At some point, possibly quite soon, a
great many people in the UK are going to be holding parties to mark
the death of a sick, frail old woman. And these will not be
commemorations or celebrations of that person's life but a big, loud
good riddance.
During her political career, Margaret
Thatcher divided people, in more ways than one. She was a strong
personality with distinct views about how the world worked, and how
it ought to work. The British public either loved her or loathed her
in a way that the recent movie with Meryl Streep really doesn't do
justice to. She divided people not because of her personality, but
because of her actions. For many in parts of the English North and
Midlands, in Wales and Scotland, her legacy is the complete
destruction of the UK mining industry, along with the decimation of
most manufacturing industries.
There is a Facebook group called “The
Witch is Dead!” which is an umbrella for flashmob public parties
when the news of Lady Thatcher's demise is released. Even before it
happens we can be sure of the media coverage; the (generally
right-leaning) British press will deplore the lack of respect to
anyone, let alone such a great statesperson. The Guardian and
probably the Independent will examine the reasons for such strong
feelings in light of Thatcher's legacy and the current Conservative /
Liberal coalition pursuing such similar – although arguably even
more extreme – policies.
The current government have not helped
matters on this, quietly floating the suggestion that Lady Thatcher
should be given a state funeral – an honour only granted to one
other Prime Minister in the last century. Winston Churchill was given
a state funeral for being the leader who saw Britain through WW2, and
few would have denied him that privilege. But he was also a member of
the British aristocracy, pillar of the Upper Class Tory
establishment. Clement Atlee, the Labour Prime Minister whose
landslide victory following the war allowed him, even with Britain
battered by six years of conflict and lumbered with a war debt that
was only paid off this century, built the modern welfare state that
gave everyone in Britain free access to education and healthcare, a
pension on retirement, affordable public transport and steady growth
based on Socialist, Keynesian principals, Atlee – probably the
leader who has seen through the biggest changes in modern British
history, was not. Claims that such an honour for Lady Thatcher would
be anything other than partisan backslapping are simply laughable.
It would be erroneous to claim that
those partying will hold nothing personal against the former Prime
Minister. She is, as I say, truly loathed in parts of Britain in a
way which few people could hope to achieve. But what those celebrants
will really be marking is their opposition to a set of ideals that
have treated people as nothing more than consumers or merchandise.
Thatcherism. Reaganomics. Trickledown. Supply side economics. Even
though many of the people celebrating will be too young to properly
remember the 1980s or may not know the terminology of the Randian
economics it ushered in, they are seeing the fruits of those policies
and those ideals. Many will be offended or even shocked by the amount
of pleasure that a large number of people exhibit at a former
leader's passing, but when that person is deliberately built into an
icon and the actions that caused so much suffering lauded as great
moments, is it any wonder that the icon becomes a target of defiance
for those that feel themselves so much at odds with the ruling elite.
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