Niall Fraser says Scots should ignore the desperate last-gasp attempts by UK leaders to win them over and instead embrace the historic opportunity for change on offer through a vote for independence
Today, the country where I was born and raised stands on the edge of history. In a few hours, 4.2 million people who live and work in Scotland - a remarkable 97 per cent of those eligible to vote - will begin to exercise their constitutional democratic right to shape the course of history by marking a cross on a piece of paper.
How special is that? No one has died, or even come close, in the politically charged, three-year run-up to this once-in-a-lifetime poll that will - one way or another - change the political landscape of Britain forever, rattle Europe and have ramifications for the rest of the world.