Yes, I was glad to see some mention of her darker deeds. It was the lack of quotes from those unafraid to talk ill of the dead I was mourning.

Brian McNeil / talk19:39, 8 April 2013

It's not too late to add other quotes; the horizon is 24 hours after publication, and we're nowhere near that yet.

Pi zero (talk)20:41, 8 April 2013

People keep going on about how horrific she is, I think if we tried living a week under Kim Jong-un in North Korea, people who have never seen the light of day, lived their lives under fear from the state, indoctrinated and brainwashed, and ultimately told that the grandfather Kim Il-sung is the "Eternal President" and God-figure and his children are the sons of God - then this is a far worse predicament. The only thing I could think of comparing it to is the situation in Nazi Germany - but even that was a period of indoctrination between 1939-1945 but this is three generations' worth that may be irreversible. State TV is controlled, newspapers are controlled, radio is controlled, no internet just an intranet, again controlled.

Computron (talk)09:09, 9 April 2013

"Margaret Thatcher: she's better than North Korea" isn't much of an endorsement.

Tom Morris (talk)09:34, 9 April 2013

My point summarised would be: to appreciate our liberty and that she did uphold that core principle of freedom and democracy.

Computron (talk)09:39, 9 April 2013

She was responsible for a whole swathe of legislation aimed at eroding people's rights and liberties. Best-of-friends with Pinochet and Saddam. Always referred to Mandela as a 'terrorist', most-likely gave the go-ahead for extra-judicial executions over The Troubles - as-in the IRA vs British Establishment in Northern Ireland.

You're comparing her, a right-wing ideologue whose outlook borders on fascism, with a spoilt brat that just inherited a very sick state with nuclear weapons. She put US cruise missiles on British soil. She used the police to enforce her political will in her obsessive war to smash unions. Police, brought in from London on overtime, kettled, coshed, clubbed and charged striking miners on horseback. Those on picket lines, many of whom had near-starving families at home, faced riot police who would stick £20 notes on their shields to try and goad people into moves that allowed them to act as thugs.

Brian McNeil / talk00:36, 10 April 2013
 
 
 

Pres. Obama's statement about Thatcher having stood shoulder to shoulder with Ronald Reagan is not something I would say to praise the woman. Remembering how Reagan and Thatcher hit it off and their stance against blue-collar workers and Reagan's policy concentrating even more wealth into the rich while driving others even deeper into poverty, I don't doubt the anti-labor allegations I'm reading about Thatcher.

Lonestar256 (talk)02:25, 12 April 2013