YESTERDAY I was catching up on lost sleep and, when the time came to post it was already too late. So here I am tomorrow morning!
What I did start to doodle on a piece of paper was some of the story of my life which began, as far as my public consciousness was concerned, with the Queen's Silver Jubilee in the summer of 1977 when I was 5.
I don't remember the street parties (though surely we had them) but I do remember the silver commemorative double decker bus I kept in near-mint condition. My brother (younger by 2 years) bashed his one up!
But I remember as a 5 year-old seizing on this anniversary year and wondering what and where I would be when the next royal jubilee came round ~ this being the Golden Jubilee in 2002 when I would be 30 years old. That 21st century date coupled to such a milestone age seemed impossibly futuristic.
When the biggest day came six years ago I was on the street begging money for my gear. It passed me by in such a haze I could barely remark on it, for it made almost no impression on my inner consciousness.
Had I been able to feel anything I suppose I would have wept for all the opportunities missed, the promise lost ... but I was far too lost then to indulge in tears.
The next woman to dent my public consciousness was Margaret Thatcher. She came into power in 1979 when I was 7 and was thus the first Prime Minister I remember. And she stayed so very long, till I was 19 that when she was eventually shoved out of office by snakes in her own Conservative ("Tory") party, I felt vaguely frightened. She was the only Prime Minister I had ever known.
How I loved Mrs Thatcher as she reigned over us! Before her appearance Britain had been a dusty, sluggish grey place marked by terminal decline (hey I'm nearly quoting her memoirs...) What Britain needed, so she believed, was a good kick up the backside. Get rid of the unions' stranglehold over British industry by eliminating practices like public ballots by show of hands. In the future only "proper" secret ballots into the box or by post would be allowed. Thatcher struck a crushing blow against union dominance when she smashed the longstanding miners' strike over pit closures. Unprofitable mines ought to be dispensed with. And so they were.
For all her faults, Mrs Thatcher did "get Britain working" again. And she made this country a businesslike place to be.
She started an international trend by privatizing national utilities: telephones, oil and gas, water, electricity and railways. Looking back I see this as national theft. Of course it's one of the most classic cons in the book to steal something off somebody and hoodwink him into buying it back and that's what she did with all her share offers. With the possible exception of telecommunications, there isn't real competition and choice in any of these businesses. Privatized electricity does not mean competing companies offering to wire your house. It just means they buy huge bulk blocks of the national supply and offer to sell dribs of electricity on to you cheaper (hopefully) than the competitors. This is a nonsense. Why not sell straight to US the public at the discount wholesale rate ~ THAT would be true democracy.
The great flaw in Thatcher's policy, which DID get a revived, modernized Britain moving again was that she seemed to view everything in the model of a business. Make a profit out of something and it's inherently worthwhile. But anything that just costs money is a "loss" and should be eliminated.
If she'd had her way, Thatcher would have got rid of the BBC ~ one of the jewels in our cultural crown. I think she was at heart a republican. The talk was always of how insufferable the Queen found her and "who does she think she is?"!
Now before Gledwood gets too boringly political here's some video entertainment from the magic era when my political sensibilities burst into life:
THATCHER UND DIE DEUTSCHEN
THIS IS TYPICAL entertainment from the best policial TV show of the 1980s: SPITTING IMAGE. See how lifelike those dummies are...
THE POLITICAL ASSASSINATION OF MARGARET THATCHER
FRIDAY's FAVE FIVE
-
Unfortunately, I'm still suffering from this damp weather, I only feel good
when I'm sitting and not doing any physical moves.
Fortunately, we started t...
11 hours ago
14 comments:
No offence but I read the topic and I saw those two photos and the first thing that came to mind was "God, no wonder you're on drugs" ;-)
I'll go and read the rest now hehe
no wonder anyone takes drugs with the state of today's world!!!
hey sugar plum.
yes my habit isn't big right now, and to tell you the truth, I dont think I will ever let it get big again. Last time I did practically beg for it though. Although I would like to main line it before really quitting. it seems to have been awhile. I dont know, Im almost 25, with an almost 3 year old, the time is coming, and is probably long over due! if I didn't have responsibilities then i'd be a totally mess. P.S is it proper to respond to comments on the persons blog or your blog? I never did know.
me neither
sometimes i do both
Boo hiss, don't like Mrs T!
I tried talking to you. apparently I am Gabber 510. But you weren't there.
No it's really hard to stay there without 1. doing nothing or 2. going to another window.
I love Mrs Thatcher but as I said before I just loathe most of her policies...
I think Thatcher was good for Britain. She was a tough nut. The privatizing was being done over here too. I think the idea was that business should be business - it is then run more efficiently. It's true. And if govt is also run more business like there is less waste and more done with less taxes.
I thought that Thatcher had brass balls. I don't admire her politics either, but she was a strong woman which I do admire. No pushover for sure. She reminded me of some of my gradeschool teachers.
thanks for visiting my blog! yours is quite remarkable...
Jeannie: I think she took her ideas to extremes though. I am reading her memoirs and though she always said capital"ism" was only an "ism" because labelled such by socialists, she does know an enormous amount about political theory ~~ and that surprised me. I had always thought of her as a woman of action
Syd: she would have made a terrifying headmistress
Heartshaped: you're welcome ;->...
Born in 1972? Your young damn it! I didn't get sober until 39 yo. Don't give up. Beging for crap on the streets is a bloody depressing existance. With your talent you could have so much more.
I don't discuss religion or politics so How are you?
M-Filer: currently I'm trying to scratch a novel out of thin air...
Akalamalu: ill! I DID say I loved Mrs Thatcher but think her politics far too extreme. I could vote Liberal, Labour OR Tory ~ I'm in the middle
Puss-in-Boots:
Post a Comment