No, actually in many respects independence is quite appealing. In the same sense that something new and different has attractions that the status quo can't match. And as I've said before, in terms of my work (and my responsibility for a business that works mainly for the public sector) the expansion of the government would be good news. Apart from an interim period stabilising a new currency and proving effective management through a programme of public expenditure cuts, I can't really see the downside.
But I do find the romanticism associated with many of the Yes arguments very misleading because they neglect what the real world is, the limited scope that any government will have and the limited ambition that most of the politicians with any real prospect of gaining power have to make changes. So I quarrel with them.
I think we've got nothing to lose by independence but I'm probably towards the pessimistic end of thinking that there's anything substantial to be gained. It's a change of management. And not much of a change of management given how much of Scotland is already devolved. I can't think of many areas of life where it will be tangible that Scotland is independent of the rest of the UK.
I think it's actually quite realistic to look at it in terms of what the SNP would do. They, in the guise of the Scottish Government, are the only serious contenders to govern an independent Scotland who have laid out a prospectus.
After Independence, since most people don't even know who Lamont, Rennie etc are, they would, I think, almost certainly win the election. Probably a majority. Have you seen how popular they are? Much more popular than independence. So Salmond would remain the leader and John Swinney would keep control of finance. And the White Paper has to become their manifesto. Realistically, what else is there to consider? The SSP? The Greens?