JCL666
absurdism
- Sep 23, 2011
- 2,190
Well, yes, "I met a miner once", but he told me so many stories of how the striking miners in his part of Yorkshire were making an absolute mint out of the money ordinary people were sending them. Like my Dad, a shop steward who took Mum's housekeeping, leaving her short of money to feed my siblings, just to support the miners who were actually laughing their heads off, according to my ex-miner friend who was in the thick of it all. Frankly, she had to do some of what she did, because the IMF told her to, just like Greece today has to obey the EU in order to receive the loans they need to prevent that country going bankrupt. That's how financially broken Britain was when Thatcher came to power. (And I loathed her, too, actually. For years. Still do. But some of what she did, she had to do.)
They were not making a mint and that IMF stuff is simply not true. Maybe you shouldn't base what you're saying on limited anecdotal evidence. Try some facts.
Read the Ridley plan or read this Economy: Report of Nationalised Industries Policy Group (leaked Ridley report) | Margaret Thatcher Foundation
People predominately in the south believed the propaganda perpetuated by the bbc read these
Shafted: The Media, the Miners' Strike and the Aftermath | General | Times Higher Education
An untold story? Fresh allegations about state manipulation in BBC's reporting of miners' strike - Nicholas Jones
The conservatives deliberately picked a fight, regardless of how necessary anyone thinks it was to take on the unions, the manner it which it was done was a disgrace.
Maybe try visiting somewhere like Blackhall Colliery to see the legacy of economic policy from the 1980s.