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Previously on "Why are some folk keen on making a point at the funeral?"

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  • shaunbhoy
    replied
    I will always be grateful to Maggie for trialling all-day Pub opening in Scotland the year I turned 18!!

    As for almost everything else, she can burn in hell, the condescending old trout!!

    Leave a comment:


  • sasguru
    replied
    Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
    How come there was less unemployment in 2004 than there was in 1979?

    .
    Simples. There are now 1.7 million (!!!!) long term sick (i.e. on some form of disability benefit) that are not counted in the unemployment stats.

    Leave a comment:


  • DodgyAgent
    replied
    Originally posted by darmstadt View Post
    It was like a brick wall being hit with a demolition ball, the ignorant against the arrogant.
    How do you know what it was? I thought you had fled abroad to feather your own nest

    Leave a comment:


  • darmstadt
    replied
    Originally posted by DodgyAgent View Post
    She did try very hard to negotiate reform with the miners and Scargill saw this as an opportunity to wage a class war
    It was like a brick wall being hit with a demolition ball, the ignorant against the arrogant.

    Leave a comment:


  • Goatfell
    replied
    Originally posted by doodab View Post
    By ensuring they had zero industry to depend on? She needed to do to build some resilience and potential for recovery into the system before she pulled the plug.
    Well, obviously that wouldn't have worked as there was no slack in the workforce for redeployment due to the full employment in those pre-Thatcher Golden Years.

    She 'didn't pull the plug', it had taken many decades for most of these titans to finally go belly up, she was merely present at the last rites.

    Leave a comment:


  • doodab
    replied
    Originally posted by DodgyAgent View Post
    She did try very hard to negotiate reform with the miners and Scargill saw this as an opportunity to wage a class war
    Agreed. It takes two to tango and Scargill was a bit of a ****.

    Leave a comment:


  • DodgyAgent
    replied
    Originally posted by doodab View Post
    TBH she may have been best off continuing to subsidize the coal industry. That's what the West Germans did and it seems to have worked for them.
    She did try very hard to negotiate reform with the miners and Scargill saw this as an opportunity to wage a class war

    Leave a comment:


  • doodab
    replied
    Originally posted by DodgyAgent View Post
    Zero industry - stats please? and how was she to build anything with no money to invest? Are you suggesting

    1. Money grows on trees?
    2. Rather than make welfare payments money should be used on investing?

    Most importantly What exactly do you mean by investing?
    TBH she may have been best off continuing to subsidize the coal industry. That's what the West Germans did and it seems to have worked for them.

    In fact you could argue that she was driven ideologically to close the mines, not by her belief in free markets, but by her opposition to reliance on fossil fuels.
    Last edited by doodab; 15 April 2013, 11:27.

    Leave a comment:


  • DodgyAgent
    replied
    Originally posted by doodab View Post
    Sorry, lets get this straight, you're arguing that although unemployment went up sharply under thatcher and didn't recover until 14 years after she left office that it was all none of her doing? And because these areas have partly recovered after 20 years she didn't do any harm?



    By ensuring they had zero industry to depend on? She needed to do to build some resilience and potential for recovery into the system before she pulled the plug.
    Zero industry - stats please? and how was she to build anything with no money to invest? Are you suggesting

    1. Money grows on trees?
    2. Rather than make welfare payments money should be used on investing?

    Most importantly What exactly do you mean by investing?

    Leave a comment:


  • northernladuk
    replied
    Be interesting to see the news coverage and see how many of these 'protesters' are even old enough to remember her in office. Looking at the pictures of the 'celebrations' in Liverpool it just looked like another excuse for the lawless to cause trouble. I am not sure how 20 odd year old scouse hoodies can understand what she did or who she is.

    Leave a comment:


  • original PM
    replied
    hmm I think to get the changes needed (such as removing 1 industry towns) you will always need to wait a generation to see the benefits.

    Many of the people affected by the changes Thatcher made will be bitter (and it was hard on them) - but they are missing the fact it offered their children more opportunity.

    It will be the same if sweeping changes are made to the benefits system (for example not giving free money/housing to girls who see pregnancy as a career choice).

    It will be tough for that generation but not so for the next generation as it will not be an option for them.

    Leave a comment:


  • ZARDOZ
    replied
    Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
    If your argument is "there are no jobs", as we often hear today, have a look at the unemployment figures:

    United Kingdom Unemployment Rate

    Unemployment went up significantly in the mid-80s, but then fell again through to the end of Thatcher's reign until the recession messed it up a bit, before continuing to fall again. If it's really true that Thatcher destroyed industry, destroyed whole areas, and left people with no hope of ever finding work again in their lifetimes as we always hear, where are all those people? How come there was less unemployment in 2004 than there was in 1979?


    .
    That's an easy one to answer, because being on long term benefits doesn't classify as being unemployed, therefore it doesn't count in the statistics. Prior to 79, there wasn't so many hidden unemployed.

    Leave a comment:


  • doodab
    replied
    Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
    If your argument is "there are no jobs", as we often hear today, have a look at the unemployment figures:

    United Kingdom Unemployment Rate

    Unemployment went up significantly in the mid-80s, but then fell again through to the end of Thatcher's reign until the recession messed it up a bit, before continuing to fall again. If it's really true that Thatcher destroyed industry, destroyed whole areas, and left people with no hope of ever finding work again in their lifetimes as we always hear, where are all those people? How come there was less unemployment in 2004 than there was in 1979?
    Sorry, lets get this straight, you're arguing that although unemployment went up sharply under thatcher and didn't recover until 14 years after she left office that it was all none of her doing? And because these areas have partly recovered after 20 years she didn't do any harm?

    Thatcher did ensure that whole towns aren't dependent on a single industry, although you may not like the way she did it, you obviously agree that it was the right thing to do.
    By ensuring they had zero industry to depend on? She needed to do to build some resilience and potential for recovery into the system before she pulled the plug.

    Leave a comment:


  • VectraMan
    replied
    Originally posted by doodab View Post
    Lets take the "what could she have done differently" argument and turn it around. Where should they have gone?
    If your argument is "there are no jobs", as we often hear today, have a look at the unemployment figures:

    United Kingdom Unemployment Rate

    Unemployment went up significantly in the mid-80s, but then fell again through to the end of Thatcher's reign until the recession messed it up a bit, before continuing to fall again. If it's really true that Thatcher destroyed industry, destroyed whole areas, and left people with no hope of ever finding work again in their lifetimes as we always hear, where are all those people? How come there was less unemployment in 2004 than there was in 1979?

    Surely it is the governments job to implement an economic strategy that ensures that whole towns aren't dependent on a single employer, especially when that government is about to pull the plug on said employer.
    I agree completely. But that wasn't Thatcher. That was all the years of state run industry and control that preceeded her. Thatcher did ensure that whole towns aren't dependent on a single industry, although you may not like the way she did it, you obviously agree that it was the right thing to do.

    I'm not sure why it would be "undemocratic" or "unfair to the majority" to take short term measures to transform or revitalise a failing local economy.
    You're still not saying what those measures actually should have been. Please tell us.

    Leave a comment:


  • minestrone
    replied
    Originally posted by doodab View Post
    I'm not sure this is true. Historically we led the world at mass production, and even today British high tech manufacturers are as good as any you'll find. Where we lost out was in semiconductor and electronics manufacture. We practically invented the computer and many of the early firms were British. That we don't have an IBM, HP, Intel or Samsung in the UK is, to my mind, the single greatest failure of industrial and economic policy since the war.
    We were rubbish, when I went to do mechanical in the early 90s the courses at recently been altered by the institute to add in 'manufacturing sciences' and management that were never taught before. It is inconceivable that we were punting out graduates that had no clue about quality, stats or how to manage a production process.

    Much of the drive to do this stuff in other countries came from industry but we had British Leyland and not Toyota.

    Leave a comment:

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