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Author Topic: The rise of the Yes vote  (Read 8675 times)

guest19

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Re: The rise of the Yes vote
« Reply #90 on: September 06, 2020, 06:42:52 pm »
I've never seen fall outs at Scotland games pre match during or after .

We are all there to support the team and have a good time .
I've never even heard anyone bringing up independence during the games how the hell would anyone fall out we someone for voting no if they don't know you .
As regards families of course there's political arguments they just didn't start with an independence vote .

Families have come to blows because my brother or aunty or uncle is a Torie that's politics way before 2014.

I know I lived through it I've seen a huge cowboy fight in the lord Byron in Northfield in the 70s police cars hospital treatment it was mental was just before a London government election .

Tell me one incident of a punch up during an independence march .

The attendances (actually attendances, not the numbers they claim) for these marches are pitiful.

Where do you get your figures from ?

My son did do a count in the Edinburgh one last year working out an average taking in the time of the march from start to finish .

'A Force For Good' - They go through the marches on video and count sections, multiplying depending on the time it takes it pass.

Pretty sure they are generous too with the counting too e.g. if a Palestine, Catalan, Ireland flag or other type of banner obscures the sight of a section, they'll count the maximum amount that could be obscured.