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Zacs, different sources put urban dwellers at around 84% in the UK as a whole and Iceland at 94%. If you were to take Scotland on its own then I believe the figure would be closer to Iceland's and the spread not dissimilar - very lop-sided (Central Belt in Scotland, SW in Iceland). I don't think if Scotland approached things like Iceland and got similar results that the statistics would be seen as skewed and/or irrelevant (unless success is). The UK has its lop-sidedness too and, after all, the difference between 84% and 94% is hardly a game changer regarding statistical significance in the exercise under discussion. To the scientific community (and international politicians too) Iceland's exercise remains an interesting example.
TTT, I was talking to someone abroad last summer, she remarked how sad it was to observe a former important country (the UK) being just a shadow of its former self. I agreed entirely. The difference between you and me is abundantly clear: I wish the UK would pull itself up and aspire to more than being a has-been, surely it could if it tried. It is sad to see mediocrity/mistake/failure all around on issue after issue and it is frustrating to observe the determination to face backward toward the past, to avoid seeing things as they are. Yes, I can be relied upon to wretch whenever new examples arise.
You can also be relied upon to round on and castigate anyone/anything that points to things not being perfect in this country. You represent the forces that prevent improvement. That is your prerogative and I have no desire to prevent you living in your world. I will not castigate you. Just you continue complaining over what bothers you, I'll continue to (vainly ?) hope for awful comparisons to change into better ones.