Nicola_Red wrote:I loved this quote from Billy Bragg:
This is not a time for celebration. The death of Margaret Thatcher is nothing more than a salient reminder of how Britain got into the mess that we are in today. Raising a glass to the death of an infirm old lady changes none of this.
If he isn't being a dick about it, nobody has to be. And by that I don't really mean anyone here - more some people I know on facebook than anyone.
I've a lot of respect for Mr Bragg, and I wish I could feel the same clear-headed right thinking way - but I know too many people who were affected by her to not feel as though the spirit of the nation has lifted albeit by a tiny amount with her no longer being here.
And I can't help but read the things my friends and peers keep saying. This for a prime example...
For
The Miners
The Shipbuilders
The Steelworkers
The Old that Froze to Death
The Old that Couldn't Afford Food
For the Thousands Made Homeless
For
The North
The Disenfranchised Black Youth
The Lost Generation of Young
The Hillsborough families
The men dead in a conflict designed to win her an election
The men traumatised from the Falklands War
For Northern Ireland
For
my mam and dad
my Grandparents
my brother
every LGBT kid who committed suicide due to Section 28 in schools
The teachers
The victims of gaybashing which were never investigated due to pressure from her government
For the gay men stitched up and banged up for being gay
For
The women of Greenham Common who were beaten and had their kids forcibly taken into care for no reason
For the men and women assaulted in the Battle of the Beanfield
For the men and women consigned to the scrapheap
For the services that used to belong to all of us and now are badly run in the hands of the rich
For the country that used to stand for social justice and created the National Health Service
The mentally ill thrown out on the streets
The children abused in care homes and ignored or worse abused by some in her government
I celebrate the death of a woman who caused so much pain