I wonder if she thi...
 

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[Closed] I wonder if she thinks it was a life well lived.

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Sat on a bench in the park watching children play. Do you think "Well, I'm glad I did all that" or do you jsut wonder "What if I'd just spent more time with my family?"

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:03 pm
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I wish she'd have spent more time with her family. I doubt Dennis would have agreed though


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:06 pm
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Like her or not, the one thing about Maggie Thatcher's time as PM is that she made her decisions and stuck to them, rather than all the fannying about we see from the current crop of drippy politicians who appear to be more interested in being 'popular' than anything else.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:12 pm
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[i]made her decisions and stuck to them[/i]

Poll Tax 😉


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:13 pm
 hora
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She looks soo old now 🙁

You can still see the steel in her eyes/countenance though.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:13 pm
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made her decisions and stuck to them

Poll Tax

Ok, I was generalising ... she wasn't nick-amed the Iron Lady for nothing though


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:16 pm
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The banality of evil, eh?


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:17 pm
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You can still see the steel in her eyes/countenance though.

Think you'll find it's more of the dispassionate look that countless evil sociopaths throughout history have displayed.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:18 pm
 MSP
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Like her or not, the one thing about Maggie Thatcher's time as PM is that she made her decisions and stuck to them, rather than all the fannying about we see from the current crop of drippy politicians who appear to be more interested in being 'popular' than anything else.

I disagree, she set the mold for current politicians, forcing through ideology despite the evidence of results. I for one would be much happier with more thoughtful considered politicians.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:21 pm
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[i]Think you'll find it's more of the dispassionate look that countless evil sociopaths throughout history have displayed. [/i]

I thought she was just realising that her incontinence pad was failing to live up to expectations.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:22 pm
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Anyway.. George 'there is no Plan B' Osbourne is surely the epitome of the Thatcherite 'Ladies not for turning' cobblers.

The economy is going down the tubes. Shall we do anything about it? No. Just more of the same. la la la - I'm not listening!!!


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:24 pm
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i expect she thinks she was a kickass PM, but given how her kids have turned out, I also expect she feels a tinge of regret.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:25 pm
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"Well at least they wont be getting any free milk later"


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:45 pm
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I disagree, she set the mold for current politicians, forcing through ideology despite the evidence of results. I for one would be much happier with more thoughtful considered politicians.

I don't mind thoughtful/considered.

But the resent lot seem to give more thought and consideration to which policies/decisions will be most popular, rather which are the best ones to make for the country.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:45 pm
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is she thinking 'hmmmmm lunch' ?


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:46 pm
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I imagine that she wishes she'd spent more time in the pursuit of hedonistic pleasures..


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:47 pm
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I think you've all forgotten her greatest achievement.

Mr Whippy ice cream.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:47 pm
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the one thing about Maggie Thatcher's time as PM is that she made her decisions and stuck to them

Well, I suppose that's one way of looking at it. Another way of looking at it is "she applied the same simplistic pigheaded approach to everything and alienated her colleagues and supporters alike".


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:54 pm
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I disagree, she set the mold for current politicians, forcing through ideology despite the evidence of results. I for one would be much happier with more thoughtful considered politicians.

Agreed


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:55 pm
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Given that she has fairly advanced multi infarct dementia I doubt there is actually much going on in her head at all


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:58 pm
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...............and it won't get any better.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 12:59 pm
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I reckon she probably regrets directing [i]Death Wish 3[/i].


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:02 pm
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She probably gave up playing with her son when he kept getting lost in the garden.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:03 pm
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I thought Barbara Cartland was dead


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:04 pm
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Whatever, she made a huge impact on our world, I guess she's happy with that.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:04 pm
 hora
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I think you've all forgotten her greatest achievement.

Some angry and bitter men who probably blame their lives and divorces on what she did during their childhood in the eighties? 🙄


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:04 pm
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Put it this way she will be remembered after she is dead. Which is more that can be said for most of us.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:13 pm
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Put it this way she will be remembered after she is dead. Which is more that can be said for most of us.

That's just a silly thing to say. There are plenty of people who are remembered after their death. To be remembered for being particularly awful, for example, is much [i]less [/i]than can be said for most of us.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:15 pm
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Is 'being remembered' the best way to judge a life?

I'd say 'being a decent human being and trying your best for your family and freinds' is probably a better way to live.

Myra Hindley's remembered...


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:16 pm
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she's more machine now, twisted and evil


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:16 pm
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Put it this way she will be remembered after she is dead. Which is more that can be said for most of us.

Just like Peter Sutcliff, Fred West, Pol Pot etc. etc.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:17 pm
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the one thing about Maggie Thatcher's time as PM is that she made her decisions and stuck to them

That is so, so not true. Which proves how good she was at manipulating the media


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:17 pm
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being a decent human being and trying your best for your family and freinds

Maybe she thinks she was?


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:18 pm
 hora
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Put it this way she will be remembered after she is dead. Which is more that can be said for most of us

If she had folded/conceded in 82 where would we be now?


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:19 pm
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[i]Maybe she thinks she was? [/i]

I didn;t say she didn't think that, I was comparing 'being remembered' as a life goal vs wot I sed.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:20 pm
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If she had folded/conceded in 82 where would we be now?

Living in a more equal society!


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:21 pm
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[i]where would we be now? [/i]

much the same place, probably.

I can't see that other western european countries that didn't 'benefit' from her term in office are significantly further ahead/behind of us vs where they were 30 years ago?


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:21 pm
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I think you've all forgotten her greatest achievement

Which was...


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:22 pm
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“Tony Blair and New Labour.”

According to her.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:24 pm
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I guess the point I was making was that she will be "judged by history".

In fifty years time when we look at politics in the 20th Century what names will be remembered?

Churchill? Definately
Wilson? Maybe
Thatcher? Certainly
Blair? Well lets hope not!

I'm sure during her brief moments of clarity she probably does think it was a life well lived.

We can all argue amongst ourselves whether we think she is right or not.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:25 pm
 hora
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Blair? I think its spelt Bliar.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:25 pm
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If she had folded/conceded in 82 where would we be now?

(ETA - presume this was a Falklands reference, apologies if it is not)

Not around in 82? or not a very good student of history???

The Thatcher Govt precipitated the events of 1982, FFS - ask anyone serving in the RN at the time.

When people talk about Thatcher having blood on her hands regarding the Falklands, minds immediately go to the Belgrano..... The reality is far more extensive and costly than the sinking of one obsolete WW2 cruiser


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:26 pm
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If she had folded/conceded in 82 where would we be now?

Britain would be a radically different country: the IRA would be in government, the mainland would be ruled by Tory wets, the Scots would be going for independence and the British economy would be dependent on decisions made by Germans in Brussels.

Oh, wait...


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:26 pm
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I guess the point I was making was that she will be "judged by history".

In fifty years time when we look at politics in the 20th Century what names will be remembered?

Churchill? Definately
Wilson? Maybe
Thatcher? Certainly
Blair? Well lets hope not!

I'm sure during her brief moments of clarity she probably does think it was a life well lived.

We can all argue amongst ourselves whether we think she is right or not.

Clemment Attlee and Aneurian Beven are more significant politicians of the last century than Thatcher and Blair.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:30 pm
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Oh my...

[img] [/img]
/p>

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:32 pm
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Dancing shoes awaiting polish - oh hold on, we did that thread and it didn't go well, did it 😈


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:33 pm
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MSP - if your right (?), I hope that historians are able to spell Aneu[b]rin[/b] Bev[b]an[/b] correctly!!!


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:33 pm
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You've still yet to enlighten us with her greatest achievement Hora?

Was it the deregulation of the City? And the re-balancing of the economy in favour of financial services? That went really well, I thought.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:34 pm
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Clemment Attlee and Aneurian Beven are more significant politicians of the last century than Thatcher and Blair.

Possibly - and I'm not arguing otherwise - you could also include Lloyd George.

But who is the most likely to be remembered?


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:36 pm
 Solo
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[i]I think you've all forgotten her greatest achievement.

[b]Some angry and bitter men who probably blame their lives and divorces on what she did during their childhood in the eighties?[/b]
[/i]

I'll add that these people see nothing wrong with sticking the knife into an elderly woman in the twilight of her life.

I believe, that she believed, at the time.
And so therefore, how can you blame someone for beleiving in something and trynig to make a difference.
In the manner that she did.
Of course, we all have the benefit of hindsight, [b]now[/b]...

As for alienation.
As we know, Maggy was assinated by the top brass for her views on Europe.
I'm staggered at how insightful she was on this matter and, all these years later.
I believe we're better off out of the Euro.

Its the only thing I agreed with Gordon on.
His 5 tests were never going to be met.
This was an accpetable way of kicking the UK's entry into the single currency.
Into the long grass.
Looking at recent events in Euro land.
I'm kinda glad we still have the GBP.

Have a dig at an old woman now, as she waits for god.
But also bare in mind what it makes you look like.
😉


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:39 pm
 Solo
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[i]Was it the deregulation of the City? And the re-balancing of the economy in favour of financial services? That went really well, I thought.[/i]

Deliberate [b]Troll[/b], not worthy of a response.
🙄


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:42 pm
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Still reminds me off...

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:44 pm
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My Baroness Thatcher has changed since 1982, seen here at a press conference during the Falklands war.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:45 pm
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I hope she gets to experience some NHS treatment under Tory rule.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:45 pm
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[i]I'll add that these people see nothing wrong with sticking the knife into an elderly woman in the twilight of her life.[/i]

that's not fair, I've been making snidey comments about her since I was 15 in 1981.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:45 pm
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I believe, that she believed, at the time.
And so therefore, how can you blame someone for beleiving in something and trynig to make a difference.
In the manner that she did.
Of course, we all have the benefit of hindsight, now...

Ahh, ok - so historical decisions, no matter how bad they look in hindsight, are actualy ok providing you believed it was the right thing to do at the time... 🙄

I can see that going down well at the International Criminal Court


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:46 pm
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Not worthy of response? Well you could always detail how pant-wettingly fantastically it all went then.

I'm not very bright, you see. I can only see whats in front of my eyes. And from where I'm standing it looks like an unmitigated ****ing disaster of biblical proportions! One that we're going to be paying for for generations. Oh.... all except the people who definitely won't be paying for it... the ones who caused it.

But do feel free to enlighten me with your evidence to the contrary


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:47 pm
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Teh damage that Thatchers governments did to the country is enormous and we are still paying now - the social damage from the deliberate policy of mas unemployment is huge apart from all the rest of it


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:49 pm
 hora
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You've still yet to enlighten us with her greatest achievement Hora?

Bliar led us into one counter-invasion and two invasions. Hes also a Millionaire and his wealth continues to grow. 100's of thousands have died as a direct consequence of his actions.

No one seems to vilify him.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:50 pm
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binners - Member
You've still yet to enlighten us with her greatest achievement Hora?

Greatest achievement was to expose the true greed and hypocrisy of the "working classes"
Give "them" a sniff of a bit of property or share ownership and they'll vote you in for ever....


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:51 pm
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Of course, we all have the benefit of hindsight, now...

God damn, you're absolutely right. If only anyone in the country had had the foresight at the time to realise her policies wouldn't work out the way she said they would. They could have done something like...I don't know...organise protests and stuff, or campaigned against her, or voted for different parties, or even - and this just a wild idea - even Tory insiders could have given her the elbow.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:52 pm
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No one seems to vilify him.

are you absolutely sure of that?


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:52 pm
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No one seems to vilify him.

Erm.... are you sure about that? Have you been living in a cave for the last ten years?


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:52 pm
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No one seems to vilify him.

He's a **** *


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:55 pm
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Bliar...No one seems to vilify him.

lol

[img] [/img]

[img] ?w=600[/img]


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:55 pm
 hora
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Use google and type Tony Blair news. How many do you see of him blood all over him, murder of innocents, enrichment? in the top hits?


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:56 pm
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i think that as elderly person in the twilight of her life she has many experiences that we could all learn from.
she was focussed enough to secure the first female leadership of a political party in this country ( only repeated once nationally since) and she was our first and to date only female prime minister. a considerable achievement to day never mind 30 years ago.
she had clear goals in mind and a vision for the country she persuaded the electorate to share that view and she was re-elected to continue that journey again something all politians would envy.
during her period in office the country changed, from a bankrupt dinosuar into a cutting edge leading european nation.
How and the way that all happened people will discuss for decades but 20 years on the country is in a better place for her period in office than it would have been if old Micheal Foot had had his 15 years of fame.
Tony Blair then squandered that leagacy with the most self serving Govt the country has ever had and Gordon ( where are you?) Brown pissed what remained up the wall.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:56 pm
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No one seems to vilify him.

are you absolutely sure of that?

Blair is an odd one. There are certainly sections of the population taht villify Blair over his US wars. In the main I'd say that his reputation is largely "in tatters", rather than being villified.

The New Labour govt achieved a lot that is to bee applauded in it's first term *, yet Blair will be remembered for his shallowness - foreign wars, his argumnets with Brown (refuted at the time, since corroborated), completely untrustworthy smile and bullshit glib PR shiny answers. For this he is disrespected, rather than hated.

Thatcher is totally different in comparison. A sizeable part of the population still idolise her (none idolise Blair...?). The rest still revile her

ETA * I think most look back on the 1997 Govt and acknowledge that big changes have been made reagrding tolerance and how Brits view themselves and each other.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:58 pm
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Have you learnt to use Google then. Well done you! Can you find us a graph to chart the relative unpopularity of Blair or Thatcher?

GO on. You can do it. Think of it as a little project for the afternoon


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:58 pm
 hora
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You know, there [i][b]are[/b][/i] better uses for google 8)


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 1:59 pm
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cutting edge leading european nation.

with a massive bleeding hole in it that has never been repaired.

The deliberate policy of mass unemployment caused such damage to society and it has not healed yet. Hopelessness, metal health problems, drug abuse. The rotting sore that is the ghettos for the poor.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 2:00 pm
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cutting edge leading european nation.

Ehhh - I must have dozed off... when was that?


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 2:00 pm
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Have you got round the parental controls? I'll have to reset those later, I think


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 2:00 pm
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Binners

Her greatest achievement - easy, ridding us of the nightmare of 1970s Britain
Her greatest failure - replacing one set of extremes with another, but probably hard to see how should could have done otherwise

Tackles: 1970s rampant inflation, excess union power, excess welfare state, over-reliance of Keynesian economic (Stop-Go cycle), IMF bailout

But leaves us with: Hayek's "Constitution of Liberty" taken to its extreme, and over-reliance on Monetarism, the Miners Strike, turning self-reliance into "no-such thing as society", over-reliance of market-based solutions and privatisation

Subsequent politicians then took the good parts and rejected the excesses leading to New Labour and Mandlesson's infamous line, "we are all Thatcherites now." Oh, and then who created the unbalanced economy with excess concentration on financial services and the Public Sector? Hmmm....remind me?


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 2:01 pm
 Solo
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Hora.

Its no use.

I forget that this place is massively subscribed to by lefties.

They'll not see sense and will blindly continue on their current path.

Sensible political debate is impossible in this place.

According to TJ's logic, WIlliam the conqueror has a lot to answer for.
🙄

Binners just loves to hate and overlooks that if Maggy did hold the top-spot during a relaxtion of the rules which were once designed to prevent the recent economic turmoil.
She did so as a member of successive premiers on both sides of the pond, who perhaps had other issues at the top of their agendas.
IIRC, Gordon was quite chummy with his mates in the City, but I see no mention of that here, for the obvious reason that it detracts from binners argument against Maggy.
Binners. Go away and read abit on recent political history.
Then you may return.
When you have something constructive and intelligent to add.
I'd offer TJ the same advise, but he's past changing or caring and is a dyed in the wool lefty, or whatever he chooses to call it.

[i]I can see that going down well at the International Criminal Court [/i]
Right oh then !....
In your mind, Maggy should be on trial at the ICC ?...
RRrriiiiieeet.
😯


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 2:03 pm
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Her greatest achievement - easy, ridding us of the nightmare of 1970s Britain
Her greatest failure - replacing one set of extremes with another, but probably hard to see how should could have done otherwise

Tackles: 1970s rampant inflation, excess union power, excess welfare state, over-reliance of Keynesian economic (Stop-Go cycle)

But leaves us with: Hayek's "Constitution of Liberty" taken to its extreme, and over-reliance on Monetarism, the Miners Strike, turning self-reliance into "no-such thing as society", over-reliance of market-based solutions and privatisation

Subsequent politicians then took the good parts and rejected the excesses leading to New Labour and Mandlesson's infamous line, "we are all Thatcherites now." Oh, and then who created the unbalanced economy with excess concentration on financial services and the Public Sector? Hmmm....remind me?

Which can be simplified to:

"Pursued political idealology beyond pragmatic necessity"

Which is what is so depressing about most / all politicians...


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 2:04 pm
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bruneep, never, [i]ever [/i]post another Terrahawks picture again without warning. I still have nightmares, you [i]monster[/i]!


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 2:05 pm
 hora
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Anyway, fan or foe. When she dies it'll be a sad day. I was neither a fan or foe. I just admired how she rose up in a male-dominated world.

That is unless you are one of those weird folk who wish ill on all and sundry?


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 2:05 pm
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OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Get her!

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 2:05 pm
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Solo - so the deliberate policy of mass unemployment she pursued did not do massive damage to society?

BTW - this place is full of right wingers not lefties.


 
Posted : 19/03/2012 2:06 pm
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