Originally posted by Stillhomewardbound
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Margaret Thatcher dies
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Richard Barrett
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostGood idea. Let's all not express any strong feelings about the issue under discussion but instead go and make a nice cup of tea. It's the English way.
just sorting out the bandanna and cocktails
(a quick question , does anyone know if a dash of bitters with add to the taste if i muddle it together in a milk bottle ? )
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Sydney Grew View PostI didn't say "misguided" - I said "greedy and covetous bourgeois."
Thatcher relied on a significant slice of the working-class vote to win three elections. At the time I worked in the carpet trade in Manchester and came across quite a number of fitters who branched out to run their own businesses. Some bought their own council-houses. Almost all (who I happened to speak to on the subject) had turned into enthusiastic Conservative supporters. There were, of course, the odd few who did exactly the same as the others but still stubbornly referred to themselves as 'socialist' and Labour Party supporters. A sort of tribal thing, I suppose.
It wasn't just the contemptible 'greedy and covetous bourgois'. It was also quite a few of the darling Proles who simply wanted to improve their lot in life.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostA not to mention her appalling attitude towards Nelson Mandela and the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa, saying in 1987: "The ANC is a typical terrorist organisation ... Anyone who thinks it is going to run the government in South Africa is living in cloud-cuckoo land." (Mind you, some of her minions went much further, like Teddy Taylor's "Nelson Mandela should be shot", from about the same time.) In Pakistan she is remembered without fondness as enjoying friendly relations with the military dictator Zia ul-Haq. Her boneheaded policy on Northern Ireland resulted in a great escalation of violence there. And so it goes on.
And I have just heard Bertie Ahearne on 5 Live saying that she played an important part in helping to bring the IRA to the negotiating table, much of it hidden from public view, part of the long process that eventually led to the Good Friday agreement. If bybone-headed
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostIt wasn't just the contemptible 'greedy and covetous bourgois'. It was also quite a few of the darling Proles who simply wanted to improve their lot in life.
Last edited by Mr Pee; 10-04-13, 07:54.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostLady Thatcher did not approve of the ANC, because she wanted to see a peaceful transition from apartheid, a system that she found abhorrent. How could she on the one hand condemn the IRA for trying to acheive their political ends through violence, and at the same time support the ANC, who were trying to do the same thing.
There seems to be no problem with Israel, the creation of which was a great success for political ends achieved though violence.....
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Julien Sorel
Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostIf by you mean roundly condemning violence and terrorism ....
Pinochet: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/11/wo...anted=all&_r=0
Pol Pot: http://www.newstatesman.com/node/137397
Would you call her support for Suharto, her friendship with Pinochet, her authorising clandestine logistical support and training for the Khmer Rouge and Pol Pot's henchmen "roundly condemning violence and terrorism"? Because I'd call it one way or another, roundly or at an angle, endorsing and supporting violence and terrorism.
Do you disagree? Or is it impolite to mention these things?
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Does anyone remember the 'trickle-down' economic 'theory' (really nothing more than a half-baked hypothesis, which some attempted to dignify with the title 'supply-side economics')? Mrs T and Ronald Reagan were both proponents of this. In reality, the result of the increase in inequality which they engineered by their tax cuts was that the rich stashed their newly acquired money in tax havens, where it did no good to society at all.
Now I do not blame Mrs Thatcher for the rise of tax havens. Their rise really began with the gradual relaxation of capital flows across borders which took place in the 1960s and continued for many years. Another result of this relaxation was this: in the early years of the Thatcher administration the pound rose in value and inflation rose. Money began to flow into London from abroad and (in line with monetarist theory) interest rates were raised. This caused more monetary inflow and so interest rates were again raised. It was quite some time before the government realised that they had created damaging positive feedback with the combination of a strong pound, high inflation and high interest rates by which time much damage had been done to British industry.
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostYou are assuming that politicians are consistent
There seems to be no problem with Israel, the creation of which was a great success for political ends achieved though violence.....
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostDoes anyone remember the 'trickle-down' economic 'theory' (really nothing more than a half-baked hypothesis, which some attempted to dignify with the title 'supply-side economics')? Mrs T and Ronald Reagan were both proponents of this. In reality, the result of the increase in inequality which they engineered by their tax cuts was that the rich stashed their newly acquired money in tax havens, where it did no good to society at all.
Now I do not blame Mrs Thatcher for the rise of tax havens. Their rise really began with the gradual relaxation of capital flows across borders which took place in the 1960s and continued for many years. Another result of this relaxation was this: in the early years of the Thatcher administration the pound rose in value and inflation rose. Money began to flow into London from abroad and (in line with monetarist theory) interest rates were raised. This caused more monetary inflow and so interest rates were again raised. It was quite some time before the government realised that they had created damaging positive feedback with the combination of a strong pound, high inflation and high interest rates by which time much damage had been done to British industry.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostYou are assuming that politicians are consistent
I did not personally state that MT supported apartheid in South Africa and she would not necessarily have had to support it in principle in any case purely in order to justify in her own mind her negative comments about ANC and Mandela; furthermore, the comparison between IRA and ANC being put forward here carries little if any weight, given that
(a) the island of Ireland was and remains a divided one over only a relatively small part of which MT's government had sovereignty and
(b) despite the agenda to whip up animosity between Protestants and Catholics and separate them from one another, there was no formal government sponsored apartheid in Ireland as there had been for years in South Africa.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostYou certainly wont be i'm sure
(though given the way that our public space has been privatised then you might be committing an "offence" .....)
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostTrickle down is a stupid American simplification of a perfectly sound economic policy. Best ignore it.
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View Post
If by you mean roundly condemning violence and terrorism and doing all in her power to defeat and neutralise the para militarys, who were butchering and killing to further a cause that was not even supported by a majority in Northern Ireland,
]bong ching
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The Selling of Council Houses was a short-termist policy that worked short -term ....but many of the housing problems we have now are due to this policy (I will not list the problems they are manifest for all to see)....
Yes won three elections with Short-termist policies....changed Britain , but caused division, desolation and despair for many for every person who actually prospered....bong ching
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