Nah. I saw that debate, and that particular question was nothing more than a witty one-liner with no actual substance whatsoever. The question is utterly meaningless. "Better together" means "Scotland and the rest of the UK are both better off together than either would be if they separated." "Why are we not better together already?" is a totally different question (i.e. "why are we [who is we?] better off than we are?"). I'd say that question was a candidate for the least "telling shot" in the whole debate. Great as part of a poem or song lyric; of no relevance at all in a political debate.vtsnowedin wrote:CSPAN just had on a rebroadcast of Mondays debate between Darling and Salmon. This was the first time I had seen either of them.
I thought Salmon won it handily.
The most telling shot came from the audience. Question was "If we are better off together why are we not better off already?".
Darling wouldn't let it go because SalmonD DID NOT answer it well. He barely answered it at all. The question was "What is your Plan B, given that your Plan A isn't going to fly because you require our permission for it [and it will be denied]?" His response was "We've got THREE plan-B's! So there!" This is a typical Alex Salmond delivery of a line that sounds clever, but does not stand up to scrutiny. Are three Plan-B's actually better than one? Well, no they aren't. He came up with this answer as a way of providing some sort of answer to the question Darling asked him repeatedly in the first debate and he couldn't answer at all, without actually answering it. You can't have "three Plan B's". If Plan A fails, which it would, then he's actually got to decide on ONE Plan B. You can't implement three. So why couldn't Salmond just tell the audience which of his three options it would be? Answer: because if he'd done so then Darling would have taken him to pieces - Darling would have made it very obvious why that Plan B was not very appealing at all. By providing three "answers" instead of one, Salmond just dodged this bit of critical examination. Again, if you were taken in by this tactic then you're too easily taken in. It's a classic example of "the Salmond problem" - it works quite well in a debate or as a TV soundbite when nothing actually rests on it, especially when the target audience is already on your side or incapable of understanding the underlying issues, but it's absolutely useless if what you're doing is making tough decisions required to run a country. It's just rhetoric, and it doesn't take much scratching away at the surface to reveal there's nothing of any value behind it. Smugness, pomposity and the ability to keep a straight face while talking utter crap are not desirable traits in a political leader.Darling wouldn't let the currency question go even though Salmon repeatedly answered it well.
You don't get it. Alex Salmond and the nationalists are depending on oil as a very significant chunk of their national income. Therefore they are very vulnerable if oil revenues collapse. The united UK is nothing like as dependent on oil income.Salmon missed an opportunity when Darling asked what an Independent Scotland would do if North sea Oil revenues dropped a half million pounds. The obvious answer is " the same thing a united UK will do as voting NO will not keep that from happening.