Seasidesage
New member
I particularly like how they've cut their tree to match the slope of her shoulders. Either that or it's ****ing windy.
I thought she'd grown a pony tail?
I particularly like how they've cut their tree to match the slope of her shoulders. Either that or it's ****ing windy.
I particularly like how they've cut their tree to match the slope of her shoulders. Either that or it's ****ing windy.
I hate Thatcher as the person who destroyed the very fabric of society as I knew it growing up and as the architect of the selfish less tolerant world in which we live. I also as the descendant of Irish Catholics hate Oliver Cromwell for the things that he did. However, do I have an objection to either having statues? No, its my opinion, others are available and to attempt to airbrush history by removing all reference to previous historical characters is both stupid and demeaning of society as it is today. Every historical character is a product of their own era and you would hope that another Thatcher emerging now would not get elected although given who has she probably would.
'Progress' does not follow a linear path, not everything she did was wrong and if the people of Grantham elect a council who want to waste ratepayers money on a statue that is for the voters of Grantham to take up at the next opportunity...
Destroying the images of those you disagree with is only a small step from destroying those you disagree with. The Nazi's didn't jump straight to murdering Jews they burnt books and destroyed businesses etc first. Worrying times...
I agree with you, albeit, there are some exceptions; it isn't a black and white issue. I am not in favour of all and every statue, or the removal of all and every statue. Removing statues of old slave owners who nobody reveres, like Colston, (and storing the staue in a warehouse) is fine by me. Putting up a statue of Thatcher in Grantham, and protecting against its vandalism, is also fine by me. Keeping a statue of Churchill is fine by me. Not putting up a statue of Bernard Manning is also fine by me.
Also, I don't think that declining to put up a new statue of General Haig represents a rewriting of history, although I agree that the burning of books, including those with which I have issues such as the holy bible, the quran, mein kampf, is reprehensible. I like books. Perhaps I'm a hypocrite. Albeit books are kept in libraries, not on plinths in the town centre.
I agree with you, albeit, there are some exceptions; it isn't a black and white issue. I am not in favour of all and every statue, or the removal of all and every statue. Removing statues of old slave owners who nobody reveres, like Colston, (and storing the staue in a warehouse) is fine by me. Putting up a statue of Thatcher in Grantham, and protecting against its vandalism, is also fine by me. Keeping a statue of Churchill is fine by me. Not putting up a statue of Bernard Manning is also fine by me.
Also, I don't think that declining to put up a new statue of General Haig represents a rewriting of history, although I agree that the burning of books, including those with which I have issues such as the holy bible, the quran, mein kampf, is reprehensible. I like books. Perhaps I'm a hypocrite. Albeit books are kept in libraries, not on plinths in the town centre.
Not everyone agreed with her , although lots of people did, but she didn’t kill anyone
I was hoping my comments were wooly enough to convey the same unease. This is the Greyest of Grey areas, my point was more the worry that globally people seem incapable of accepting another view or that the decisions made in a snapshot in history are not necessarily the ones that would be made now. Colston I get although throwing the statue in the Avon is going too far for me. Cecil Rhodes? More difficult although he clearly is an architect of some of Africa's problems now. Not sure there were a lot of street demonstrations against Imperialism at the time?
Captain Cook? Julius Caesar? Christopher Columbus? There are a lot of historical figures who judged through a 21st century lens don't come out of it too well. Where if anywhere is a line to be drawn?
Thatcher was a deliberately divisive figure who revelled in, and actively sought, conflict.
Putting up a statue of her and then having people throw eggs at it seems about right to me as a reflection on her life.
Eh? She started a pointless war to get re-elected when we were previously in the process of negotiating away sovereignty. That killed a thousand people.
I was hoping my comments were wooly enough to convey the same unease. This is the Greyest of Grey areas, my point was more the worry that globally people seem incapable of accepting another view or that the decisions made in a snapshot in history are not necessarily the ones that would be made now. Colston I get although throwing the statue in the Avon is going too far for me. Cecil Rhodes? More difficult although he clearly is an architect of some of Africa's problems now. Not sure there were a lot of street demonstrations against Imperialism at the time?
Captain Cook? Julius Caesar? Christopher Columbus? There are a lot of historical figures who judged through a 21st century lens don't come out of it too well. Where if anywhere is a line to be drawn?
Negotiating my a**e! What happened was that Sir John Nott-a-very-good-Defence-Secretary decided to scrap HMS Endurance, the Royal Navy's Antarctic patrol boat that protected the Falklands to save some money to spend on his lovely nuclear deterrents. General Galtieri, desperate to quell the unrest against his government in Argentina used his power of wishful thinking to assume this was an indication that the UK wouldn't exactly bust a gut to protect the rights of the Falkland islanders. So, for political gain, he ordered the invasion of the Falklands.
Boy, did he get that one badly wrong!
Try telling that to the families of the 323 killed on the ARA General Belgrano that was heading back to port.
You could argue both leaders got it badly wrong.
Eh? She started a pointless war to get re-elected when we were previously in the process of negotiating away sovereignty. That killed a thousand people.
We were at war, that ship posed a threat to British forces, even if only in the future.