soon as a Scot there probably is still a smidgen of anti-English in my body, but it usually only appears in connection with sport. As an adult I consider myself British before Scots, perhaps because I have lived in England all my adult life (just this week I made this distinction on a form).
I don't mind the monarchy, but I don't want to pay for it.
I like living in England, but would move back to Scotland for a number of reasons, if my circumstances enabled me to do so. If I had been living in Scotland at the time of the independence referendum, I would have voted Labour because I don't think Scotland would be better off outside the UK (but it would have been a hard choice and a decision I lived to regret). I will play my small part in fighting for a better life for us all at the ballot box.
Life isn't always as black and white as most of your questions imply. A lot of the time you accept how things are and live your life. It does not make me anti-British or unpatriotic.
As an obscure backbencher, I'm sure JC knows how parliamentary daily life works, but as for the minutiae of what happens if you get elected as a party leader, I see no reason to call him a liar. He doesn't strike me a a liar at all.