"As I have said before if SNP and other separatists were honest, set up a republic and stipulated a high taxation economy like Denmark then I would vote for that. However, this is not an option."
The last sentence is not strictly true.
I'm sure the Greens and various socialist factions would like that. The Labour Party (in Scotland) ought to want some of that and say so - but we are not there and don't look likely to be.
I think it's safe to say that "However, this is not an option" IS true within the UK.
There is no guarantee that after a Yes vote the SNP will win the next Holyrood election. I would like to see more 'other' parties - as happened in the first Scottish Parliament election.
Logically the Labour Party should be the largest party after the next Holyrood election on the basis that last time 'Labour voters' 'lent' their votes to the SNP as the party most likely to get more devolution which is (apparently) 'what the Scottish people want'.
Labour should do well if there is No vote too.
I suspect that it won't for many/various reasons.
It's possible that after the referendum 'Labour heavyweights' (mostly existing MPs) could decide that their future was Holyrood.
This might work - or backfire spectacularly.
"however, posters on this forum said they did not think there is anti English sentiment."
This forum is spectacularly unrepresentative - as is Edinburgh in relation to the rest of Scotland (so are most politicians... Though it's probably better when they are trying to show leadership, rather than be representative'!).
"I found this surprising as I used to come across it all the time when I lived West of the Pecos. if you hate the f'ing English clap your hands. Settler Watch, Scottish Republican Army etc. Maybe this is all a thing of the past."
It's probably not entirely "past".
I don't want this to sound unduly crass, but I genuinely wonder if the recent troubles at Rangers have subdued things at all(?)