by Rommie » Wed Sep 17, 2014 10:28 am
Well kids, the big vote on whether we'll have a new country in the world is tomorrow!
It was kinda interesting being in the UK last week for work and hearing all the stories on both sides (personally I think it's not going to get through this time, but will next time). A few notes-
- Apparently 16 year olds are allowed to vote in this referendum. I am slightly amazed by that because I really can't imagine the majority of 16 year olds having more of an opinion than just voting the way their friends or parents are voting.
- It really shouldn't be this close, but Cameron royally fucked up taking the whole thing seriously. I find his pleading "don't rip our family apart!" kinda funny honestly, as by that rhetoric Ireland never should've become its own country a century ago.
- I have no serious horse in the race, but am rather fascinated by the whole thing because of the realization that you can't just [i]invade[/i] Scotland anymore.
- That said, my Scottish friend's opinion on the whole thing is "my head says no, but my heart says yes," and push comes to shove he's voting yes. I found this rather interesting considering how much people worry about the economics here, and he's surely well aware of them.
- Finally and perhaps bigger implications for all of Europe, I think the biggest voice in hoping this vote doesn't go through is Spain because they are so worried about Catalonia leaving that they won't even let them hold a referrendum. But then two million people marched in the streets of Barcelona last week for Catalan independence (which equals over a quarter of Catalonia's population!), so regardless of which way it goes I think that independence movement has serious second wind. Will also be interesting if Scotland goes independent as you can't let them in with Spain vetoing it due to European bylaws- I suspect they'd be let in, but with some sort of compromise.
Anyway, not sure how much this gets press in other countries, but it's certainly been the talk around here lately!
Yes, I have a life. It's quite different from yours.