The Scotsman

Nationalis­ts’ reversion to type tells all

- Phillips Avenue Largs Rocheid Park Edinburgh Carslogie Road Cupar, Fife Ashfield Road Aberdeen Craigmyle Park Clovenford­s, Galashiels Craiglea Drive Edinburgh New Cut Rigg Edinburgh

LesLey Riddoch (Perspectiv­e, 21 October) presents a litany of problems that show the UK to be, in her opinion, uniquely failing. From this, and the assertion that it couldn’t happen here, Ms Riddoch deduces that scots have a set of exclusivel­y “scottish values” that set us apart from, and somehow above, the rest of the UK.

she then undermines her case somewhat by saying that she found the people on a north of england radio audience more in tune with “scottish values” than the population of London and the south-east.

I’m not sure what we are supposed to take from this. It is at least confused and at worst borderline racist. Does it not occur to Lesley Riddoch that the people of the north of england resemble scots because there is, on any sensible judgment, no real difference between them?

And that the “scottish values” that she extols are commonly found, even in those “nasty” southerner­s?

On any rational evaluation, the supposedly superior values which Lesley Riddoch allocates solely to scots are standard human values, common to the english, the Welsh, the Irish and indeed the scots. They are, in fact, the universal values to be found in decent people of all nations and population­s.

Finding fault in your neighbour in order to feel superior in yourself is not an endearing characteri­stic in individual­s or nations and indeed the Nationalis­ts have been successful in recently burying deep this aspect of their appeal to the baser political instincts.

That they should, at this stage in the referendum campaign, feel it necessary to return to the politics of grievance and difference is a sure sign that their campaign is failing.

If the price of their success is to build difference and resentment between and among the peoples on our small island, then those with real human values – values which unite rather than divide – will welcome that failure.

alex GallaGheR MAY I draw the attention of your readers to the fact that scotland is independen­t in every way in the Union, and that independen­ce is exercised fully within the British parliament.

what the sNP is asking for is not independen­ce in the proper meaning of the word but separation.

Its use of the term westminste­r is a deceit to give the image that it is England’s parliament when in reality it is Britain’s parliament.

England does not have a separate parliament, unlike scotland which has the pleasure of two parliament­s. remember the adage: divided we fall. And fall scotland will if salmond has his way.

The term “independen­ce”, in simplicity, is a false manna provided by the good lord Alex to feed the ego of the deluded.

It is separation that should be on the table for discussion, not independen­ce. In all truth, all the sNP is doing is giving scotland a sair belly. ed above are eliminated, will the smaller nations of the UK ever begin to feel that they are being treated fairly as equal partners within the UK.

Ian GaRDen

IMlach sheaReR IT wAs gratifying to learn from the sNP conference just how many goodies are in store for us. Decreases rather than increases in our energy charges, early retirement without tears, decreasing taxes, to name but a few.

But a few practical details would have been welcome. For ONe can only feel sad for the myopic, if not blinkered, outlook revealed by the writings of stan Grodynski (Letters, 21 October) and Lesley Riddoch, who must, collective­ly, live in a small, freshwater mussel shell somewhere beneath the impenetrab­le murk of the River Tay, judging by their comments.

I am not quite sure why I feature in Mr Grodynski’s latest rant. I dare say that there is some quaint logic to it, though quite where the British empire comes into it, I confess I am unsure.

This is 2013. Mr Grodynski complains about infrastruc­ture projects down south. He need not worry, because we have our own. Consider the Commonweal­th Games soon to be held in Glasgow; perhaps Mr Grodynski can tell us how much benefit from that will be flowing south – not to mention from the new Forth Crossing.

Of course, the sNP has promised it will upgrade the A9… eventually, but not yet.

What with new nuclear power stations being ordered (but not in scotland, thanks example, how frequently will the manna be delivered and where will we collect the milk and honey?

eRIc DavIDson wHIlE london (+8.9 per cent) and the rest of the UK, even wales and Northern Ireland, may be anxious about rapid property price rises (+1.3 per cent to + 5.0 per cent) and another “housing bubble”, the current economic uncertaint­y and blight being caused by even the most remote risk of a Yes vote in september 2014 means that scotland can relax – we are already unique, with a fall in house values (-0.7 per cent) over the same period.

Unfortunat­ely, the vague, uncosted, and wishful “on-thehoof” fiscal and social policies of the sNP only guarantee that such a decline in home valuations and sales will accelerate in the months ahead.

I dread to think what an actual Yes decision would do to house prices, and every other economic indicator, in the sNP’s “cloudcucko­o-land” in the years ahead. It may be time to join the swallows and fly south before the nationalis­t winter arrives “North of the wall”.

(DR) MIchael WIlson How shocking is the news that Tesco wastes food? Developed countries such as our own are the gold medallists at wasting and to a certain Mr Alex salmond) and tax incentives from the Chancellor to boost investment and employment in the North sea (where the oil that Grangemout­h used to refine comes from), one could almost overlook the economic resurgence that is pushing the UK ahead of one or two of the BRICs, not that Ms Riddoch seems to notice.

One could be forgiven for thinking Ms Riddoch could have focused her attentions more fruitfully on the Us over the past week or two, if she wants to pretend anywhere is “broken beyond repair”.

However, I rather think that windmills being built without heed of environmen­tal consequenc­e or legal judgment in our wild places; ineffectua­l attempts to prevent the closing of scotland’s only oil refinery; attempts to conceal a lack of legal advice on scotland’s position vis-a-vis the eU, while pretending that there was such advice; telling scottish voters that a separate scotland could afford an oil fund while concealing their own advisors’ advice stating the precise opposite show that, if anything is “broken beyond repair”, it is the sNP’s failed, blinkered vision.

anDReW hn GRay ALL the old Nationalis­t chestnuts and clichés are dredged up and on display in stan Grodynski’s letter.

Despite his party’s supposed move to presenting a more positive argument, Mr Grodynski reverts to the stereotypi­cal sNP case – an evil UK government spending all its time and energy plotting to do down scotland and skin the scots of their taxes.

Rampant paranoia comes to the fore once more. No reasoned argument will convince people holding these views and we are fortunate that his barely concealed anti-english prejudice, for that in essence is what it is, is held only by a vociferous minority.

The innate good sense of the great majority of scots is reflected in the referendum opinion polls.

alexanDeR McKay

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