Indyquines today doing #YesBecause. pic.twitter.com/P7eTIWn3or
— Misssy M (@MisssyM) August 31, 2014
Sorry, England–but Scotland may not be that into you anymore.
On Thursday, Sept. 18, Scottish voters will head to the polls to decide whether or not Scotland should be its own independent country. If the campaign for independence is successful, Scotland would end a more-than-300-year-old union with England–a move that many of UK’s leaders are against. In an address to a group in Edinburgh, Scotland on Wednesday, British Prime Minister David Cameron said, “I would be heartbroken…if this family of nations is torn apart.”
It’s a vote that’s been trending online for weeks–but what does it all mean, and why does it matter outside of the UK?
1. What would it mean for Scotland? Among many things, they’d have to reapply for the European Union and NATO, and they’d no longer be a part of the United Kingdom.









