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    This is the Guardian's guide to Scottish independence.
    For the non-Brits.
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    It’s a long and complex story but let's
    begin by answering the most fundamental question.
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    Where is Scotland anyway?
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    The country of Scotland is right here, at
    the top of the island of Great Britain, the
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    crazy hat worn by the bearded troll who appears
    to be looking west, toward Ireland and laughing.
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    On Thursday the 18th of September, the people
    of Scotland will vote to decide whether or
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    not it will become a country in its own right.
    But wait, I hear you ask. Didn’t you just
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    call Scotland a country? Isn’t Scotland
    already a country?
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    The definitive answer to that question is:
    sort of.
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    Technically Scotland is a country within a
    country known as the United Kingdom. Scotland
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    may have its own church, its own legal system,
    its own professional soccer league and its
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    own dietary idiosyncrasies, but it’s still
    part of the UK, which also includes the countries
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    of England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Scottish
    people have British passports.
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    Scotland did used to be a separate country,
    with its own king, James VI. Then in 1603
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    Queen Elizabeth - not that one, this one - died
    without leaving an heir, and the nearest relative
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    they could find turned out to be her cousin
    James. He became James I of England, while
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    still keeping his job as James VI of Scotland.
    If you think that’s confusing, you ain’t
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    heard nothing yet.
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    England and Scotland maintained a monarch-sharing
    arrangement for over a century before the
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    Acts of Union in 1707 made the two nations
    a single entity, with one parliament, located
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    in London. Scotland went along with this largely
    because it was almost bankrupt, thanks to
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    something called the Darien Disaster, which
    happened way over here and is, frankly, another
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    story for another time.
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    Let’s have a stirring musical interludel
    before we skip ahead, Way ahead.
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    Duh, duh, duh, duh, duh, duh (etc)
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    In the 1970s speculation about devolution,
    the notion of returning a measure of power
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    to the Scottish government gave rise to what
    used to be known as the West Lothian question.
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    For most people in the UK today the real West
    Lothian question is: ‘What is the West Lothian
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    question?’
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    The West Lothian question named after the
    Scottish constituency of the MP who first
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    asked it. To paraphrase, he basically posited
    a world where Scotland had its own regional
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    parliament, but also continued to send representatives
    to the British parliament in London. How could
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    it be, he asked, that Scottish MPs could vote
    on laws that affected only England, and yet
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    had no vote on matters that affected Scotland?
    That would be totally crazy! You weren’t
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    really meant to answer the West Lothian question;
    it was just there to demonstrate that a Scottish
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    parliament couldn’t logically exist, and
    that if you tried to set one up the universe
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    would disappear, or something.
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    But then in 1998, after a referendum on devolution,
    they did set up a Scottish Parliament, with
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    its very own brand new building. I know, but
    it’s meant to be really nice on the inside.
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    Devolution is not the same as being a separate
    country. The British parliament merely devolved
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    certain powers to Scotland, rather than transferring
    them, and it reserved to the right to overturn
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    any law made in the Scottish legislature.
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    In 2011 the Scottish National Party - a party
    that campaigned on a pledge to hold an independence
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    referendum - won a landslide in the Scottish
    parliament. The SNP leader - this man, Alex
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    Salmond (you don’t pronounce the L, like
    with the fish) - became Scotland’s First
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    Minister, and promised a referendum within
    the election cycle. In 2012 British Prime
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    Minister David Cameron finally agreed to a
    legally-binding referendum, saying: “This
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    United Kingdom can never hold a country within
    it without its consent.” What he meant was:
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    “I’m allowing this because it’s certain
    to fail”. Polls consistently showed that
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    only a minority of Scots would vote for actual
    independence.
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    A Yes Campaign was set up, and also a No campaign,
    which isn’t called the No Campaign, because
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    that would sound a bit negative. Instead it’s
    called Better Together, which is arguably
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    worse.
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    Those is Yes camp include Alex Salmond and
    the SNP, and also the Scottish Green Party,
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    the Scottish Socialist Party, possibly Rupert
    Murdoch, Sir Sean Connery and both of the
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    Proclaimers.
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    The No camp includes all three main political
    parties, Harry Potter author JK Rowling, Susan
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    Boyle, one of the Dr Whos, and a majority
    of the people in the rest of the UK, who don’t
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    get a vote.
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    Those conspicuously offering no opinion include
    Andy Murray, Billy Connelly and the Queen.
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    Recently the no camp's comfortable lead has
    eroded and a lot of questions that nobody
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    had ever answered satisfactorily have suddenly
    become interesting to people.
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    Questions like: if it were independent, what
    would Scotland use for money? What about Scottish
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    passports? Would Scotland be able to join
    the EU? Or NATO? And what will they call the
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    rest of the UK if Scotland leaves? At the
    moment they’re are literally calling it
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    “the rest of the UK” or rUK for short,
    which gives you an idea how much thought has
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    gone into the whole business.
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    The real question is: will Scotland be better
    off as an independent country, or would it
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    be an economic disaster. And the real answer
    is nobody knows... because it’s the future.
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Sandbox
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You can use this Sandbox to try out things with the Amara tool.

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Video Language:
English
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Duration:
01:46:39
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox
koma edited English subtitles for Sandbox
koma edited English subtitles for Sandbox
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox
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  • Revision 1 = provided subtitles for Lecture 1.2 of Prof. Scott Plous' Social Psychology course

  • Revision 1 = provided subtitles for Lecture 1.2 of Prof. Scott Plous' Social Psychology course

  • Revision 1 = provided subtitles for Lecture 1.2 of Prof. Scott Plous' Social Psychology course

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