Friday, 12 September 2014
Senior SNP figure threatens BP with nationalisation and cutting banks down to size for being 'in cahoots with rich English Tories' Daily Mail, The SNP show their true colours
Former SNP deputy leader Jim Sillars lashes
out at pro-Union businesses
He asked: 'Who do these companies think we
are? They will find out'
BT Group chair Sir Mike Rake says 'Yes' would
'inevitably' cause a slowdown
CBI boss claims this could 'easily' last for
a decade because of uncertainty
Comes after IMF warned separation could
result in financial market turmoil
Five Scottish based banks this week warned
they would move to England
Richard Branson is the latest business figure
to oppose independence
Asda, Waitrose, B&Q and Screwfix say
prices would rise after independence
Marks & Spencer set to join firms warning
against 'Yes' vote next week
Comes as poll shows 'No' campaign four points
ahead with six days to go
Separate
poll released today put the 'Yes' campaign just two points behind
The former deputy leader of the Scottish nationalists has threatened a 'day of reckoning' for businesses that have spoken out against independence.
The former deputy leader of the Scottish nationalists has threatened a 'day of reckoning' for businesses that have spoken out against independence.
SNP grandee Jim Sillars lashed out
after a host of banks, finance firms, supermarkets and retail giants warned
about the dangers of separation.
Mr Sillars said oil giant BP would be
nationalised 'in part or in whole' while bankers and big business chiefs would
be punished for 'being in cahoots' with the Tories.
The remarks are likely to increase
business anxiety over independence just six days before next week's
referendum.
The 'Yes' to independence campaign's economic case for independence was further damaged after one of Britain's most influential industrialists Sir Mike Rake warned that Scotland’s economy could be damaged for a decade if it votes for independence.
But Mr Sillars vowed to punish big
business for siding with the 'No' campaign against independence.
He said: ‘This referendum is about
power, and when we get a Yes majority, we will use that power for a day of
reckoning with BP and the banks.
Going Through Spiritual Confusion, Oswald Chambers, My Uttermost for His Highest
Jesus
answered and said, ’You do not know what you ask’ —
There
are times in your spiritual life when there is confusion, and the way out of it
is not simply to say that you should not be confused. It is not a matter of
right and wrong, but a matter of God taking you through a way that you
temporarily do not understand. And it is only by going through the spiritual
confusion that you will come to the understanding of what God wants for you.
The Shrouding of His Friendship (see Luke 11:5-8).
Jesus gave the illustration here of a man who appears not to care for his
friend. He was saying, in effect, that is how the heavenly Father will appear
to you at times. You will think that He is an unkind friend, but remember? He
is not. The time will come when everything will be explained. There seems to be
a cloud on the friendship of the heart, and often even love itself has to wait
in pain and tears for the blessing of fuller fellowship and oneness. When God
appears to be completely shrouded, will you hang on with confidence in Him?
Luke
11:1-13New International Version - UK (NIVUK)Jesus’ teaching on prayer
11 One day Jesus was praying in a certain place. When he finished, one of his disciples said to him, ‘Lord, teach us to pray, just as John taught his disciples.’
2 He said to them, ‘When you pray, say:
‘“Father,[a] hallowed be your name, your kingdom come.[b] 3 Give us each day our daily bread.4 Forgive us our sins, for we also forgive everyone who sins against us.[c]And lead us not into temptation.”’[d]
5 Then Jesus said to them, ‘Suppose you have a friend, and you go to him at midnight and say, “Friend, lend me three loaves of bread; 6 a friend of mine on a journey has come to me, and I have no food to offer him.” 7 And suppose the one inside answers, “Don’t bother me. The door is already locked, and my children and I are in bed. I can’t get up and give you anything.” 8 I tell you, even though he will not get up and give you the bread because of friendship, yet because of your shameless audacity[e] he will surely get up and give you as much as you need.
9 ‘So I say to you: ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. 10 For everyone who asks receives; the one who seeks finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.
11
‘Which of you fathers, if your son asks for[f] a fish, will give him a snake
instead? 12 Or if he asks for an egg, will give him a scorpion? 13 If you then,
though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much
more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!’
Peevish and bristling, Salmond exploded at man from the Beeb. Daily Mail
Scotland do you really want this arrogant, little man to lead you ?
This was meant to be the day Alex
Salmond showed off his statesmanlike qualities to the world.
But instead of meeting the founding
father of a brave new nation, the world’s media came to his grandly-named
‘international press conference’ to find a peevish man bristling with
indignation over the parochial details of a very inconvenient truth.
For the grandest bank in Scotland had
just announced it would pack up the boardroom and move its HQ to London if
Scots vote for independence next week.
The RBS has been domiciled in Edinburgh since the days of George II. It could hardly be worse if Scottish Widows became Surrey Widows or Nessie suddenly moved ponds to Windermere.
Not so, according to Mr Salmond. The
loss of the RBS would be a footling matter. The real scandal was that the news
had been leaked to the BBC.
And they could only have got it from
one source: ‘scaremongering’ officials at the Treasury. The fact that
market-sensitive information had ended up in the hands of the media, he said,
almost quivering with displeasure, was a matter of ‘extraordinary gravity, as
serious a matter as you can possibly get’.
As journalists argued that RBS’s vote
of no confidence in its motherland was the bigger deal, Mr Salmond was having
none of it, particularly when questioned by BBC political editor Nick Robinson.
Arguing that it involved little more than
the relocation of a ‘brass plaque’, Mr Salmond demanded that the BBC be dragged
before an official investigation and made to blab.
‘Scotland is on the cusp of making
history,’ Mr Salmond went on. ‘The eyes of the world are upon us. And what the
world is seeing is an energised, articulate and peaceful debate.’ The ears of
the world only had to wait five seconds longer before they heard the day’s
first attack on ‘the blatant bullying and intimidation of Westminster
government’.
Pretty much any irksome statistic could
be attributed to ‘scaremongering’, ‘bullying’, public schoolboy politics’ and
so on from That Lot.
Until very recently, international
interest in this debate had not extended much beyond the provincial press in
countries with an ongoing separatist squabble – principally Spain and Quebec.
Yesterday, there were earnest questions
about future Scottish relations with Russia, Brazil and India. Perhaps the trickiest came from a German
television presenter. She asked Mr Salmond to explain in what ways the English
had a different identity from the Scots ‘because our audience don’t see it’.
‘This campaign of ours does not depend on identity,’ he replied.
Out in the streets right now, it seems
to depend on little else.
Thursday, 11 September 2014
Rattled Salmond launches rant at the BBC after it revealed Royal Bank of SCOTLAND will quit country after 'Yes' vote. Daily Mail
First Minister lashes out at broadcaster to
deflect row over threat by banks
RBS one of four major banks to turn its back
on independent Scotland
John Lewis, Waitrose and Asda say prices will
rise if there is a Yes victory
SNP leader was accused of lying about oil
reserves by industry members
He calls for official inquiry into Treasury
source who leaked RBS story
Insurance giant Standard Life said it would
move south days after Yes vote
Alex Salmond today launched an
extraordinary rant at the BBC after the broadcaster reported how even the Royal
Bank of Scotland planned to relocate to England in the event of independence.
In a bizarre press conference he
launched a series of petulant attacks on the BBC, Westminster leaders and the
Australian prime minister.
And he revealed he has called for an
official inquiry into the Treasury's 'deliberate attempt to cause uncertainty
in the financial markets' by leaking details of RBS's fears about the break up
of the Union.
The First Minister presided over an astonishing press conference for the world's press corps in which he was tetchy, rattled and – according to several observers – 'losing the plot'.
Another observer suggested this was Mr
Salmond's 'Sheffield rally', a reference to Neil Kinnock's ill-fated cry of
'We're alright!' before he went on to lose the 1992 General Election.
At one point there was an ugly clash
between the SNP leader and BBC political editor Nick Robinson over the fate of
Scotland's banks if there is a Yes vote in next week's referendum.
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