Originally posted by ahinton
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Margaret Thatcher dies
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It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThough I do find it slightly troubling that the teen tweets seem currently to be focusing on 'Who was Margaret Thatcher?'
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Julien Sorel
Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostI should have thought it is perfectly clear. To describe Lady Thatcher's cabinet colleagues as "rogues and psycopaths" ... is also quite possibly slanderous.
Suharto ("One of our very best and most valuable friends") and Pinochet http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/108383 ("I'm also very much aware that it is you who brought democracy to Chile, you set up a constitution suitable for democracy, you put it into effect. Elections were held, and then, in accordance with the result, you stepped down," she added, drawing a warm smile from the general) http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/1999...inochet.chile2 were unequivocally rogues and psycopaths (General Pinochet scoffed at his human rights critics. Asked about the discovery of a mass grave of his government’s victims, he was quoted in the Chilean press as joking that it was an “efficient” way of burial http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/11/wo...anted=all&_r=0).
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post. . . Mrs Thatcher was not alone in her intent and actions.
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by Sydney Grew View PostYes let's not forget in all this the guilt of the British persons in the street. How did Mrs. Thatcher contrive to be elected three times with an unhealthy majority? Through the sheer greed and covetousness of a great many of the afore-mentioned British bourgeois, the nature of whom being the daughter of a shopkeeper she well knew. Money has no bottom but that worried neither her nor them!
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostYes, all those evil people that voted for her - bloody democracy, gets in the way sometimes.
Incidentally, on this morning's edition of Today on BBC R4, Ken Clarke in interview made at least two references to the "rust-bucket industries" that prevailed at the time of MT's assumption of prime ministerial office; the potential if not actual significance of that term in the context of the "iron lady" was not lost on me...
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostSome people prefer to stay in the abstract, because reality (or personal anecdotes as you call it) contradicts the theoretical world they want to live in.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostNo, what I'm calling personal anecdotes are personal anecdotes (the clue is in the name), strongly coloured in your own case it seems by what the chip on your shoulder is whispering in your ear that you should or shouldn't regard as significant. It isn't "theoretical", for example, that the Thatcher years saw the highest unemployment in the UK since the 1920s, that public spending was drastically reduced or that poverty and inequality greatly increased, even though your or my situation during that period may have differed from those trends.
Also, I cannot imagine even MT endorsing some of the "reorganisations" and "restructuring" of certain state benefits as are now being implemented and proposed (but then the factor of national indebtedness was rather different in her day to what it is now, I guess).
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Anna
Originally posted by french frank View PostI'm not sure why the death of an elderly person who has been out of public life for so long should be regarded as momentous. Though I do find it slightly troubling that the teen tweets seem currently to be focusing on 'Who was Margaret Thatcher?'
As you were, keep calm and carry on sniping.
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