goldfinger
- 09 Jun 2005 12:25
Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).
Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.
cheers GF.
Haystack
- 13 Apr 2013 02:20
- 23717 of 81564
Labour wasn't working as a government. That was pretty clear.
Fred1new
- 13 Apr 2013 08:58
- 23718 of 81564
Cynic,
Post, 23705
No not replying to you, but the Dumbo Hays.
To me, Diana appeared to be a relatively harmless naive young woman, not very bright, (but brighter than Hays), who was popular with the country and seemed to as useful in her role, as any of the other member that family is.
I think with the "state" at that time, it would have been difficult not to have given her a state burial, especially after Blair, with his little speech, had grab the public attention and whipped up the hysteria around her death. I winced when I heard his "little speech" eulogising her.)
But, strangely there seemed little animosity to-wards her and many seemed to unite and support her.
Thatcher was psychopathic, (Hays look up meaning) malevolent, divisive woman, but nevertheless a PM. (She had divided the torie party and those divisions are still there.)
If it was the practice to give "state burials", so be it, but it isn't and the tories are producing a "political stunt" at the expense of the public, unless of course there is going to be a "whip around at party headquarters".
Perhaps, hoping the hysteria being created around her funeral will be of benefit to the party cause.
Of course, Hays will be dipping deep into his pockets as a mark of his respect for the dear lady.
------------------
As far her benefit to the country as a whole, she reminds me of the surgeon congratulating himself after cutting off a patient's broken leg, because it was quicker than pinning, splintering and a period of rest.
Didn't matter that the patient couldn't walk again, unaided.
But each to their own mother.
cynic
- 13 Apr 2013 09:04
- 23719 of 81564
the tories are producing a "political stunt" .... fred - that is a total and utter distortion of the truth and well you know it! .... the funeral arrangements were put in place by the last labour administration
merely as as aside about Diana - she may not have been the most intellectual lightbulb, but she certainly learnt to use her charm to its best effect and did a lot of work with a great many valuable charities ...... that said, the ultimate hysteria following her death assuredly got ridiculously out of hand
skinny
- 13 Apr 2013 09:16
- 23720 of 81564
"chris carson my daughter was in the falkland war and was in port stanley
she does not say much about it as she sign to serve the queen and country
she was also in barain . did you fight for your country"
tanker - how old was your daughter in 1982?
Fred1new
- 13 Apr 2013 09:24
- 23721 of 81564
Cynic,
Was that in hopeful expectation, or planning a hit squad.
cynic
- 13 Apr 2013 09:47
- 23722 of 81564
MT's funeral arrangements? ..... don't remember how or exactly why they were put in place or what triggered the debate about them at the time ...... in honesty, this (rather/very silly) debate on here has dragged on long enough with the usual extraneous crap being spouted from several sources
Fred1new
- 13 Apr 2013 09:56
- 23723 of 81564
Yes Dad!
We will all be quiet!
3 monkies
- 13 Apr 2013 10:08
- 23724 of 81564
Thank Heavens for that.
Fred1new
- 13 Apr 2013 10:41
- 23725 of 81564
But I am not making a sound!
;-)
Haystack
- 13 Apr 2013 11:10
- 23726 of 81564
Princess Di was the result of a highly privileged upbringing and achieved nothing. I can think of plenty derogatory adjectives to apply to her but I won't post them. She would have been fine as the wife of someone from a similar background and not much else. The public's opinion is not important. She caught a certain mood at the time and not much more. I have never seen the the appeal that she had. Being popular with the public is pretty meaningless. The public never did have any sense or good taste. Her only value and legacy has been the large number of jokes about her.
2517GEORGE
- 13 Apr 2013 11:51
- 23727 of 81564
'The public never did have any sense or good taste.' Strange statement.
2517
Haystack
- 13 Apr 2013 12:30
- 23728 of 81564
If the government listened to public opinion all the time we we would be in a mess. When you get public opinion about any topic you get an average. The average is almost always wrong. If I put one hand in the oven and one in the freezer then on average I am comfortable. Public opinion would mean that we would have capital punishment. When we reflect MPs we are choosing people who we think will do the right thing in many situations.
Dil
- 13 Apr 2013 12:33
- 23729 of 81564
Being popular with the public meant there was no debate about who paid for her funeral arrangements Haystack.
Why we should foot the bill for MT is beyond me.
Haystack
- 13 Apr 2013 12:36
- 23730 of 81564
Her renogociation of the EU rebate against the other leaders has netted us £79 billion so far. That's reason enough. By the way Blair unnecessarily gave back a large slice of that rebate.
2517GEORGE
- 13 Apr 2013 12:36
- 23731 of 81564
Is this the same public opinion that have voted MT as the best PM, and if so how does that square with your statement?
2517
Haystack
- 13 Apr 2013 12:38
- 23732 of 81564
From 2009
Tony Blair’s decision to cut a large part of the European Union rebate has cost the economy £9.3billion, new figures show.
The former prime minister was criticised for failing to win concessions when he decided to axe the UK’s Brussels rebate four years ago.
Now figures calculated by House of Commons researchers show that Britain will have lost out on €10.5billion (£9.3billion) by not receiving the full rebate between 2007 and 2013, calculated at 2004 prices.
Haystack
- 13 Apr 2013 12:42
- 23733 of 81564
As had been said earlier, the form of Mrs T funeral was decided by the last Labour government. Take your complaints to Brown's chums: Balls and Miliband.
Haystack
- 13 Apr 2013 13:25
- 23734 of 81564
Whether you like or loath Mrs T will depend in part on whether you are old enough to have experienced the awful 1970s. If you take 1973 as a base, which was when the trouble with militant unions was at its height and just before the three day week in 1974. That is 40 years ago. Anyone who was at least say 15 then and experienced all the union trouble and the battle to decide who runs the country, unions or government, would be at least 55 now and most would be 60 plus now. It would be interesting to see the poll figures from people with an informed opinion. The bulk of trouble and activism is, as usual, from people far too young to have any idea of what really went on.
Scargill had seen how it had been possible to bring down the weak Heath government by causing strikes. Thatcher knew she was going to get more of the same. She built up coal stocks and was ready for Scargill. Right on cue, Scargill called a strike with no vote allowed for his union members. Scargill was so sure of victory that he called the strike in summer when coal usage is very low. Some mineworkers wanted to keep working and flying pickets bullied them into giving up. There was a smaller more militant group within the union that instigated violence, culminating in the dropping of a concrete block on someone from a bridge, killing him. Union members asked regularly for a vote during the strick, but Scargill refused every time as he knew the members had wanted to settle the strike months earlier.
Don't forget that the minors' union was getting funds from the Soviet government at the time.
2517GEORGE
- 13 Apr 2013 13:34
- 23735 of 81564
Haystack, I take it that reply was for Dil (post 23731). I find it a strange comment to make (post 23728) in light of the fact that you are taking the same public opinion to support your view (and mine also) of MT being the best PM.
I happen to believe that she came along at the right time for the country, notwithstanding there are a good many people with (perhaps rightly in their case) a huge sense of injustice and unfairness, just as there is now with the coalition and most certainly during Labour's wasteful years. Governments whatever their persuasion will not please everyone.
2517
Haystack
- 13 Apr 2013 13:57
- 23736 of 81564
Tony Blair said recently, "when you decide, you divide".
When Mrs T came along the country was already divided. The sides were the unions and the majority of the country who hated the unions.