My sentiments exactly...  Romi/Blue

On Margaret Thatcher’s Passing
by John Andrews / April 10th, 2013
I’m just a tiny, tiny bit sad today.
So, Thatcher’s dead. I live in the town where she was born and 
raised. There are inevitably some who are in deep mourning today, and a 
few little bunches of flowers have appeared outside the corner shop that was 
her first family home. On the other hand, there’s also quite a bit 
of celebrating, and I was speaking to a woman today who said she just 
hopes that Cameron and Osborne and all the rest of them do the decent 
thing and jump onto her funeral pyre. Given the fact that her home town, once 
well-known for its heavy industry, is now largely silent because 
of Thatcher’s policies, you can see her point.
For myself, I must confess that a very tiny part of me is sad. Whilst she still 
breathed there was a miniscule theoretical possibility that 
she could be held to account for the vast crimes against humanity, in 
general, and the British people, in particular, that were committed by 
her government. I’m truly sad that even that miniscule theoretical 
possibility has been permanently snuffed out.
Three years into her reign a poll published in the Times revealed that she was 
the most unpopular British prime minister in history. And then things got worse.
She began by causing the deaths of a thousand people over a clump of 
wind-blown rocks 8,000 miles away from Britain, supposedly to defend the right 
of 2,000 people to call themselves British. It would have been 
cheaper for this supposed champion of democracy and devotee of 
Chicago-school economics to pay for those people to move lock, stock and barrel 
to the UK, accommodate them and give them all Income Support for the rest of 
their lives, than to wage a war and support a military 
garrison on the Malvinas to the end of time. But that little fact is 
always conveniently overlooked.
Thatcher’s foreign policies had one striking feature in common: her 
government’s support of murderous dictatorships was total; and the 
line-up of tyrants who enjoyed the backing of her government is quite 
impressive. There was Pol Pot, for example, and the unspeakable Suharto 
in Indonesia. Everyone knows about the blood-soaked Pinochet whose 
evasion from justice was actively assisted by Thatcher’s government. 
Less well known about are the assortment of Middle-Eastern despots her 
government aided; but the daddy of them all, the most ruthless oppressor on the 
face of the Earth, the US government, was always Thatcher’s 
favourite; and she made significant contributions to its goal of world 
domination. It’s impossible to know how many tens, if not hundreds of 
thousands of unnecessary deaths were aided and abetted by Thatcher’s 
government.
Impressive though her foreign policies obviously were, they pale to 
insignificance compared with the treacherous actions of her government 
against the British people. Her mission from the outset was to kill-off 
the trade union movement which, for all its imperfections, was the only 
real champion the ordinary Briton had. Once that was done it was game 
over, lambs fattened and ready for slaughter. She proceeded to kill-off 
the main source of Britain’s wealth, our manufacturing base; and then 
rapidly sold off every bit of family silver she could get her hands on. 
In quick succession Britain’s essential publicly owned utilities were 
flogged at fire-sale prices: transport, water, electricity, 
communications, gas… all went under the hammer. Millions of jobs were 
trashed or scrapped altogether, and then she turned her attention to the last 
remaining protection the British people had: public services. Why 
did she do all this? Just so a tiny, tiny handful of obscenely wealthy 
people could become even more obscenely wealthy.
What a great legacy. You can see why people want to put up statues to her.
The economic wasteland that Britain is today is not all Thatcher’s 
fault: others followed her who could have put things right, but didn’t. 
Nevertheless, it was Thatcher who started the ball rolling.
There was never any real chance that Thatcher would have to account 
for her crimes, but I am truly sad that the miniscule theoretical 
possibility that she could have been brought to justice is now gone 
forever.
John Andrews is a writer whose latest book is The People's Constitution. He can 
be contacted through his website. Read other articles by John.

http://dissidentvoice.org/2013/04/on-margaret-thatchers-passing/#more-48371


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