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The British people honour Mrga Thatchula - David Guyatt - 11-04-2013 The BBC is in difficulties, it seems, according to the Daily Mail. The below song is trending heavily in the UK charts, reaching number 10 (synchronicity or what!). Do you Beeb play it in their top 40 countdown. Stay tuned See article HERE. The British people honour Mrga Thatchula - Peter Lemkin - 11-04-2013 :pointlaugh::rofl::popworm: The British people honour Mrga Thatchula - Adele Edisen - 13-04-2013 Fri, April 12, 2013 11:36:23 PM "Tribute" to Margret Thatcher From: Brasscheck TV <news@brasschecktv.com> If you like listening to Brits argue with each other in Parliament, you might enjoy this. There was a motion to honor the late Margaret Thatcher in some way. Not everyone agreed. Video: 8:04 minutes long Play to the very end. http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/22988.html - Brasscheck P.S. Please share Brasscheck TV e-mails and videos with friends and colleagues. That's how we grow. Thanks. ================================ Visit out partner sites: The Real Food Channel: http://RealFoodChannel.com The truth about the food you eat Real Econ TV: http://RealEconTV.com Financial news without the big bank baloney Jazz on the Tube: http://JazzontheTube.com Take a jazz break ================================ Brasscheck TV 2380 California St. San Francisco, CA 94115 Adele The British people honour Mrga Thatchula - Magda Hassan - 13-04-2013 Good old Glenda Jackson! Fantastic speech. Now she would make a decent PM. Adele Edisen Wrote:Fri, April 12, 2013 11:36:23 PM The British people honour Mrga Thatchula - David Guyatt - 15-04-2013 Thatchcula's funeral is becoming a political congratulations-didn't-she-do-well event. In imo, the right-wing are influencing police decisions behind the scenes to use the Public Order Act to inhibit protests, even though, there is a public right to express one's political views in protest. What is effectively a state funeral, i.e., a tax-payer funded media event, is not to be allowed to have opposing public participation. Quote:Protests over planned use of 'draconian' Public Order Act by police on day of Thatcher funeral Mustn't alarm or distress all those Thatcherites and other Neo-liberal, Mont Pelerin enthusiasts attending the funeral at London-Pyongyang don't you know. The police, in their magnanimity have announced that they will take no action if demonstrators present along the funeral route "turn their backs silently", which is thoughtful of them, because they could simply have insisted that anyone present must stand at attention, face front and weep to order. The British people honour Mrga Thatchula - David Guyatt - 17-04-2013 Today, all news channels are broadcasting wall to wall coverage of the de facto state funeral. To get ordinary news I'm having to watch Euronews and US stations. Whether I want it or not (I like millions of others don't) I'm opted in. The British people honour Mrga Thatchula - Magda Hassan - 17-04-2013 My deepest condolences David. My thoughts are with you all in the UK having to endure this massive public insult to your dignity, your intelligence, your memory and bank account.....it must be bleak indeed to turn to US media for a break. Can't wait till there is a statue of her and pigeons can shit all over her. David Guyatt Wrote:Today, all news channels are broadcasting wall to wall coverage of the de facto state funeral. To get ordinary news I'm having to watch Euronews and US stations. The British people honour Mrga Thatchula - David Guyatt - 17-04-2013 Magda Hassan Wrote:My deepest condolences David. My thoughts are with you all in the UK having to endure this massive public insult to your dignity, your intelligence, your memory and bank account.....it must be bleak indeed to turn to US media for a break. :pointlaugh::pointlaugh::drink: The British people honour Mrga Thatchula - Magda Hassan - 18-04-2013 It's Time to Bury Not Just Thatcher but Thatcherism She didn't save Britain or turn the economy round. We need to break with her failed model to escape its baleful consequences By Seumas Milne April 17, 2013 "The Guardian" - They have only themselves to blame.Protests were always likely at any official sendoff for the most socially destructive prime minister in modern British history. But by turning Margaret Thatcher's funeral into a state-funded Tory jamboree, puffed up with pomp and bombast, David Cameron and his acolytes have made them a certainty and fuelled a political backlash into the bargain. As the bishop of Grantham, Thatcher's home town, put it, spending £10m of public money to "glorify" her legacy in the month benefits are slashed and tax cuts handed to the rich is "asking for trouble". What's planned today isn't a national commemoration, but a military-backed party spectacle. It's a state funeral in all but name, laid on for none of the last seven prime ministers. Nothing of the kind has been seen since the death of Winston Churchill, who really did unite the country for a time against the mortal threat from Nazi Germany. Thatcher did the opposite, of course, though every effort will be made today to milk her short but bloody colonial conflict in the south Atlantic for all its jingoistic worth. It's hardly a surprise that 60% of the population oppose the public subsidy, or that Buckingham Palace is alarmed at the funeral's regal dimensions. Now the decision to silence Big Ben has tipped the whole saga into the realm of offensive absurdity. There's been much talk about a need for dignity and respect. But the prospect of the leader of a class war government being treated like a respected head of state is itself an insult to the half of Britain that recoils from her memory and the millions of people whose communities were devastated by her policies. From the moment the former prime minister died there has been a determined drive by the Tories and their media allies to rewrite history and rehabilitate a deeply damaged brand. For a few days of fawning wall-to-wall coverage it seemed like that might be working, as happened in the US after Ronald Reagan's death in 2004. But a week on, it's clear the revisionists have overplayed their hand. Anger and revulsion keep bursting into the open. Simply raising her record reminds people of the price paid for unrelenting deregulation, privatisation and tax handouts to the rich; why she was so unpopular across Britain when she was in power; and the striking similarity with what's being done by today's Tory-led coalition. So there's been no polling bounce for Cameron, even as he claimed that Thatcher "saved our country". And while people recognise her strength, polls show clear opposition to many of her flagship policies, including privatisation (only a quarter think it's delivered a better service). Most don't believe she "put the 'Great' back into Great Britain" at all, her economic policies are seen to have done "more harm than good", and her legacy is regarded as one of division and inequality. Which is what the facts show. Far from saving Britain, Thatcher's government delivered rampant inequality, social breakdown, disastrous financial deregulation, pulverising deindustrialisation and mass unemployment. A North Sea oil bonanza was frittered away on tax cuts for the wealthy and a swollen benefits bill as public services were run down, child poverty escalated and social mobility ground to a halt. But for all that, her apologists insist, Thatcher did what was necessary to turn Britain's economy round. But she didn't. Growth during the 1980s, at 2.4%, was exactly the same as during the turbulent 1970s and lower again in the post-Thatcher 1990s, at 2.2% while in the corporatist 1960s it averaged over 3%. And despite claims of a Thatcher "productivity miracle", productivity growth was also higher in the 60s (and it's gone into reverse under Cameron). What her government did do was redistribute growth from the poor to the rich, driving up profits and slashing employees' share of national income through her assault on trade unions. That's why it felt like a boom in better-off Britain, as the top rate of tax was more than halved, while real incomes fell for the poorest 40% in her first decade in power. You only have to rehearse what Thatcher's government unleashed a generation ago to recognise the continuity with what's been happening ever since: first under John Major, then under New Labour, and now under Cameron: privatisation, liberalisation, low taxes for the wealthy and rising inequality. Thatcher was Britain's first woman prime minister, but her policies hit women hardest, just as Cameron's are doing today, while Tony Blair says he saw his job as "to build on some of the things she had done rather than reverse them". But Thatcherism was only an early variant (following her friend General Pinochet, the Chilean dictator) of what became the neoliberal capitalism adopted or imposed across the world for the next generation. And it's that model which imploded in the crash of 2008. As even the free-market Economist conceded last week, while demanding "more Thatcherism, not less", her reforms could be said to have "sowed the seeds" of the current crisis. Like other true believers, the magazine's editors fret that the pendulum is now swinging away from the neoliberal model. So does Blair, who remains locked in the politics of the boom years and whose comfort zone remains attacking his own party. So he's launched a coded assault on Labour's leader, Ed Miliband,for supposedly thinking a crisis caused by under-regulated markets will lead to a shift to the left. There's certainly no automatic basis for such a shift. As history shows, the right can also take advantage of economic breakdowns and often has. But more than 20 years after Thatcher was forced out of office, the evidence is that most British people remain stubbornly resistant to her individualistic small-state philosophy, believing for example that it's the government's job to redistribute income across the spectrum and guarantee a decent minimum income for all. And crucially, the economic model that underpinned the policies of Thatcher and her successors is broken. As the Labour frontbencher Jon Trickett argued this week, we need a "rupture" with the "existing economic settlement" the Thatcher settlement. That's the challenge of the politics of our time, not only in Britain. As we remember blighted lives and communities today, it's time not just to bury Thatcher, but Thatcherism itself.
The British people honour Mrga Thatchula - David Guyatt - 18-04-2013 To highlight the hate and distrust Thatcher was held in by great swathes of the population, when her death was announced, celebrations were held: [ATTACH=CONFIG]4614[/ATTACH] Revellers in Glasgow vent their long-held urge to dance on Margaret Thatcher's grave. Photograph: David Moir/Reuters From The Guardian. |