Gritt23
New member
Alright Barbara, keep yer Alan's on. This is 30 years later.
Lol. No idea what you mean, but it did make me laugh.
Was it supposed to?
Alright Barbara, keep yer Alan's on. This is 30 years later.
Totally incorrect, most mines were still perfectly capable of turning a profit
How many did Labour shut in the 10 years prior to Thatcher to balance the debate, do tell?
Ahh the sweet smell of innocent naivety......
The National Conference of the NUM had already approved the strike.
I would, remind me where are those weapons of mass destruction ?
There is no way on Gods earth that Blair is hated as much as Thatcher in this country. Absolutely no way.
I'm not arguing that Scargill didn't have his own agenda, but it saddens me to think that Thatcherites can white wash everything that went on with this idea that Scargill deliberately manipulated a mass of mute miners as if there was nothing at stake except the future of the Tories in government. It's a nonsense. Thousands of British workers lost their jobs over this, arguably needlessly.
I've no interest in starting another dull argument with you, thanks.
My point was not that a lot of people don't dislike Blair, for the decisions he made - a great many clearly do. My point was that I think you under-estimate the level of HATRED that a lot of people still hold for Margaret Thatcher.
It wasn't just the hard edged decisions she took, but also, the total lack of empathy that she displayed. It made it easy to caricature her almost as a witch.
On a personal level, when Thatcher was in power, I was an ideallistic, impressionable, politically active student, rather than the married, setlled family man of Blair's tenure. Things are much more black and white in those times, and my personal feelings regarding Thatcher and her legacy are subsequently far stronger than toward Blair and his.
Exactly, at least Blair, at the beginning made huge leaps forward in social reform. Thatcher just got stuck in the minute she was an MP and as soon as she became PM you could kiss goodbye to a fair country. This is unfortunately what happens when women are given any kind of power. It happens with women in the workplace, they feel they've had to work harder so feel they must impress their authority but lose sight of what they are actually there to do, but on a much bigger scale. Shame really, because some women show potential until they actually get what they wish for.
I will when you do. And it was you who first said it was the case.Prove it then, all ears
It's not naive, it's correct. There was no ballot of any miners about calling a strike. This caused a split between the miners i.e those who did and those who did not want an immediate complete all out strike. This actually lead to a breakaway from the NUM of the U(nion) D(emocratcic) M(iners) whom wanted to work (predominately around Nottinghamshire).
It was Scargill's utter crapness at leading his members that led to the miners downfall. The man wanted a fight (well really a revolution) got one and lost.....and dragged the miners (whom not all were behind him by any means causing the union to split) and the industry down with him.
I will when you do. And it was you who first said it was the case.
But I can leave you with anecdotal evidence of how she polarised opinion: I was once walking about in central London when I came across the biggest queue I have ever seen from a shop - it must have been several hundred people. As I approached the source, I saw SIX armed police at the front of a book shop, and a sign proclaiming Margaret Thatcher was signing her autobiography.
A queue that size was not normal, and nor was the need for armed police. Considering I once literally bumped into Ken Clarke in duty free at Heathrow when he was chancellor of the exchequor at the time with no obvious security in sight, I think that tells you all you need to know about Thatcher. You either loved her or hated her.
She was voted in by 40% of the popular vote at most, and an awful lot of those votes were by default as Labour were considered a shambles for several years by middle England. So there is no way that more than half of those voters considered her "the greatest post war leader" I'm afraid, whatever sycophants like you choose to peddle.
I suspect many more people hate blair for taking us into a war we should not be in
You sound like a simpleton when you go off on one like that. No-one is saying Labour should be thanked for sending us to war ARE THEY?Off course you have no interest you just want me to agree with you which I don't.
Everybody clearly love labour for entering a war on a lie and also forcing the country into a huge recession - what a wonderful life they have given us all
And therein lies the flawed logic of strikes, because the length of strike, and the lack of maintenance of equipment during this period only makes it more likely that MORE closures happen. It's the case in a lot of businesses, but in an industry that is so dangerous to start with, and where equipment was probably needing pretty regular maintenance, it just exacerbated the problem.
It's one thing to try to argue with the Givernment that one mine or another could stay open and remain economic, but the longer teh strike continued the harder that argument would become to win, because of the reasons you give.
Shift the blame? What the f*** are you on about? YOU said Blair was more unpopular than Thatch. I disagreed. YOU asked ME to prove I was right without bothering to do so yourself.Ah, nice and defensive you seem so certain but now shift the blame - I take you are a labour supported as this is generally what they do
Off course you have no interest you just want me to agree with you which I don't.
Everybody clearly love labour for entering a war on a lie and also forcing the country into a huge recession - what a wonderful life they have given us all
What the f*** in the name of Sam Allardyce's ringpiece are you on about...?