[image: Pablo Navarrete]*Pablo Navarrete*
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3h <https://twitter.com/pablonav1/status/321260274239803392>

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Thatcher* <https://twitter.com/search?q=%23Thatcher&src=hash>'s death.
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http://www.marxist.com/thatcher-dead-we-remember-her-crimes-against-our-class.htm

Thatcher dead – we remember her crimes against our
class<http://www.marxist.com/thatcher-dead-we-remember-her-crimes-against-our-class.htm>
Written by Rob SewellMonday, 08 April 2013
[image: 
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The TV is full of the sycophantic outpourings of right-wing commentators
and politicians about the sudden death of Margaret Thatcher. The
Establishment has rallied to praise her. The Queen has sent a personal
message of condolence to the Thatcher family. The news is full of tributes,
portraying Thatcher as some kind of champion of freedom and liberty. Of
course, nothing could be further from the truth. She was a champion – a
champion of capitalism, the ruling class, and all it represents.

Her death is now being used to “rehabilitate” her, to paint her as a
heroine. Of course, Margaret Thatcher is very much admired by
representatives of her class, the ladies and gentlemen of the ruling class,
as a fervent defender of capitalism, the existing social order, and their
class interests. For us, Thatcher represented and epitomised privilege,
wealth and the inequality of class society.

[image: Margaret Thatcher
1983]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/britain/Margaret_Thatcher_1983.jpg>While
Prime Minister between 1979 and 1990, she epitomised capitalism in the raw.
She set about attempting to destroy the power of the trade unions and
plunder the state through privatisation, all in a vain attempt to restore
the position of British capitalism. She attempted to drive the working
class back to Victorian times by attacking all those who resisted,
especially the miners, as “the enemies within”. Whole swathes of anti-trade
union legislation were brought onto the statute book. The right to strike
was all but removed.

Gone was the image of One Nation Toryism. The Tory Grandees were pushed
aside by the Tory rabble, who bestowed the leadership of the Tory party on
Thatcher. She represented a new breed of Tory: the narrow, parvenue outlook
of a shopkeepers’ daughter. It reflected the degeneration of British
capitalism, which has been in a process of long-term decline.

Her policies, based upon the economic doctrines of monetarism - which
simply represented a return to the pre-war balanced budgets - resulted in
the destruction of 20% of manufacturing industry between 1979 and 1981. It
caused a greater destruction of industry than the German Luftwaffe during
the Second World War. This drove up levels of unemployment to over 3
million; meanwhile Norman Tebbit, the Chingford Skinhead, lectured the
unemployed to “get on their bike” to seek work.

[image: unusualimage-thatcher street
art]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/britain/unusualimage-thatcher_street_art.jpg>Picture
by: Unusualimage-thatcherIn 1984-85, she set about attempting to destroy
the National Union of Mineworkers and smash the mining industry. Everything
was done to starve the miners back to work. Thatcher was hoping for a quick
victory, her “industrial Falklands”, but the miners held out for another 12
months. Ultimately, it was only the sabotage of the TUC and Labour leaders
that sealed the miners’ fate and handed victory to Thatcher.

As with the memories of 1926, the experience of the 1984-5 strike was
burned into the consciousness of the working class. They will never forget
and never forgive.

The creed of monetarism (of Thatcherism) elevates greed and egotism to a
principle. Its philosophy is that everyone must grab as much as they can,
despite the consequences. They should climb the social ladder at the
expense of the rest of us. The richest elite are praised to the skies,
while the poor are condemned as lazy and indolent. They represent the
“undeserving poor”, as the Victorians described them, the “welfare
scroungers” as they are described by the Tory press today, who should find
non-existent work or be deprived of their benefits. This is the law of the
jungle, the law of capitalism, which Thatcher espoused.

She denied “society” and promoted individual selfishness, which epitomised
the outlook of the bourgeoisie in this epoch of decline. The market has its
high priests, and Thatcher represented one of these apologists. Together
with Reagan, her counterpart in the United States, she spearheaded a
“counter-revolution” against working people, robbing them of their rights
and past gains. She reflected the fact that capitalism in decline could no
longer afford the reforms of the past.

For the super rich, the mindless pursuit of wealth and the worship of greed
are the over-riding principles. This is their morality, their religion. Of
course, this is all hidden behind a moralising screen of patriotism,
freedom and enterprise. This, of course, is the freedom to exploit and
enrich themselves at the expense of others. The capitalism system is based
upon this, on the search for maximum profits, and the extraction of unpaid
labour from the efforts of the working class.

Thatcher represented the Establishment - an Establishment which is now in
crisis and is increasingly being discredited: Parliament, Government, the
Press, the Police, the Church. One scandal after another, involving
businessmen, politicians, police-chiefs and judges, has laid bare the
cesspit of corruption that extends to the very top. Under Thatcher’s
“democracy”, the police-chiefs were manufacturing evidence against striking
miners at Orgreave and Liverpool supporters at Hillsborough. But that was
perfectly in order. The means justified the ends.

One expects the fawning of Conservative politicians over Margaret Thatcher,
but the Labour leadership, to their shame, also stoop to this level. They
view “politics” not as a war between the classes, but as a parliamentary
game. They are out of touch from the lives of ordinary working people who
have been directly and indirectly affected by Thatcherism.

“She will be remembered as a unique figure”, states Ed Miliband. “She
reshaped the politics of a whole generation. She was Britain's first woman
Prime Minister. She moved the centre ground of British politics and was a
huge figure on the world stage.”

But all this “shaping” and “moving” was done in the name of True Blue
Conservatism and to the detriment of the working class. Ed Miliband went
on: “The Labour Party disagreed with much of what she did and she will
always remain a controversial figure. But we can disagree and also greatly
respect her political achievements and her personal strength.”

And what achievements were these? She made the rich richer and the poor
poorer. She destroyed working class communities in the interests of Rent,
Interest and Profit.

Shamefully, the Labour Party has announced that it will suspend campaigning
in the local elections until further notice following Thatcher's death. It
would have been more appropriate for them to have declared that they will
compensate all those miners who were sacked by the Thatcher government
while defending their class.

Former Labour Prime Ministers, Blair and Brown have fallen over themselves
in praise of the woman despised by millions. Brown put out his this
statement: “commemorating Lady Thatcher's many decades of service to our
country”! It would have more correct to say service to the Bankers and
Speculators, the City of London and the giant monopolies.

Brown went on: “She will be remembered not only for being Britain's first
female Prime Minister and holding the office for 11 years, but also for the
determination and resilience with which she carried out all her duties
throughout her public life. Even those who disagreed with her never doubted
the strength of her convictions and her unwavering belief in Britain's
destiny in the world.”

To make such a statement is to spit in the face of all those who were
prepared to stand up to Thatcher and Thatchersism. It is an insult to those
who stood by the working class as they faced the Tory onslaught throughout
the  1980s and 1990s.

“During our time in Number 10, Sarah and I invited Lady Thatcher to revisit
Downing Street and Chequers - something which we know she enjoyed very
much.”

Again, this reveals the hobnobbing of the Labour leaders with the Tories,
who they regard not as class enemies but as friends. They too “very much
enjoyed” the company of this bourgeois Lady.

Tony Blair also issued his tribute. He described Lady Thatcher as "a
towering political figure". He went on: “Very few leaders get to change not
only the political landscape of their country but of the world. Margaret
was such a leader. Her global impact was vast. And some of the changes she
made in Britain were, in certain respects at least, retained by the 1997
Labour government, and came to be implemented by governments around the
world.”

Blair was, as he admits, a continuer of Thatcher’s policies. That is why he
kept the anti-trade union laws. That’s why he continued the privatisations.
That is why he too bowed down before the Market. Blair was an agent of
capitalism in the ranks of the Labour movement.

Even the ex-left and former home secretary David Blunkett described
Thatcher as an “outstanding leader and, as the first woman prime minister
in the United Kingdom, a groundbreaking politician.”

Meanwhile, Harriet Harman, the deputy leader of the Labour Party, had the
cheek to put out a message: “My condolences to Thatcher family. First woman
PM, a towering figure in British politics.”

Many feminists fell for this rubbish that Thatcher as Prime Minister
represented progress for women. It was the line of the recent film ‘The
Iron Lady’, where Thatcher was portrayed by Meryl Streep, and who again
attempted to justify her role. These people only had to ask the wives of
former miners to put them straight. Whether it is a man or woman attacking
the working class is completely irrelevant. It is the class interests that
are important and not the sex of a politician. For the overwhelming
majority of women, especially in the former mining areas destroyed by her
government, Thatcher was not a person to look up to but a person to be
despised.

It is clear from these remarks that the Labour leadership is a million
miles removed from the trade union movement and ordinary workers. We knew
Thatcher as our class enemy. We must now cleanse the Labour movement of
those who simply use it for their own purposes and careers. The
pro-capitalist leaders must be replaced by genuine fighters for the
interests of the working class.
The only thing we would say about Thatcher is that she faithfully fought
for the interests of her class, however blindly. It is high time we had
leaders in our movement who, instead of pandering to the enemy, would
faithfully and forcibly represent our class interests, namely, the fight to
put an end to capitalism and the establishment of socialism. Only then will
we have repaid the debt to all those who fought to the bitter end against
Thatcherism and the system it represents.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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