- 04-05-2009, 15:01 #11
Re: Thirty years ago today .......
I am frequently surprised at the venom that is directed at Thatcher, going by what her detractors say it would appear that they were actually preying for the crowd of lunatics we have today all through her tenure.
The arguments against her, especially in my generation (Thatchers children etc) always seem as questionable as those used to describe the troubles in Northern Ireland or the rights and wrongs of America. The arguments are almost always simplistic, overly-subjective, poorly researched and nearly fundamentalist in their approach.
It seem however that Google News thinks Scotland should like her a bit more though. These are 2 articles that came up after only 2 clicks of the mouse:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/c...f-Britain.html
http://news.stv.tv/scotland/94097-an...aret-thatcher/RMAS CSgt: "Hurry up Mr Quantity, my dead mother could dig that trench faster then you!"
OCdt UQ: "Yes CSgt, but she's got a 6 foot head start on me!"
- 04-05-2009, 15:14 #12
Re: Thirty years ago today .......
She made more than you might think.
Originally Posted by metimmee
I grew up in a council flat in Scotland. Dad spent most of his working life on the dole after giving up a life on the ocean wave. I had the pleasure of standing in a separate queue for the kids who got free school dinners. Mum worked in factories until she retired.
You'd think we'd all be natural born socialists. The power cuts, strikes, chaos and, where I lived, food shortages of the 1970s turned us all into life long Tories.
I know another working class bloke who turned because his family had friends behind the Iron Curtain. When his family started receiving food parcels from an impoverished, communist dictatorship he had a 'WTF' moment and turned his back on Labour for ever.
Of course, bringing the Poll Tax in a year early in Scotland was unforgivable and lost Maggie much of the support she had in Scotland. The 'Tory Toffs' stereotype doesn't go down well in council estates either so it's unlikely that the Tories will regain the popularity they enjoyed in Scotland in the 1950s.
It's reported that Dave will stop subsidising Scotland if and when he is PM. The Barnett formula will be abandoned and Scotland will only get as much from the UK as it contributes. That should make the Poll Tax debacle look like an argument at the Womens Institute about who bakes the best cakes.ArRSe is the Hotel California - You can log-out any time you like, but you can never leave!
- 04-05-2009, 17:53 #13
Re: Thirty years ago today .......
In the 70s, quite a few people still thought that communism in one form or another was the way ahead. Many, such as the Cambridge spies, formed their opinions during WWII when the Soviet Union fought against the Nazis. Others, like our own dear Rt Hon Patricia Hewitt MP were indoctrinated listening to left wing intellectuals at university during the 1960s.
Originally Posted by Unknown_Quantity
Opinions varied from Stalinism, as espoused by President for Life Arthur Scargill, through to an alliance with the USSR with Soviet troops based in the UK as favoured by Tony Benn to the relatively mild but chaotic brand of socialism practised by Jim Callaghan.
Maggie is a hate figure for some because she crushed the hard left in Britain. Their dreams of a socialist utopia, presided over by an unelected, ruling elite, were dashed for ever.
As the Tories weren't on the trade union payroll, they had no incentive to tolerate abuses like closed shops, flying pickets and strikes being called on a whim by union barons. The rug was pulled from under the feet of the TUC.
Scargill went from being 'the enemy within' to being a laughing stock by declaring 'moral victory' as his members were leaving the NUM and his strikers were marching back to work.
Derek Hatton, aspiring Gauleiter for life of Liverpool, would have to wait a while for his first Jaguar when his worker's revolution failed to materialise, reputedly thanks to Maggie sending in MI5 and Special Branch.
Ken Livingstone failed to establish the Peoples Democratic Republic of London when Maggie abolished the GLC but it would be many years before Boris delivered the coup de grace.
Lesbian diversity consultant, Lewisham council leader and demander of reparations for slavery, Linda Bellos would no longer be able to ban Met Police officers from council property.
1979 - The dream died for rabid, communist nutters everywhere and they still curse Maggie for locking the gates to their playground for the loony left.ArRSe is the Hotel California - You can log-out any time you like, but you can never leave!
- 04-05-2009, 22:09 #14
Re: Thirty years ago today .......
From one Ancient Mariner to another........ think you've just about covered the reality of those years. A good post.
- 04-05-2009, 22:35 #15
Re: Thirty years ago today .......
And could all these specimens of the loony left have done one per cent of the damage to Britain that the rabid right have been responsible for?
Originally Posted by Ancient_Mariner
If, as you claim, the lefties dreamed of unelected control of the UK, the reality is that the western world is now controlled by unelected multi-national companies. Companies, it now turns out, run by idiots who make Scargill and Livingstone look like geniuses.
You sound like a survivor of the Titanic claiming that it was the stokers' fault the Captain put the ship on a collision course with an iceberg. Yes, Thatcher was strong willed and didn't care what damage she caused in trying to prove she was always right. Field Marshal Haig had exactly the same attitude and killed or wounded almost a million British soldiers because of them. I have nothing but contempt for him and nothing but contempt for Thatcher. As will generations of Britons as yet unborn. She turned my country into a plantation divided between the rich and the slaves, which is why I left. It wasn't my idea of a civilised society.
Now it's turned out to be a Reagan/Thatcher style free enterprise paradise where the trickle down effect is the CEO's and financiers pissing on the average citizen before taking their private planes loaded with gold bars to Switzerland and Israel. Leaving the dickheads who let them get away with it to starve on the dole.
One day I hope to have the pleasure of pi==ing on Thatcher's grave. In the meantime I suggest you look out of your window. Welcome to the Iron Lady's legacy. Enjoy it to the depths of your Tory soul before the IMF bailiffs arrive with the final notice.
- 04-05-2009, 22:41 #16
Re: Thirty years ago today .......
I was in central London that day. There was a universal feeling of euphoria and a great party atmosphere. The joy wasn't that Thatcher had been elected but that Labour had gone.
A change of government is a rare thing in this country. It's only happened once since - in 1997. In 1979 the late Bob MacKenzie commented “..whatever your view of the outcome of the election let us marvel for a moment that here is a transfer of power taking place solely because of the votes millions of people yesterday. Democracy is very special and something we should always treasure ….”
I will treasure casting my at the next election because I, along with millions of others, will bring about a transfer of power and Labour will be gone.
- 04-05-2009, 23:04 #17Senior Member
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- Feb 2004
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- 8,408
Re: Thirty years ago today .......
Greatness is something you rarely see.
Once in your lifetime if you are lucky.
I do feel sorry for the Sad Sicko's who missed out.
john
She saved UK from the mess created by Labour in the 70's.
Pity there is no Iron Lady now, for our country is now in a worse condition all due to Nue Labour and its Prime Mentalist.
- 04-05-2009, 23:09 #18
Re: Thirty years ago today .......
One day I hope to have the pleasure of pi==ing on Thatcher's grave. In the meantime I suggest you look out of your window. Welcome to the Iron Lady's legacy. Enjoy it to the depths of your Tory soul before the IMF bailiffs arrive with the final notice
If you feel that strongly, I will even pay for the air fare for you to come over and relieve your bladder.
But when you do attempt it please remember that there is a lot of folk who respect her for smashing miners, ensuring a junta to collapse after invading BRITISH Island, asking PW Botha to release N Mandela survive the Brighton bombing, allow 1.5million council houses to be purchased and sign the Anglo-Irish Agreement.
Out of interest are you a expat or Australian through and through.Look at an infantryman's eyes and you can tell how much war he has seen.
- Bill Mauldin
- 04-05-2009, 23:13 #19Senior Member
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- Apr 2007
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- 3,568
Re: Thirty years ago today .......
Er, 'our' country? Where do you live again?
Originally Posted by jonwilly
- 04-05-2009, 23:20 #20Senior Member
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Re: Thirty years ago today .......
F Uck Off you Black enameled jap strangling swine.
john




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