Petition against M. THatcher day

Started by sebigboss79, 01 March 2014, 09:50:26 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

FierceKitty

Bury her at the crossroads with a stake through her heart. If she had one, as a better Tory might have said.
I don't drink coffee to wake up. I wake up to drink coffee.

Hertsblue

01 March 2014, 10:23:13 AM #2 Last Edit: 01 March 2014, 10:32:11 AM by Hertsblue
But then, neither of you is English....
When you realise we're all mad, life makes a lot more sense.

www.rulesdepot.net

SV52

Quote from: Hertsblue on 01 March 2014, 10:23:13 AM
But then, neither of you are English....

By English I assume you mean British as she was PM of Great Britain, England hasn't had one since 1707. Problem is this nonsense would apply throughout the so-called UK. Before you cast aspersions at rebellious Scots, best to take a poll in northern England on the late Maggie's popularity.
"The time has come, the walrus said..."

2017 Paint-Off - Winner!

FierceKitty

I'm not, but my grandfather devoted five years of his life to fighting for the Empire.

Apart from that, if she hadn't done what she did to British education, I might be having an easier time when reading the bizarre grammar on many of these posts.

And if someone tries to start WWIII and wreck civilisation, I'd say we were all stakeholders. Pass the mallet.
I don't drink coffee to wake up. I wake up to drink coffee.

Sandinista

Burning in hell for eternity is far to good for that bitch  >:(  but then this is probably not the forum for this

Nosher

Ahhhhh... Politics...... that great old opinion divider :)

Maggie might have been a tough old boot but she had a pair bigger than any of todays 'legend in their own lunchtime' oxygen thiefs.

And before anyone starts about polls in the North, I'm from the North and watched the devastation of the miners strike at first hand.

I wont be signing, but can understand why others would. Regardless of the result what this government wants will go ahead anyway. Anyone remember the public outcry about her funeral... (:|
I don't think my wife likes me very much, when I had a heart attack she wrote for an ambulance.

Frank Carson

sebigboss79

I did not attempt to start infighting and bad mood here gentlemen.

Matter of fact the bill would only be applying to England, Wales and Northern Ireland (as stated in the text).

My personal believe is that this woman has done bad things to this country where I live in (Great Britain) and to honour HER with a public holiday whereas much more renowned personnel has not received similar honours is a disgrace (Churchill, Drake, Watt, Darwin, Adam Smith...)

Besides personal preferences and political snipes I ask to keep this sporty please.

FierceKitty

Shakespeare, Turner, Pope, Newton, Darwin....To do it for any politician is absurd!
I don't drink coffee to wake up. I wake up to drink coffee.

Nosher

Quote from: sebigboss79 on 01 March 2014, 10:48:29 AM
I did not attempt to start infighting and bad mood here gentlemen.

Matter of fact the bill would only be applying to England, Wales and Northern Ireland (as stated in the text).

My personal believe is that this woman has done bad things to this country where I live in (Great Britain) and to honour HER with a public holiday whereas much more renowned personnel has not received similar honours is a disgrace (Churchill, Drake, Watt, Darwin, Adam Smith...)

Besides personal preferences and political snipes I ask to keep this sporty please.

Personally I didn't think this post thread has got un-sporty, but thats the nature of the politics/thatcher theme. It will invariably divide opinion like marmite... see my new post/poll ;)
I don't think my wife likes me very much, when I had a heart attack she wrote for an ambulance.

Frank Carson

sebigboss79

Quote from: Nosher on 01 March 2014, 10:58:31 AM
Personally I didn't think this post thread has got un-sporty, but thats the nature of the politics/thatcher theme. It will invariably divide opinion like marmite... see my new post/poll ;)

I was merely attempting to calm the waves before a potential storm. It is understood that certain topics (politics, football, marmite...) are a bit controversial.

FierceKitty

Though I'm not sure why this is in the "Wargaming Topics" forum, mind you.
I don't drink coffee to wake up. I wake up to drink coffee.

Ithoriel

Quote from: FierceKitty on 01 March 2014, 11:25:40 AM
Though I'm not sure why this is in the "Wargaming Topics" forum, mind you.

Because it's shaping up nicely to become a war in here? :D

Met the old bat once and, while I loathed her politics, she was definitely one of the better politicians face-to-face. She engaged with you, if she was talking to you she was talking to you, whoever you were. Several others I've met in social situations were far to busy looking round the room for someone important whilst talking AT you.

Didn't stop me sniggering at Frankie Boyle's comment about Thatcher's funeral, mind you.
There are 100 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who can work from incomplete data

Steve J

Coming from East Anglia I had a very different view of the Thatcher Years. As an example:

- The Unions didn't give a toss about those who suffered in the Eastern Counties as they were and are most likely to be, always Conservative. I know from bitter experience when my Dad was laid off. This contrasts markedly with what happened in the Midlands and the North. A farm labourer without work and in the middle of the Fens suffered just as much as a miner in the North East.

- After the 'Winter of Discontent' the first term of the new Conservative administration felt like a breath of fresh air in comparison. Almost exactly the same was felt when Tony Blair won his first election. Both leaders then went from bad to worse in successive terms IMHO.

- After the terrible decade of the '70s, the '80s under Thatcher felt wonderful in comparison. Working in the design industry, we finally started to sort out decades of mis-administration in manufacturing, with the Unions and mangement equally to blame. London at this time was a great place to be where anything seemed possible.

I for one was glad of the 'wind of change' that the Thatcher era brought in, just as I was with Tony Blair. However I can see no reason whatever for changing the August Bank Holiday into a Thatcher one.

sunjester

Of course it really helps the "cause" if:

1. People have even the slightest awareness of current affairs relating to their "cause" - the bill to change August BH to Margaret Thatcher Day actually failed it's second reading yesterday, before this thread was started!

2. Those raising petitions for public consumption used a spell checker (given that everyone's education in the UK was personally destroyed by Maggie) - what is a "poposal" or a "Holday"?

I'll just point out here that I have no more time for "Maggie Thatcher Milk Snatcher" that I do for that back-stabbing little sh** Blair....not true at least Maggie wasn't a war criminal and she waited for someone to invade us before starting a war!