If Scotland says Naw, when would they get their next chance at independence? Would it be another 35 years?
It will be never.
The Scotch public will have spoken again.
If Scotland says Naw, when would they get their next chance at independence? Would it be another 35 years?
It will be never.
The Scotch public will have spoken again.
Think it will be brought up every 10 years or so...If Scotland says Naw, when would they get their next chance at independence? Would it be another 35 years?
I reckon they should go for it![]()
very good Mick!very good Mick!
1/8 No and 9/2 yes Jip
The bookies are rarely wrong when the odds are so heavily in one side's favour. So why so much blind optimism from the Yes lot (ST, Aldo, Eric Cartman etc) on here?
A lot of it's to do with the accuracy of the polls I think. He'll correct me if i'm wrong but I'm sure ST said that at the last election the polls predicted a labour landslide and the SNP ended up getting full control. I don't know what the markets were saying then but it would be logical to assume labour would have been long odds on. They've got it spectacularly wrong down here as well of course - I think John major had pretty much moved out of Downing Street in 1992 as they said labour would cruise it! That being the case there is definitely grounds for optimism from the yes camp.
I don't pay much heed to Polls, especially when most people I know are undecided. I feel the undecideds may be leaning towards a Yes vote so it will be a lot tighter than the polls are suggesting.
I certainly gert that impression Dev.
I don't pay much heed to Polls, especially when most people I know are undecided. I feel the undecideds may be leaning towards a Yes vote so it will be a lot tighter than the polls are suggesting.
For something that is 50-50 in the polls 9/2 for a yes is a great bet.
A lot of it's to do with the accuracy of the polls I think. He'll correct me if i'm wrong but I'm sure ST said that at the last election the polls predicted a labour landslide and the SNP ended up getting full control. I don't know what the markets were saying then but it would be logical to assume labour would have been long odds on. They've got it spectacularly wrong down here as well of course - I think John major had pretty much moved out of Downing Street in 1992 as they said labour would cruise it! That being the case there is definitely grounds for optimism from the yes camp.
Fair enough, there may have been isolated incidents in the past when they got it badly wrong. But as the old saying goes, you don't get many poor book-keepers.
Why are the odds so strongly against a Yes vote when the polls are so close?
Why are the odds so strongly against a Yes vote when the polls are so close?