Well this is it. In two days time we as a nation will take the biggest decision in our lives.

After years of leaflets, speeches, debates and public meetings, it is make up your mind time.

According to all the opinion polls the decision is literally on a knife-edge. It could go either way.

Tommy disagrees and says it will be 60:40 for Yes but I disagree. I think it will be closer.

Apparently at least one in every eight voters are still to make up their minds. The majority are now firmly Yes or No but around 12% of Scots will swing one way or the other and decide Scotland's fate. What a momentous decision! What an historic day!

Mr Cameron travelled to Scotland to appeal to us to stay with him and the UK. As readers of my column know I disagree with him. I don't trust him an inch. He warns us this decision will be permanent and there is no going back. I find that patronising. We know it is permanent. We know this is a 'forever' decision. That's why we are convinced it is the right thing to do.

To listen to a man who is a personal millionaire at the head of a cabinet of fellow millionaires (80% of the ConDem Government) lecture us about fairness made me angry last night. The guy who gave us the pathetically unfair bedroom tax while cutting tax for himself and other millionaires wants us to believe 'fairness' is a value he believes in. Well I don't buy it. I don't trust him or the No campaigners who waited until the last minute before panicking and offering us the back of a fag packet deal of more powers that should have been on the table over a year ago. Do they think we are daft? Do they think we can't see how desperate and panicky they are?

The term intimidation has been bandied about by the No campaign against the YESers. I have witnessed less than acceptable behaviour from both sides.

Tommy, Nicola Sturgeon and other prominent Yes crusaders like Jim Sillars have been subjected to personal abuse in person and online. They have received death threats. But they haven't run off to the police and enlisted a sympathetic media for cheap coverage.

Whatever the outcome on Thursday we all have to get on with our lives and live together. Bridges have to be mended. Abuse is unacceptable from any side.

But to talk of intimidation without reference to the threats from companies, banks and supermarkets to punish us if we democratically opt to become independent is cowardly and irresponsible. Evidence now exists to show Mr Cameron got bankers and supermarket bosses together and asked them to issue warnings in a coordinated fashion. That is nothing short of intimidation and makes a mockery of his talk of 'fairness'.

Individual Scots should vote on Thursday based on what both their heart and head is telling them not based on threats and bullying from big millionaire bosses. This is a secret ballot. Don't be intimidated.

My final point is in reference to the trade unions that have written to members and campaigned for No. As you know I was a very proud and active trade unionist all my working life. It is with a heavy heart that I therefore criticise unions who failed to ballot their members about their actual opinions before actively supporting the No side.

The same side as the anti-trade union Tories. One trade union did ballot their membership. That was the Rail Maritime and Transport workers union. Guess what happened? The membership voted for Yes. Pity all the other unions never showed the same confidence in their members.

However you vote on Thursday lets ensure as a nation we work hard at promoting tolerance and understanding, and togetherness regardless of the outcome.