![good post :goodpost:](./images/smilies/goodpost.gif)
Happytorq, your response is idiotic.The Scottish Independence Referendum happened because the Scottish National Party, who campaign for Scotland to be independent, won a majority at the last Scottish Parliament election.
The referendum question was: “Should Scotland be an independent country?†and voters were asked to choose ‘yes’ or ‘no’.
Simple as that.
55.3% voted ‘No’ and 44.7% voted ‘Yes’.
And so Scotland remains part of the UK.
Surely that’s clear enough. EU membership is a completely different issue. If some people confused and conflated the two issues, or were so misled by the SNP, that's their problem. They cannot complain and insist upon another referendum simply because they made an error.
Scotland and the other home nations are one united country, much as the nationalists may wish otherwise. And that united country have just decided, by a small but clear majority, to leave the EU. That's democracy.
Such momentous questions should be decided once in a generation. Yet the nationalists seem to want vote after vote, until they get the result they want. And then, presumably, no more votes.
And the mystery remains: why do they want independence from a free and democratic UK, only to give their independence away to an anti-democratic EU? If the Scottish people, at some point in the future, are so misguided by the nationalists that they decide to do this, how would they deal with the consequences? The EU is on the verge of breaking up, with all its economic, social, and political problems. Having rejected the UK, will they then ask the UK to bail them out. I suppose we would..
But what on earth is this isolation you mention? Far from being isolated, an independent UK will be free to engage with the rest of the world in addition to co-operation with our European friends, but without the yoke of the EU political union.