If we must speak Gaelic, Amaideas!
All the media hype to the contrary notwithstanding, the referendum on independence for Scotland was very close to a farce. Ironic, too, that such political balderdash should have taken place in the historic home of a half dozen of the worlds most noted political thinkers.
That it was media-driven was made even more apparent in the closing hours after the victory of commonsense took over. CNN, unfortunately that worldwide purveyor of stylish rubbish, set the tone. Amanpour, who never met a cliché she couldnt misappropriate, led the pack in the little inquest, with talk of the great democratic process. That, of course, despite the fact that not a single of the extremely difficult problems which would surface with independence from currency to defense had been debated in any real sense. Then there was a spokesman for facebook who nattered on for several minutes on how important the social media had been to the process without presenting one solitary fact. And bringing up the rear was a bimbo from a leftwing American thiMk-tank the Scots didnt have enough muddlers on their own, apparently who supposedly advised the Scottish demagogic leader, Alex Salmond, on economic issues. But, as with every major concern in the whole proposed process of leaving the United Kingdom, neither she nor he an economist and onetime banker gave a clue as to how a new impoverished mini-state would organize its finances or its currency.
From its origins in 2012 when U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron acquiesced to the referendum, blithely assuming there was no question of the overwhelming strength of unionist support, the referendum was treated cavalierly. Cameron had rejected, by the way, Salmonds offer to put a third option on the ballot, the very one which Cameron and other U.K. leaders of all the major parties have now promised the Scots, that is, an expanded self-government. So much for the political perspicacity of the British Conservative Party leadership which has little if any following among the Scots. [No one even mentions that the name Cameron, despite the PMs very posh background, is of Scottish origin, widespread throughout the Anglo-Saxon world and typical of the many indivisible links that bind all the British isles peoples.]