RARE REBEL FREE SCOTLAND TREASURE Home Rule for Scotland on RBS P351a(2) UNIQUE 

Free Scotland Now...

Saor=Free, Alba=Scotland, a-nis=now Literally, it translates as "Up with Scotland" it means the same sort of thing as the French mean when they say "Vive la France".

The flag of Siol nan Gaidheal who are an Ultranationalist Scottish group

 The name Sìol nan Gàidheal, properly spelled Sìol nan Gàidheal , is Scottish Gaelic for 'Seed of the Gaels'. The first incarnation of Siol nan Gaidheal was founded in 1978 by Tom Moore, a Scot who spent his childhood in the USA, though it became defunct twice and was re-established by Jackie Stokes in 1987 and again in 1997.

 Though the group publicly disavows politics Sìol nan Gàidheal has been variously described by commentators as anywhere from "traditionalist to "crypto-fascist" or "proto-fascist" and Members of the group have been banned from membership of the mainstream nationalist Scottish National Party since 1982.

Throughout the 1980s, Siol nan Gaidheal published a magazine called Firinn Albannach (Scottish Truth), which has been described as having a rhetoric which was "anti-communist, neo-fascist and sometimes violent in tone".

 Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's personal security was stepped up in Scotland after members of Siol nan Gaidheal tried to accost her outside the Conservative Party conference in Perth in 1982, and Some members of Siol nan Gaidheal made a unofficial paramilitary wing called Arm nan Gaidheal ("Army of the Gael") which was responsible for a number of petrol bomb attacks in 1982 and 1983.