Correct.....and there hasn't been some sort of seismic swing towards Yes since the referendum, the figures show the county is split down the middle, and I'm afraid it will continue to do so until some of the older generation snuff it. What were seeing is a period of defiance from Yes voters which will dissipate through time - the movement is however too big now to go away, and I expect to be living in an independent Scotland in a decades time. For this to happen though - It needs to be put on the back burner and the SNP needs to stay united and continue to run Holyrood efficiently and centrally. For this reason, I would have liked Salmond to stay in the SG as he's clearly the brains in the Sturgeon-Salmond partnership. Watching Salmond run rings round Lamont and co has been glorious. Sturgeon v Murphy is more level playing field.