Well, even if the Scots hold a second referendum, Westminster can declare it non binding. No doubt you will appreciate that as you are often grizzling about the "only advisory" nonsense.
I am not "grizzling" about anything, nor indeed do I need to.
Furthermore, Westminster won't even have to declare such a referendum non-binding because it is now far more widely known in any case that
all referenda in UK are advisory only and not legally binding.
The first Scottish independence referendum was not legally binding either, but the outcome of that was in support of the maintenence of the
status quo whereas the UK/EU in/out one was, albeing very marginally, in favour of changing the
status quo, so the fact that neither was legally binding brings about a different effect, because maintenance of the
status quo does not legally require Parliament to do anything anyway, whereas overturning it obviously does.
That said, were Scotland to hold a second independence referendum that goes in favour of independence, Westminster will be able to say whatever it likes about its non-legally binding status but Scotland will have spoken and it will be up to Scotland to turn the Scottish Parliament into the Scottish government; were that not the case, Westminster could stop the break-up of the Union forever.
How about a small friendly bet between us, say £100 about Brexit. I say it will not be abandoned. Prepared to put your money where your mouth is?
Thank you for the kind invitation but no thank you, for two reasons; firstly, I do not gamble (except on and with my work) and, secondly, I do not say and have never said that Brexit will be abandoned because I do not know whether or not it will; all that I do know is that
1. no date has been set for invoking Article 50 81 days after the opinion poll result was published
2. no advance planning was made for Brexit
3. no one yet seems to know what Brexit might mean (single market or no single market, for example)
4. no one yet knows what the results of next years' elections in France, Germany and Netherlands will be or to what extent they might impact upon EU and, in turn, upon any negotiations between it and UK
5. no one can know until those negotiations progress to the final fence (if indeed they do) whether the resulting deals will favour UK sufficiently to warrant its government ratifying Brexit; it might, in unfavourable circumstances, abandon Brexit then and there in UK's interests and it would indeed have a duty towards its citizens, including its electorate, to serve those interests as best it can.
So, given that none of us can predict how the government might assess the outcome of all those negotiations before we even know if they'll commence in the first place - and given also that it might be unable even to begin to do so until after the next General Election (when there might be a new government anyway) - the fact that neither you nor I nor anyone else can tell whether Brexit will or will not come about is plainly obvious.
So, while we can each maintain the friendliness, we should also each save our money!
Best,
Alistair