financial and administrative chaos which only the establishment will not suffer;
4. a fairer, more equal Scotland, but only because everyone will be poorer.

I would love to see and live in a truly independent Scotland. But if the result of a Yes from today's referendum means financial and administrative chaos and Scotland keeping the Pound or adopting the Euro then I will not be moving to Scotland any time soon. If I was voting today I would need much more detail before voting Yes.

Scotland should probably play safe and vote naw.





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