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Are many Scots angry about the so-called bedroom tax, worried for the future of the NHS and annoyed that the current resident at No 10 is a Tory? Without a doubt.

But is that reason enough to ruin a union which has not only survived but flourished in the face of terrible odds? Is it a pretext for destroying a family of nations that has provided a model for other countries who seek financial prosperity, bounded and informed by a sense of moral justice?

In the past century alone, Great Britain has emerged as a voice of hope and a symbol of justice, having faced two horrendous world wars, a Great Depression, a Cold War that cast shadows over Europe for a generation and a near global economic recession.

The UK is far, far from perfect. It faces huge problems with insufficient housing, misguided multiculturalism, historic child abuse, political elitism and more. Arguably, it may well be weaker in the sense of what it stands for than it was a generation ago.

Yet what happens for Scotland if the Yes vote wins tomorrow? Alex Bell, the former chief policy advisor to the SNP has admitted that, "The SNP's strength does not lie with policy."

Yet policy is going to be needed fast - providing all the pragmatic answers which, until now, the SNP leadership have refused to articulate.

This may be in part because they don't know the answers. Granted, some things will need to be worked out through negotiations after the vote, but people should at least be told now what the negotiating position will be.

The SNP's lack of definitive policies on, for example, the currency issue - and, by extension, who will effectively control much of its monetary policy - may also be related to the fact that they plan to be more socialist than the majority of Scots have assumed.

Whatever the reason, the fact is that Scots - and Brits in general - have little idea what flesh the SNP will add to the bare bones of its current announcements.

A ComRes poll published today says that only 14 percent of people surveyed in England and Wales think that Britain will be better off without Scotland. It is to be hoped that the Scots who feel the same will cast their vote accordingly tomorrow.

I, like much of the country, hold my breath in hope. CR

The opinions expressed in this article are not necessarily those held by Cross Rhythms. Any expressed views were accurate at the time of publishing but may or may not reflect the views of the individuals concerned at a later date.