Originally posted by french frank
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Petition for Thatcher's state funeral to be privatised
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Originally posted by Sydney Grew View PostIt was Mrs. Thatcher who inspired me to leave the country (along with those spiky hair-styles) . . . but what is worrying is that I found myself agreeing with her about several things - on council rates and on one or two other issues which I cannot for the moment remember.
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Lateralthinking1
Interesting comments. Did Lord Liverpool have a state funeral before his burial in Gloucestershire? I'm not sure.
Still, one thing's for certain. His funeral wasn't organised by a "devout church-goer" who managed to combine being a Director both of a "Trust" with investments in an American pornographic actress's adult DVD business and a company that profited from sub-prime mortgages. Expect tasteful when it happens like never before.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostAny chance of someone explaining why it's an obsession and not a strongly-held legitimate view?
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Lateralthinking1
For God's sake, lets not make it a way of life. I could be tempted to say that if a state funeral for a PM is ever to be done at all it should be based on length of service. That was why I mentioned Robert Jenkinson with whom there are repressive parallels. However, I am not going down that road because TB would have to be included and frankly that very notion makes me feel ill.
Two brief points. First, like some others, I feel uneasy about all the speculation. It seems unnecessarily macabre. Here I do believe in taking the moral higher ground. Secondly, the politics of it on both sides should be enough in this case to rule such a funeral out. On balance, I think I favour guidelines - perhaps based on contributions towards significant unification of the country in adversity a la Churchill - with individual events confirmed by the monarch and then if necessary arranged by apolotical quango.Last edited by Guest; 22-12-11, 13:14.
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Pilchardman
Originally posted by ahinton View Posta state funeral for Churchill is one thing, given his achievements during WWII, but one for other British Prime Ministers is quite another, so why Thatcher but not Attlee, Eden, MacMillan, Hume, Wilson, Heath, Callaghan, Major, Bliar or Broon?
However, one wonders whether a state funeral for Ian Paisley Snr, come the event of his death, might not be contentious. I don't think opposing that would be "dancing on his grave", no matter how strongly one disagreed with his politics. However it wouldn't be without precedent, since Edward Carson, the Ulster Unionist leader and founder of the the Ulster Volunteers (later UVF), the first loyalist paramilitary group, was afforded a British state funeral in 1935.
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Pilchardman
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Originally posted by John Skelton View PostI don't understand why objecting to a state funeral for Margaret Thatcher is "this kind of dancing on her grave when she's not even in it." Unless planning a state funeral is this kind of dancing around her grave when she's not even in it. Margaret Thatcher will apparently be given a state funeral (or that's the plan) and people who think that is a wrong thing to do (including the Conservative Peter Oborne, who makes this very point) wish to raise perfectly reasonable objections while it's still possible to do so (before the event, as it were).
As far as the petition is concerned (and I did understand that the wording was tongue-in-cheek), it might have been better to have treated the matter more directly. A state funeral represents the nation paying its last respects to the deceased. Given that her political life has been so divisive and that so many have no respect for her and the results of her political leadership, it would be - as Peter Oborne suggested - unwise to organise a state funeral unless the authorities are prepared to deal with people paying their 'respects' in their chosen way.
A state funeral so that the nation can demonstrate its feelings about her? Sounds like madness.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 PostA state funeral so that the nation can demonstrate its feelings about her?
though I would bet you that it would be made illegal to say anything in opposition .......... actually come to mention it, if you can get 4 years for saying "lets have a riot" on Facebook it probably is already illegal
still as MrP always says ..........Nothing to hide, nothing to fear
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Originally posted by Pilchardman View PostThe petition now has 11,404 signatories.
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Lateralthinking1
It is a pity that this petition only currently has 16 signatures - http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/19023.
We need to support what is right even more than opposing what is wrong. I don't think any of us does this well.
I think it is right that the discussions are being held privately. However, I would like to know the specific reasons why a state funeral is thought right in this case and who is proposing it. E-petitions are rejected where the issue is not the responsibility of the government so one for the time being must assume that it is an initiative of the Coalition.
That rioting could ensue is not to my mind a satisfactory reason to oppose it. That it could be used for party political purpose
is more of a worry. No doubt the powers-that-be will seek to draw clear lines between the past and the present while secretly considering the political capital. That makes me uneasy.
Mark Serwotka explained recently that many in South Wales whose parents' lives were so devastated by the mining dispute became Civil Servants and are now losing their jobs. I think that they would see an unbroken line.
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