Abolishing full stops was her biggest mistake though.
I know I know punctuation was never a strong point of mine, reading anything I write my best advise would be that one should always take a very deep breath before you start.
Abolishing full stops was her biggest mistake though.
Like her or loathe her, Margaret Thatcher never avoided tough decisions…
At the time I thought she was evil heartless @#%& without an ounce of compassion, as with many things as one ages our views opinions and tastes evolve I am now in my sixties and with the benefit of hindsight over the intervening years One can reflect as such I now think she was the most evil heartless #**%@ with out an once of compassion who did no lasting good, with no industrial base no British owned motorcar industry same for steel all the oil was sold off and not reinvested (see Norway for how it should have been done) no renewal of the council housing stock which was sold off, the destruction of trades unions the selling off of our assets rail, BT, Gas, Electricity parts of the Post Office, parts of the NHS (see Capita) the throwing of a generation onto the scrap heap with no jobs no hope while allowing free reign to assist stripping money people no one has ever heard of making millions on the backs of the masses, I cannot genuinely think of one thing she got right evil pure evil
Whoever it was is always going to get criticised, but as the vaccination programme is still part of the overall pandemic in my opinion, I think Boris has done just as well as anyone else was lively too.
Major sold off BT, gas and electricity etc. I still have the carriage clock from the electricity board I was working for.
At the time I thought she was evil heartless @#%& without an ounce of compassion, as with many things as one ages our views opinions and tastes evolve I am now in my sixties and with the benefit of hindsight over the intervening years One can reflect as such I now think she was the most evil heartless #**%@ with out an once of compassion who did no lasting good, with no industrial base no British owned motorcar industry same for steel all the oil was sold off and not reinvested (see Norway for how it should have been done) no renewal of the council housing stock which was sold off, the destruction of trades unions the selling off of our assets rail, BT, Gas, Electricity parts of the Post Office, parts of the NHS (see Capita) the throwing of a generation onto the scrap heap with no jobs no hope while allowing free reign to assist stripping money people no one has ever heard of making millions on the backs of the masses, I cannot genuinely think of one thing she got right evil pure evil
Apart from the gold reserve debacle
Like her or loathe her, Margaret Thatcher never avoided tough decisions…
Lt Col William Kilgore from Apocalypse Now
He’s a morally bankrupt, elitist, misogynistic, racist, odious, serial lying man-child philanderer, but apart from that, yes it’s all pretty darn swell having ‘Boris’ as people strangely persist in calling him, at the helm. Did you refer to Cameron as simply ‘David’ or May as simply ‘Theresa’ in the same manner?
Which has subsequently been well and truly superceded by our £37 billion Track and Trace failure.
But, he wore the wrong coat to an Armistice Day commemoration...?The chuckle brothers. Even just the dead one.
More seriously if Corbyn had been in charge the probability is we'd have had:
A people's bank to support small businesses (in the manifesto)
We'd all have free internet. Which we now know is a necessity.
The NHS would have more money and wouldn't have suffered even more privatisation.
He would have actually followed the science and we'd have far less deaths. Or if you prefer need have followed the unions quicker than BJ did and we'd have far fewer deaths.
We'd probably have introduced a universal basic income, removing the penury many suffer under universal credit as well as targeting relief more effectively and for less cost than the furlough scheme.
We'd have recognised public transport is a public service and at the very least have fully renationalised rail, which would at least legally have been possible at less cost than the sums we're paying private foreign companies to run the service.
On the other hand we would have criticized Israel and maybe got billionaires to pay tax so a narrow escape eh?
Why strange? It's not without precedent. Thatcher was widely known as 'Maggie', and Churchill was often spoken of as 'Winnie'. And come to think of it, no, we didn't refer to Cameron as David, but 'Call me Dave' was in common usage.
His family call him Alec. Boris is his third name but he chose it deliberately for politics as it’s more user friendly than Alexander.
The chuckle brothers. Even just the dead one.
More seriously if Corbyn had been in charge the probability is we'd have had:
A people's bank to support small businesses (in the manifesto)
We'd all have free internet. Which we now know is a necessity.
The NHS would have more money and wouldn't have suffered even more privatisation.
He would have actually followed the science and we'd have far less deaths. Or if you prefer need have followed the unions quicker than BJ did and we'd have far fewer deaths.
We'd probably have introduced a universal basic income, removing the penury many suffer under universal credit as well as targeting relief more effectively and for less cost than the furlough scheme.
We'd have recognised public transport is a public service and at the very least have fully renationalised rail, which would at least legally have been possible at less cost than the sums we're paying private foreign companies to run the service.
On the other hand we would have criticized Israel and maybe got billionaires to pay tax so a narrow escape eh?