Wednesday, 17 September 2014
Snp's Bully Boy Tactics
The SNP are the Seriously Nasty Party http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2758514/The-Seriously-Nasty-Party-With-one-day-damning-evidence-bullying-intimidation-voters-Scots-nationalists-just-ask-Miliband.html @MailOnline
4 Ways to Test if God is Calling You
4 Ways to Test if God is Calling You

Have you ever wondered if God called you to something more?
John 1:6 "There was a man sent from God whose name was John."
This simple verse tells us a lot – it tells us that the man we know as John the Baptist somehow stood out. It was obvious to others that he was sent by God. In retrospect, knowing the full story, we can see how he paved the way for the coming Christ.
However, if John appeared on the scene today, I'm pretty sure we'd all think he was whackadoo. After all, he was a loner, speaking against the establishment, telling everyone to repent.
Sometimes the scariest thing about following God is a fear that we, too, might look like a whackadoo.
How do you know if God is calling you?
1. It makes sense in your life. Even before he was born, John was testifying to Jesus. Jesus' brothers and mother thought he'd gone 'round the bend at one point, but the scripture doesn't show us that about John. It made sense for John to speak out as he did. Even for those of us who are called to something radically different than we've done before, God uses the basic makeup of the person He created. You were born with innate strengths and talents. What God calls you to will be in line with who He created you to be.
Sterling could be plunged into the abyss, and Scotland would face unprecedented austerity if country votes 'Yes', warns top banker. Daily Mail
Alex Salmond said Scotland will be entitled to use the pound if independent
Westminster claims Scotland will have to seek
an alternative currency
Salmond has threatened to walk away from
Scot's share of the national debt
Alex
Salmond's Plan B would see every British taxpayer paying £5,900 extra
Scotland risks unprecedented austerity and the pound could ‘plunge into the abyss’ if the referendum results in a Yes vote, economic experts have warned.
Scotland risks unprecedented austerity and the pound could ‘plunge into the abyss’ if the referendum results in a Yes vote, economic experts have warned.
The National Institute of Economic and
Social Research expressed dismay at Alex Salmond’s ‘Plan B’ if an independent
Scotland is barred from using the pound.
The think-tank said the SNP leader’s
back-up plan – adopting the pound informally and reneging on Scotland’s share
of Britain’s borrowings – was ‘opportunistic’ and would saddle every taxpayer
in the rest of the UK with an extra £5,900 of debt.
It warned that defaulting on its debts would make Scotland an economic pariah, because it would be seen as too untrustworthy to borrow on the international money markets.
This would lead to an
‘unprecedented degree of austerity and the eventual collapse in the currency
regime’, it predicted.
Danny Alexander, the chief secretary to
the Treasury, said this scenario would see Scottish bonds – loans from international
investors – downgraded to ‘junk’ status. This happens when it makes no sense
for investors to lend money to a country because the risk of not getting it
back is too high.
Row breaks out over allegations that Salmond 'tried to gag' leading Scots academic who questioned independence . Daily Mail
First Minister 'put pressure' on St Andrews principal Louise Richardson
Source said he spent ten minutes trying to
'put words in her mouth'
She
then rejected the 'suggested statement', according to Daily Telegraph
A spectacular row broke out last night over Alex Salmond’s alleged attempts to silence a leading Scottish academic who questioned independence.
A spectacular row broke out last night over Alex Salmond’s alleged attempts to silence a leading Scottish academic who questioned independence.
The first minister tried to force
Louise Richardson, Principal of St Andrews University, to tone down warnings
about the adverse impact of a Yes vote.
A source said he spent ten minutes
attempting to ‘put words in her mouth’
Leaked emails revealed how the SNP leader’s special adviser, Geoff Aberdein, urged Professor Richardson to attack the Westminster government over funding for higher education, the Daily Telegraph said.
He reportedly emailed her press
secretary with a suggested statement, reading: ‘The Scottish Government has
risen to the challenge on fees in stark contrast to the government south of the
border and I’m sure they can rise to the challenge on research funding as well.’
But in a reply, Professor Richardson
wrote: ‘I’m sorry but I’m afraid I cannot agree to this statement.’
It is also claimed the First Minister
called Professor Richardson, the first female principal of the 600-year-old
institution, and told her to rectify remarks she made about the consequences of
Scotland leaving the UK.
Read more here:
Allan Massie: The UK’s value is immense, The Scotsman
by
ALLAN MASSIE
In
any democracy, many people endure a government they didn’t vote for. There is
still time to think, writes Allan Massie
I
can understand why many will vote Yes. I can’t fathom the thinking of those who
say: “Let’s give independence a try.” This is like saying, “Let’s try suicide”.
If you bring it off, there’s no way back.
Independence
is not an experiment we can abandon if we decide it isn’t working. It’s not
like resigning from a club because you’ve fallen out with the committee and
then re-applying for membership a few years later.
I’m
lucky. I’ve never had any difficulty deciding how to vote tomorrow. I’m a
Unionist, always have been. Of course, like almost every Scot, I’ve had my
nationalist moments, sometimes sparked by momentary indignation when I’ve
muttered “Bloody English”, other times patriotically proud or boastful when I
think that no small nation except, one admits, the Jews and the Ancient Greeks,
has given more of value to the world than the Scots.
The Seriously Nasty Party: With one day to go, damning evidence of the bullying intimidation of voters by Scots nationalists (just ask Miliband) Daily Mail
Pro-union
voters have endured stone-throwing and been called traitors
Many
are now said to be too scared to show their support of a No vote
Ed
Miliband was forced to abandon visit to Edinburgh shopping centre
The dark side of the campaign for
Scottish independence can be laid bare today.
In a string of sinister incidents,
separatists have used bullying and intimidation to cow their rivals.
Pro-union voters have endured
stone-throwing, been called traitors and faced threats that their houses will
be torched.
Many are now said to be too scared to
show their support for fear of reprisals that might follow a defeat for the
nationalists in tomorrow’s vote.
Yesterday, Labour leader Ed Miliband
was forced to abandon a visit to an Edinburgh shopping centre after he was
surrounded by Yes supporters who jostled him and branded him a ‘****ing liar’.
His minders had to step in to escort him to safety.
Further acts of intimidation have been
reported by the No camp across Scotland, including:
·
Hundreds of campaign boards have been
daubed with offensive graffiti or destroyed;
·
Homes with ‘No Thanks’ posters have
been pelted with eggs and one householder in Edinburgh had ‘traitor’ etched
into his front door;
·
Farmers have received anonymous phone
calls saying their livestock will be set loose unless they take down campaign
boards
·
Nationalists have bragged on Facebook
about ripping down No signs and posted videos of them stamping on the posters
·
Pro-union canvassers been called
‘loyalist scum’ and ordered to hand over details of supporters so their ‘houses
can be burned down’.
Tuesday, 16 September 2014
Scottish Independence Vote Triggers Mass Banknote Shift Amid Fears Of Run On ATMs
Millions
of banknotes have been rushed to Scotland amid growing fears a Yes vote on
Thursday could trigger a run on the country's ATMs, it has been reported.
As
the future of the union hangs in the balance, Scottish businesses near the
border have also purportedly been moving their money into English accounts in
Cumbria.
Fearing
people will run to withdraw money and put it into English banks, the cash has
been moved to ensure the banks and , ATMs do not run out.
The
Bank of England prints bank notes and circulates them in high-security vans to
where they are needed, depending on the demand.
One
source told the The Independent there had not yet a surge in withdrawals: “We
have seen a big rise in customers coming in and asking us what would happen,
but there is no sign of any significant flow of deposits from north to south.”
Another
said: "We are, of course, monitoring the situation very closely from hour
to hour.”
Rob
Johnson, the chief executive of Cumbria's Chamber of Commerce, said many firms
were transferring funds from banks registered in Scotland to those
headquartered in England.
"We
know it's happening, but we can't give names," he told The Guardian.
"It's
inevitable that people would start to do this because uncertainty is something
businesses can't handle … It's not about businesses being pro or against
independence, it's businesses saying: 'There are some real issues here and we
don't know what's happening.'"
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