Originally posted by Nevilevelis
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I experienced the liberal and more overt leftism among 18 year olds when 11 at my posh school in 1974. I experienced how by the time we were all 16 in 1979 most of those in my class were ultra conservative. Those are the two generational strands which have informed the character of the two main parties since 1979, albeit in Labour in two distinct ways.
I experienced the smell of the rubbish in the chute beside my grandmother's tower block flat just off the Walworth Road when working class Tories and more traditional Labour types were wondering if it was Mrs Thatcher or Mr Steel and Mr Jenkins who would improve life along the lines of the past as it was perceived (if not indeed the National Front if it got worse).
I experienced how they concluded largely on the basis of the "highly symbolic of everything that has gone wrong" Thorpe affair that it would be the former. Not that any of them had a clue what Thatcherite economics would bring, nor did they in the early 1980s. That was when I was in Yorkshire and travelled regularly between two parts of the country, one of which would happily have gone to war on behalf of Mr Scargill and the other happily against him. And I was aware that gay men in my university were breaking the law in 1982-83 and later.
Not that it was of any especial relevance to me.
As for the courses, the first was on civil liberties in which, probably in my third and fourth week there, we were asked to consider the rights of those who had wanted the age of consent down to 4 since the mid 1970s. I remember deciding to miss the fourth week on the grounds it was beyond the pale and instead drove to Scarborough on what was a lovely sunny day.
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