SB..I have taken your question from the other thread...
"Speaking of the Blackwater Hall,Gerry, I noticed a photo on the wall which showed the teacher and pupils of Blackwater school in 1956. There were 17 pupils, a teacher and another adult who may have been employed as a caretaker, cook etc. I'd be interested to know how many families with children lived in the area at the time and what they did? It would be interesting to find out where those kids are now also. My bet is that few of them (who are alive) will live in the area and not a few will live furth of Scotland. I'd be really interested to know how many children of school age (5 - 12) live in the area NOW and what their families do.
I suspect the answers to those questions might just put a large dent in your argument that the only people whose opinions matter re land use in Scotland are the people who own and benefit from its use today. That's the kind of thinking which led to the de-population of rural Scotland in the first place.
I'm not a nationalist and I still have several months before I put my cross on the ballot paper but I'm a great believer that if we keep on doing what we've always done, we'll keep on getting what we've always got."
I can't be bothered replying on the other thread, which has become a Turdy talking to Turdy exercise.
Almost all of the families in the photo will have been employed in agriculture. Significantly less so today; modern machinery and farming practices have seen to that. The school here has shut as have many others. The rural population in the 50's 60's 70's 80's etc left because they wanted to. I don't think I said anything about the 'only opinions that matter'....what I do say is that the vast resources flowing into Scotland from land owners are nearly ALL that is keeping what fragile remnants of a rural population there are here at all. Most of the Land Reforms proposed by the SNP are almost calculated to drive such investment elsewhere.....and it won't be replaced by government spending...further driving the rural population down. Thats how Mugabe wrecked the economy of Zimbabwe.
The average 16 year old voter in Alloa or Kirkcaldy doesn't give a toss.....but they may be the ones deciding...
"Speaking of the Blackwater Hall,Gerry, I noticed a photo on the wall which showed the teacher and pupils of Blackwater school in 1956. There were 17 pupils, a teacher and another adult who may have been employed as a caretaker, cook etc. I'd be interested to know how many families with children lived in the area at the time and what they did? It would be interesting to find out where those kids are now also. My bet is that few of them (who are alive) will live in the area and not a few will live furth of Scotland. I'd be really interested to know how many children of school age (5 - 12) live in the area NOW and what their families do.
I suspect the answers to those questions might just put a large dent in your argument that the only people whose opinions matter re land use in Scotland are the people who own and benefit from its use today. That's the kind of thinking which led to the de-population of rural Scotland in the first place.
I'm not a nationalist and I still have several months before I put my cross on the ballot paper but I'm a great believer that if we keep on doing what we've always done, we'll keep on getting what we've always got."
I can't be bothered replying on the other thread, which has become a Turdy talking to Turdy exercise.
Almost all of the families in the photo will have been employed in agriculture. Significantly less so today; modern machinery and farming practices have seen to that. The school here has shut as have many others. The rural population in the 50's 60's 70's 80's etc left because they wanted to. I don't think I said anything about the 'only opinions that matter'....what I do say is that the vast resources flowing into Scotland from land owners are nearly ALL that is keeping what fragile remnants of a rural population there are here at all. Most of the Land Reforms proposed by the SNP are almost calculated to drive such investment elsewhere.....and it won't be replaced by government spending...further driving the rural population down. Thats how Mugabe wrecked the economy of Zimbabwe.
The average 16 year old voter in Alloa or Kirkcaldy doesn't give a toss.....but they may be the ones deciding...

