I have never said that Scotland would overrule the EU referendum result. If England vote to leave then that is what will happen regardless of how the other countries in the UK vote.
If Scotland voted NO to leaving the EU and England voted YES then another independence referendum at that point would be justified.
It's implicit in the "tough luck"remark
Hypothetical situation. 100% of the people of Scotland vote to stay in the EU. 100% of the population of England vote to leave the EU. In your view that would just be Scotland's tough luck and it would be forced out of the EU against it's will.
In what way can 53m English voting to leave and it not happening because 5.3 Scots said no result in it not happening. So yes, simple numbers mandate that if those were the percentages, it'd be tough luck.
I do agree it'd justify another referendum, though. I said so earlier.
It's also why I'm in favour of Scottish independence, if that is the will of Scots. Given that we have a pseudo-Democratic system, sheer population numbers mean that if England votes heavily one way, the combined populations of all the other parts can't do anything about it.
However, the actual numbers are nothing remotely like 100%. It's far from clear that the "leave" camp can even get a simple majority among 53m English, never mind a substantial one. Even if "leave" do manage a majority, it's entirely plausible that it would be by a small enough marhin that a heavily "stay" oriented Scottish vote could swing the overall vote to remain.
Suppose, for example, and assuming all 53m English were of voting age and that everyone voted, that 26m voted "remain" and the other 27m voted "leave". Then, England wants to leave. Now suppose that of 5.3m Scots voting, 2m voted leave, but the remaining 3.3m voted "remain". The 1.3m Scots majority wanting to remain swings it against the 1m English majority wanting to quit, and the will of Scotland wins over the will of England.
Ultimately, though, the source of the Scottish (or rather, Scot Nat) complaint about "will of Scotland" and English domination seems to be that there's more of us than you. Well, true enough. Guilty as charged.
As a result, if Scotland wants to leave the union so it can determine it's own affairs, I entirely understand that, and don't have a problem with it. If that's what you, as in all Scots, decide you want, I wish you luck as an independent nation, and can we please get on with it?
What I don't understand is the rationale that says you want to leave the union with the UK to recover national sovereignty, and then immediately cede it to the EU by joining another sovereignty-sucking Union. Unless, of course, the sovereignty issue is actually a mask for some deep-rooted anti-English sentiment? And if that's the case, then again, please get on with independence.
I mean, if Scotland's voice is limited because 5.3m Scots cannot outvote 53m English, how the heck do you think 5.3m Scots will have any substantial say among 500m EU voters or 28-ish other European nations?
I get wanting independence from England. I don't get that, and yet still wanting EU membership. Either you (Scots) want sovereignty, or you don't.