Well said mate. Totally agreed. 

Sent from my iPhone

On 9 Apr 2013, at 21:12, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
wrote:

> Fairly obvious that a figure like Thatcher was going to produce divergent 
> views
> and that is what you get in a democracy and I'm good with that, but I'm not
> prepared to take socio-historical/socio-political lessons about what it has 
> been
> like in this country under this woman and her legacy from an ex-pat, of
> what...40 or 50 years, or from someone whose racist views have seen him
> kicked-off this list twice that I can remember.
> 
> I grew up in Wakefield in the 80's and saw the effect on the kids and families
> around me, it was disastrous and it was deliberate. Unemployment soared and 
> all
> the attendant social problems followed.
> 
> Some of the major problems we face today are directly traceable back to her
> government - can't get a place on a housing list? You can thank Thatcher's 
> sell
> off of the council housing stock and not rebuilding behind that - of course it
> is easier to blame immigrants. Can't get decent contract of work (with defined
> hours, rather than "zero hours", with proper rates of pay etc) thank the
> government that took on and weakened trade unions, removed legislation to 
> assist
> the individual worker and protect them against the whims of bosses, whilst
> simultaneously freeing business owners from their obligations to the workers 
> and
> communities they are situated in (if you don't like it I'll take my business 
> to
> China where I can employ people for one tenth of what I should pay here, and
> they'll work longer and in worse conditions, but hey that's capitalism for
> you!); we hear that one of the problems that is holding back our current
> recovery is the lack of any manufacturing in our economy...well who got rid of
> that then? Apparently it was a "price worth paying"; and of course she was 
> party
> to the so-called big bang in the banking industry, the de-regualtion of which
> laid the groundwork for the 2008 collapse and which also sowed the seeds of 
> the
> "grasp all I can" society - in fact there was "no such thing as society" - a
> mentality that leaves us with the some of the worst venal aspects of Britain
> today.
> 
> I've just heard some ridiculous woman on the radio arguing that she "opened up
> democracy in this country by making many millions more shareholders" - arrant
> nonsense, we owned the chuffing things in the first place and shareholding 
> does
> not equal democracy. The selling off of many state industries...because the
> market will ensure that the buyer gets the best deal possible. Not really 
> worked
> out like that has it, but then it was never meant to. The buyer gets shafted 
> as
> the prices soar again and again, bearing no relation to the rate of inflation
> nor to the actual quality of the service that is provided. Buyers are trapped 
> in
> an effective cartel of a few big businesses that co-exist reasonably happily
> living off their share of the fat...pensioners and the poor have to chose
> between heating and food.
> 
> ...and Labour's shameful failure to put some of this right, is not something
> that I support.
> 
> Something historical that cannot be denied is the fact of her being the first
> woman prime minister which is an admirable achievement. She did little for 
> other
> women but, in fairness she never set herself as a champion for women. She
> claimed to be a self-made woman; well I know plenty of talented women who 
> could
> do a whole lot more with their talents if only they'd had the foresight to 
> marry
> a millionaire businessman.
> 
> One final personal point, I'm an active trade unionist and I am surrounded by
> hard-working fellow trade unionists and I utterly refute the one-eyed 
> anti-trade
> union nonsense written on here in the last couple of days.
> 
> I do understand those who say that they don't wish to celebrate the death of 
> any
> human, and in most cases I would agree with that view - but in this case, fuck
> that, she did more damage to more people's lives and deserves little but our
> scorn. And it will be interesting to see what reaction comes forth from all
> those lifting their skirts in horror at some of the reactions to Thatcher's
> demise when Mandela dies, sometime soon, as seems likely.
> 
> Below is a link to a blog written by a former "insider" - an foreign office
> mandarin - he reflects on the Thatcher he knew through work - the last three
> paragraphs are particularly enlightening.<http://www.craigmurray.org.uk/>
> 
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