There's plenty of debate about whether to vote yes or no. But without discussing which way I'm leaning, I'm concerned about whether I should vote at all.
I'm a UK citizen and live in Scotland, so I have the technical right. I love Scotland. But there are lots of other places I love too, and even more places I've never been to and would like to find out if I love.
Continuing on my current trajectory, I'm going to live here for at least another two years. Probably a bit longer. But then what?
Are many students, or otherwise temporary residents, wondering the same? Do I really have a right to vote and then not stick around in the long term? Is a vote a commitment to, in the event of the result matching my vote, stay here and support Scotland with my income tax and my custom and my activism?
I feel like it should be. It's a vote about a long term future, and it's not going to fade away when this batch of politicians leave office in a few years (is it?).
Certainly I find it more difficult to confidently express any position to anybody who knows that maybe I won't even live in the UK any more when the changes really start to be felt.
Do I have an unconditional right to vote in the referendum? Does voting come with the responsibility to stay in Scotland? Responses warmly welcomed.
I've lived here for 9 years, (and another 9 years ago), but I have similar concerns. I have no great feeling of ties to Scotland or the UK, but I do have feelings about what Scotland and the UK are/should be. At the moment I see myself living elsewhere within a couple of years, but I've been given the right to cast a vote on what I think is right so I have done so (postal vote).
One of the most vocal people I know campaigning (and certainly voting) is leaving the UK/Scotland for good at around the time of the referendum.