Why I think Scotland should vote yes

WARNING: This blog entry might be seen as seeing the United Kingdom as the union between England and Scotland. It is not meant to be but I feel the whole argument in Scotland is being framed as the Scot’s relationship with the English – so it really only deals with that. If this does offend any Welsh man/woman or Northern Irish man/woman who might read this then it was never my intention and I apologise for that.

Yesterday I made a rather emotional blog on the Scottish Independence debate. I have had time to think about what I wrote and I still feel that separation is the best way forward. I don’t believe that the Westminster parliament can deliver on the Gordon Brown Devo Max plus a unicorn plan (my idea to add the Unicorn but it is, after all, the symbol of Scotland and Gordon seems to be throwing everything else in so why not). I also don’t believe that should the No side win the Yes side will go away quietly – far from it – especially when the Gordo plan fails. I also don’t believe that that Westminster has any idea how to deal with the West Lothian or English question as they have a great suspicion of anything that takes power away from the centre. Because of all these things and the resentment I feel that some of the Scottish elite get away too easily when blaming everything that goes wrong on England I cannot see the union between the two countries is worth keeping.

As I write this I can here the cry of loss of influence in the world the country will face and I have to ask so what? What has this influence brought to this country over the past few years? Many thousands killed or injured in two futile wars as well as huge sums of money wasted trying to fight these wars. An over bloated military which in turn has lead to the building two aircraft carriers (Both carriers are being built in Scotland by the way something I suspect will end should the Scots gain independence) that we have no aircraft to fly on nor the funds to use both of them – just so we can project power. What power? The only nation who can project power in the world is on the other side of the Atlantic and our role is usually to be an adjunct of whatever decisions are made in Washington. We may well loose our influence on the IMF and World Bank is another cry but again what has been the benefit of that? Did it prevent our leading banks, mainly Scottish, from getting into a huge mess and costing us untold billions of pounds? We might loose our seat on the UN Security Council – other than preventing the French getting over grand what does this achieve?Perhaps the only European power that should have a place on the Security Council is Germany but I guess that is a whole different story. In short I cannot see what is the true value of all this influence or “punching above our weight” – especially when compared to the billions that are wasted trying to pretend we are something we are not. What, in truth, do we get unless, of course, you are part of the Westminster/Oxbridge elite who still have delusions of grandeur. I cannot help but wonder these things.

I hope this doesn’t come over all UKIP it really isn’t meant to. I don’t believe that we should retreat into out part of these islands and fear the world outside. Far from it I believe that best long relationship that England can have with the world through the European Union (EU). I know this is a highly unpopular view as there are so many huge faults with the EU. Nonetheless, when we work together with out near neighbours we get much more done than the default ‘..lets bomb them back to the Stone Age ..’ approach that seems to emanate from parts of Washington. Or am I just being too simplistic?

What I hope to come out of Scottish Independence is a much more mature relationship between Scotland and England. It won’t be an easy birth and there will be many problems that will need to be sorted out but they will be over time. I think that this is the only way forward as has been pointed out many times we both have so many common interests that finding a way of meeting them will only be possible when we both are able to just be honest with each other. I know this sounds like a marriage that has broken down but that really is what has happened. Both countries will be better for the separation even if one, I suspect, is in for a rude shock over the next few years should there be a separation. That is the joy of being an independent sovereign country.

One final thought. England as a country is broken. We have two totally different parts trying to coexist. The first is London centric and who’s short hand name might be M25 land. The second is the rest of the country. I have a sneaking suspicion that if the country outside of the M25 land was asked whether they wanted to join a new union with Scotland and separate from M25 land they may well agree to do so. Which, if true, says so much about the broken model of politics that passes for business as usual in this country.

Simon Marchini
www.simonmarchini.co.uk

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Project LV One – Day 143 – Contemplating the Female Form

Oadby Nude 07

I spent most of today looking at a nude woman.  For some with a rather childish or pruriant view point this might sound a bit dirty.  However, anyone who has tried to make some form of drawing/painting by doing this knows that it is actually very hard and exhausting.   It is far too early to decide what I feel about this painting but over all it was a good day.

ContactSheet-001

 

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Scotish Independence …Some More Thoughts

So this is the final weekend when both sides will be out trying to persuade voters that they are right and the others are wrong. The pressure will start to build up to unheard of levels with every word uttered by all the politicians being pulled to pieces to try and detect hidden meaning. My God I’m glad I have never had to suffer such scrutiny!

In the end what will be left? What will survive from such bitter infighting north of the border? Well my fear is that the only lasting legacy will be resentment on both sides of the border. Currently we south of the border mostly appear to be bemused onlookers not quite sure what all this means. We probably agree with Alex Salmond that the sight of Westminster politicians heading north is more to do with saving their own jobs as anything else but then we have no real love of the Westminster elite either. What I fear we haven’t really woken up to is the consequences of the referendum and that is when the resentment will start to set in.

Currently the plan, should Scotland vote no, is to try and railroad the biggest constitutional change through the British parliament in the next 6 months. There will be no chance for the rest of the UK to be consulted on what they think should happen and whether what is being proposed is a good idea. No answering of the West Lothian question nor the Barnett formula. No, Gordon has spoken and we must all bow down to his great wisdom. Well we all know how that ended last time.

I really do feel that the Westminster politicians think that they can force this through the nonsensical Gordon Brown proposals and then everyone will go back to the way things were – after all there was more upset and consternation in Westminster when one MP moved to UKIP and caused a by election than the whole of the Scottish referendum combined until it looked like the Yes side might win. Well I don’t think they will be able to for one simple reason – UKIP. Whilst I don’t agree with anything UKIP says I do believe that they are really good at mustering a loud and very noisy protest and they will see the whole political fix up should Scotland vote no as a gift. In short I really don’t think the Houses of Parliament can deliver – certainly much before the next election. If this were the case then I suspect this will be viewed as just another betrayal by many north of the border – things could get ugly after all the Holyrood elite, yes they are just as bad as their Westminster brothers and sisters, have their own election to think about in 2016.

So because of all this I have come to the conclusion that I hope that Scotland votes Yes. I don’t believe that Scotland will be better off because of it but that I think the Union between England and Scotland is so badly damaged as to be irreparable. Until Scotland stands on its own two feet then the default position of ‘… it’s all England’s fault…’ will just stoke more and more rsentment. However, after independence I suspect that will still be the default position as more and more of the Scottish state unravels over the next 10 years. This doesn’t mean that Scotland won’t succeed it just means that they will have make their own way whilst the big beast to the south goes its own way.

Over the past few months my view of the whole Scotland question has changed. At the start I was neutral about the whole question. I couldn’t understand how you can unravel two nations so totally intertwined – certainly not in the ludicrous timescales suggested by the Scottish Nationalist – but if the Scots wanted out then I would wish them good luck on their journey. However, as the vote comes closer I have come to realise then something has been broken apart. I guess it was only in the last week when I started to hear the fantastical notion that we Scots didn’t vote for this Government and all it’s austerity and if we were on our own Scotland would be a beacon of light and hope compared to the dark forces to the south of the border. Such an argument is nonsense but seems to be gaining real traction. That is when I changed my mind. If the Scots are so great and wonderfully enlightened people then please go and prove to the world that you are for this is one former unionist who no longer can see any real value in being together. In my view I think we would be better apart and both sides of the border will have to make the best of what happens after that.

Simon Marchini
http://www.simonmarchini.co.uk

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Project LV One – Day 142 – Grey and Colour

GL 05

So I continue to work on my latest grey painting and I feel it is progressing slowly – there is something missing and I am not at all sure what that it is.   In the meantime I pulled a quick photo shoot last night and produced a totally different portrait.

Sam 005

Not sure what all this means.

 

Got to run for your life….

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Project LV One – Day 141 – Nudes

Man with Cigar - sketch

Are we getting more prudish in our old age?  I really don’t know if I have an answer to that but just recently I have started to wonder if making life drawings is still considered to be a sane thing to do.  For me I guess it started just over a year ago when I got a warning from Flickr about a digital painting I had posted onto my account of a nude woman.  Someone had complained that it was in appropriate for general viewing and should be only allowed to be viewed by adults (whatever that might mean in the context of the Internet).

That really had an impact on me not because of it’s crass stupidity but the feeling that there was something wrong with the human form that it must be hidden away from sensitive eyes less they be corrupted.  Perhaps it was even worse and no one had complained but Flickr took it upon itself to censor my work.  Enough of this nonsense as I think I am reworking an old moan.

So are we getting more prudish?  In one sense we are but it another real sense we really aren’t and the recent case of the hacked celebrity nude photos would seem to point in this direction.

Nude Sketch standing

I do feel that views towards life drawings are changing for the worse.  Of course it could be  that society has always been a bit ambiguous about nude drawings and paintings it is just that now that I make Life drawings I have become aware of the ambiguity?

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Devolution must include borrowing powers, but it’s not just about Scotland | The Times

A fascinating and thought provoking article on the way forward should Scotland vote No…worth a read

I’ve shared this article from The Times for you to read:

Devolution must include borrowing powers, but it’s not just about Scotland

Times Newspapers Limited, publisher of The Times and The Sunday Times websites, is not responsible for the content of this email. Use of the article and the website is subject to the website terms of use.

Simon Marchini
www.simonmarchini.co.uk

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Project LV One – Day 140 – Not so lethargic

GL 01

Yesterday was just one of those days…I do seem to be getting a lot of those at the moment. Today it is back to the easel and paint, paint, paint.  This is the start of another painting in the Grey series – I wonder how this will work out?

 

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Timetable to Independence – the next 3 months

Yesterday I outlined a possible timetable up to the end of 2014 should Scotland vote yes. As with any speculation it was just that with huge gaps in it because of a lack of knowledge. However, already somethings I speculated about have started to come true. Firstly, and hardly surprisingly, the big beast of Scottish Finance have indicated if there is a yes vote they will be heading south across the border. What this actually means is unclear at the moment but should there continue to be currency uncertainty then it well lead to job losses in Scotland. The size and scale is unknown.

The secondly the cracks on the Yes side started to show. In the event of a yes vote then Alex Salmond believes he will have a negotiating team ready within a week. However, the Scottish Green Party, part of the Yes campaing, have indicated that their view of a future Scotland is diametrically opposed to Salmond’s – how this can be overcome in seven days after the Yes vote I do not know – one of the many issues where there is uncertainty.

Whether this means the rest of what I said is right or near right is a very moot point and I guess history will be the judge of that.

So the first three months of 2015. This assumes one crucial thing – that the current government has resisted it’s own contradictions and kept going – given the problems facing the two nations this is probably the most likely result.

In January the first real negotiations will start to take place. The run up to the end of 2014 would have been full of posturing and sizing each other up. There are two key decisions that will probably shape the whole of what is to come.

The first is money. At the moment the UK has said that should Scotland vote yes then they will have to come up with a new currency arrangement as they cannot continue to use the pound. This has been dismissed by the Yes side as scaremongering as it is in both sides best interest for the current situation to carry on. I cannot see that there is any chance that Scotland can continue to use the pound in it’s current way – as part of a wider currency union. The yes side have countered that if they aren’t allowed to do so then they will renege on taking a fare share of the national debt. This again is unlikely to happen as it would mean that the new country would start out as a defaulter country with no currency. Both positions are bonkers. I suspect there would be some form of agreement sort that is some form of middle road. Whether it could be sold to a now very distrustful House of Commons is another matter.

The second big decision is defence. This is not the abstract argument over Trident or the absurdity of just saying that Scotland should have 12 Typhoon jets without any real idea who will fly/support such planes. None of these things will matter a jot because there is one decision that has the potential the wreck everything – where will the new class of navel destroyers be built? At the moment they are planned to be built in Glasgow which, currently, is part of the UK. However, if Scotland votes Yes then Glasgow will be a foreign country and the Royal Navy doesn’t build warship in a foreign country. What this demonstrates more than anything else is that in a Cold War situation, which the Navy still is in, new ships are not really about defence but rather about subsidising well paid jobs. To add extra complexity to all this there are an awful lot of marginal seats in and around former navel ship yards in England which would gratefully receive the billions of pounds of investment that would come should they be asked to build the new ships. I cannot see the ships being built in Scotland for two reasons.

Firstly the UK government will have no control over the political landscape into which these ships are being built. I will give you an example – earlier I mentioned about the Greens and their divergent views with the main SNP. They have very clear views about defence spending which is not very positive, especially where nuclear weapons are concerned. Now should they form part of a new Scottish Government in 2016 how will this effect the building of war ships for a foreign power? A foreign power which still keeps its nuclear weapons in Scotland – suddenly the new warships being built on the Clyde could be an extra negotiating tool to get those Nuclear weapons out sooner rather than later. Is this likely? I don’t know but it is just one of the scenarios that make building war ships in a foreign country fraught with problems – just ask the Russians and their new aircraft carriers being build in France.

Secondly, there is an election due in 2015 for the whole of the UK – how could any party resist calls for defence spending to go to deprived former navel dock yards in the UK not a foreign country – Scotland?

The result of all this is that the ship building industry on the River Clyde would finally be killed off with the loss of thousands of jobs. Exactly how this dynamic will feed into the negotiations is impossible to say but I can’t see it being very beneficial and remember there are many solid Labour UK parliamentary constituencies in the Strathclyde region as well as Lothian – all would be directly effected by this closure. Even more complexities to add to an already complex situation

Of course this decision could well be put off until after the 2015 elections but that is just making matters worse as it would increase the instability and distrust in any negotiation. Whatever happens this has the potential the derail any negotiations for months.

So by the time of the 2015 election we could be facing a real breakdown in relations between the UK and Scotland which could well be voiced in the elections – with gains for the SNP at the expense of Labour, thus wrecking any chance of a Labour forming the new government in the truncated 2015 – 2016 parliament. Equally, UKIP will be only too willing to play the English card in their campaigning which may also destroy the Conservative’s chances. In short this will probably lead to a weak coalition government facing a more belligerent SNP – things could go very wrong and both sides will be the losers.

Having reread this I realise that it is very negative but given the heightened emotions that are running around at the moment I don’t believe it is totally out the question. Of course should Alex Salmond win the vote he might turn into some fair minded reasonable person who is willing to compromise. Viewed from south of the border that doesn’t appear to be the Alex Salmond I have come to know – hence the pessimistic view. I just hope and pray I’m wrong – so very wrong about all this.

Simon Marchini
http://www.simonmarchini.co.uk

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Project LV One – Day 139 – Come Again

Woody Allen

Lethargy is a curse I suffer from time to time and can be herald of much worse – I hope it doesn’t this time and I think it won’t.  Which makes me wonder why I made this little doodle of Woody Allen.

 

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Timetable to Independence – the first 3 months

So St Gordon is to come to the rescue on his greying charger. “…Once more unto the breach…” he seems to be saying and he alone is going to save the Union of Scotland and the UK. I’m really not sure who is more patronised by all this more? The Scots or the rest of us. Here we have the least successful PM in living memory standing up, as bold as brass, wrapping himself in the Union flag, and saying trust me I’m Gordo. As with all of Gordon Brown’s great plans in the past his timescale to Home Rule for the Scots is falling apart before he has bothered to sit down. Today we hear rumbling’s from English MP’s about no one has spoken to them about all this and how is all this going to effect their constituents? After all many of these MP’s may be fight the forth coming election, whenever it might be, against a UKIP insurgency who will love to exploit any deal done with Scotland as a bad deal for England. Nice one Gordon.

So, if this whole thing back fires or that Miliband or Cameron make some almighty mess of things today as they tour Scotland like some papal missionary trying to convert the heathens to the joys of unionism and the Scots vote Yes – then what? What is the timetable after that? I have blogged about the impossibility of the supposed 18 months to independence and I still believe that. However, no matter what is the likely date there are certain things that are likely to happen over the next 6 to 9 months. This is my first stab at trying to imagine what the first 3 months might be.

Within a week of the vote there will be a purge of the Government of all Scottish ministers. This won’t be too problematic for the Conservatives but it will hit the Lib Dems much harder. No matter all the Scottish ministers will be gone. The same things will happen on the Labour side which will cause greater problems but problems that they can get around.

It is also likely that in that week there may well be a run on the pound as speculators test the boundaries of how much the currency will fall. However, this probably will be a short term thing and the currency markets will settle down after the first flush of activity. However, we might see that interest rates will have to be raised to defend the pound which should see how strong the recovery really is. Shortly after this the great Scottish banks will admit the invertible and move their HQ’s to London. This will mean that much of their debt will also move from Scotland which probably wouldn’t harm things either – although expect some stamping of feet north of the border. There is also the first real test of the real temperature when the Ryder Cup is played at Gleneagles between the USA and EU golf players. If this turns into a Scotland the brave show then this might have much broader implications than just the golf. I hope it doesn’t but in the heightened atmosphere of the post referendum vote who knows. A lot depends on the statesmanship of Alex Salmond.

By the end of September all of the contingency plans that currently do not exist in Whitehall will start to appear. They may well be thread bare but will be the starting point for the negotiations to come. They will also be the starting point to measure of the feeling of the people who live in UK – just how hurt do they feel about the whole thing and who do they blame. This is when David Cameron will start to get into all sorts of trouble – especially from his right wing. If he falls then there is a good chance that his Government will fall then this will lead to early elections – which possibly won’t be such a bad thing given the whole mess he has lead the country to. The election will have one theme – just how much do you give the Scots and could become very ugly indeed.

By October senior civil servants from the UK and Scotland will have held meetings to start to flesh out the agenda for the negotiations. I guess the first things to sort out is just what points there are not contentious. This may well be a very small list but it is a start. For me I guess the one thing that they all can agree on is that Scotland will be part of NATO. They might also agree that the Royal Regiment of Scotland should form the core of the new land forces for Scotland. Whatever the result of the these contacts are (this may already have taken place and agreed in principle) they will have to report back to the political master who have to make the final decision – which of course might be a problem if Cameron has fallen and an early election is called. One of the more thorny problems to be identify in this period would be who actually negotiates for Scotland on the International stage? Would the Scots accept the good offices of the Foreign Office who, after all, have all the contacts with the EU, UN, World Bank, NATO et al. It would seem sensible but don’t expect such things to be plain sailing.

By November then there is the little case of a Scotland v England football match taking place in Glasgow at Celtic Park. This is fraught at the best of times but if feelings are running high between the two countries then it might be worth while cancelling the match. It should also be remembered Celtic is identified as the Irish Nationalist team which might just cause extra tension. Also by this time the contradictions on the Scottish side will start appear. The SNP is a rainbow coalition of groups who are held together by the hope of independence and so these disparate voices will want to be heard in any negotiations. On top of this you have all these soon to be out of work Westminster based Scottish politicians who will want to try and make a new career north of the border who may well want have their say on the shape of a new Scotland – don’t discount St Gordon making a big play for the leadership of the Scottish labour party. Whatever happens the smug smile of Alex Salmond might not look so smug by the end of November as he faces his own political difficulties. British participation in any American lead attack on ISIS will cease as their is unlikely to be any support in Parliament for it. This is also the case for any negotiations with the EU over the role of Britain as their won’t be a Britain in the less than 18 months. In short, for the first time in an awful long time the British guns will be silent and we will have no voice in the world – silence is golden.

By December the negotiating lines will start to be established and hopefully by Christmas there will be peace on the northern front as sane council will have prevailed because the New Year is going to one hell of a ride. Of course none of this takes into account “..events dear boy events..” or perhaps a much better quote would be the “…unknowable unknowables…” Here are just a taste, a nuclear accident in the Scottish nuclear power station, a major fire at Grangemouth refinery, some form of major sectarian problems in Northern Ireland as a result of the Scottish vote. None of these are likely but should they happen – then who knows how it will effect things.

I really do hope the Scots know what they are really voting for – not the brigadoon of Alex Salmond’s imagination but a hard, chilling slog to a new, perhaps not better, country who will always be influenced by the comparatively huge country to the south. It ain’t going to be easy to forge this new Scotland but should they vote Yes then this is the road they are setting out on. I hope and prey that sane voices on both sides prevail – I’m not sure they will.

Simon Marchini
www.simonmarchini.co.uk

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