People are quick to jump to extremes on both sides. I'll share some extended thoughts that I've already shared (partially) elsewhere today:
I don't believe she was evil, or even that she wished any harm on the people of Britain. I like to think it is something of an anomaly if someone is able to possess both political appeal and any kind of ill-intent towards others. Leaders like Thatcher believe in what they do, it serves a purpose for them, and they pursue their beliefs with conviction. Phisheep might see a great deal of good that came of her tenure, and he might even have experienced it first hand, but I don't think he should accept his own experiences as universal. Our rolling news channels have already begun to eulogise her, but to me, this is cowardice over scrutiny; a deference to the tradition of respecting the dead rather than dwelling too much on the polarised reality. Regardless of whatever good she did, I think its worth remembering Britain's record of shame during her tenure and how her government did not affect all of us for the better, nor all of us equally.
Someone posted this link earlier in the thread and I think it is probably the best image yet for helping to illustrate the far-reaching and long-lasting divisiveness of her government. The result of the 1987 election:
http://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/mapr1987.html -- indeed, on the subject of Thatcher, we are as two nations instead of one.
I was born in the years immediately following, so I never experienced it first hand but I have been told about having to endure power cuts and shit piling up in streets (their words not mine), so of course - I do understand that some people 'like' that she broke the power of the Unions. Some are glad that she prevented them from being used as a political weapon. That's fine. While I do think that both sides made miscalculations - I don't believe that an all-out war on workers' collectives was conducive to a harmonious society. There was no compassion for people made redundant overnight. And why should there have been? This was a party that was odious enough to suggest to Thatcher, following the 1981 Toxteth riots, that she let Liverpool fall in to "managed decline" as some sort of punishment. Her government was brash and over-authoritative. Brash and over-authoritative sus-laws helped cause the riots in the first place.
She brought about great change to the British economy, moving us away from industrial production to a service-led economy, but I would suggest that is not necessarily a good thing. Not entirely. There are some obvious benefits that we see all around us today, but Reaganomics-style deregulation and supply-side economics helped lead us by the hand to the economic recessions of yesteryear and today. The savings and loans industry was the culprit in the early '90s, and the more recent recession began with sub-prime mortgage lending. I have a few things to suggest to you all there: firstly, when those recessions came along we didn't have anything like industrial production or manufacturing to fall back on. Secondly, her accompanying policies generated wealth but distributed it selectively. Lastly, Britain is still so addicted to Thatcherism and 'by-the-bootstraps' thinking that blame and punishment continues to fall upon the shoulders of those least able to bear it. People are still living under the illusion that we are a meritocracy.
There is a love of money in this country, a self-interested pursuit of it that crystallised under the reign of Thatcher. People seek retention of it at the expense of others. I am thinking particularly of people who are now hoarding housing, with rich landlords free to extort tenants because of a market she helped create through Right to Buy. There can be no doubt it was a popular move amongst the people who were made wealthy by it, and those who suddenly found themselves able to own their own home, but what is the impact today? I remember reading that the son of former-housing-minister Ian Gow owned at least 40 ex-council houses. They did not replace anything that they sold off, and with demand increasing as populations do - we have been left with something that resembles an exploitative, protectionist racket. It is a game that only the wealthy and fortunate can play. The current crop of conservatives attack Brown for not "repairing the roof while the sun was shining", but their forbears literally sold out roofs from above peoples' heads. Their successors are now telling poor people at what ages their children should be sharing bedrooms. So much for small government!
Despite real causes of hardship in this country being grounded in the mismanagement of resources, and the mistakes of political and financial elites -- all I hear about in the media (and parroted by those who consume it) are complaints about benefits 'scroungers', immigrants and other forms of scapegoat. Only on the subject of bankers bonuses do we return to the crux of our problems: reckless greed.
I find it lamentable that people have been hoodwinked in to consuming political messages that are against their own interests, implicitly accepting what they are told by the government and certain high-circulation newspapers. The same thing happened in 1989 following the Hillsborough football disaster. Police and The Sun newspaper facilitated a disgraceful cover-up by placing blame upon victims and their families. Thatcher could have shared in the horror of what happened and allowed a proper inquiry, she could have shown a real interest in the truth, but instead her government were complicit through sheer inaction, and simply allowed the maligning nonsense to take hold in the public consciousness. Only now, 24 years later are we seeing any kind of atonement for that.
As a Liverpudlian that has moved around the country, witnessed regional inequality, and witnessed poverty - I find myself, more than ever - wanting a more representative government. I want a compassionate rather than dispassionate government. I want people to have the opportunity to achieve great things and do well in life. I want them to be supported when they face genuine hardship. Instead, we have absolutely no parties that are truly liberal, we have gerrymandered regional borders, an unelected house of lords that everybody at the last election 'promised' to reform, financial institutions that were largely insulated from their own mistakes, a government massaging the unemployment figures with part-time workers, record numbers of youth unemployed, sky-high tuition fees, an NHS increasingly exposed to private interests, one of the worst rich-poor divides in the Western world and a culture eager to blame the poor before it addresses the billions hoarded and evaded in tax by the top percentile. It's not her legacy alone, but she shares a piece of it in my mind.
She was a milk snatcher. She dismantled livelihoods dispassionately. She sank the Belgrano under dubious circumstances. She presided over race riots in Birmingham, Bristol, Leeds, Liverpool and London. The scenes of ruthless clashes during the miners strikes and the poll tax riots will continue to live long in the memory. She dubbed the ANC 'terrorists' during Apartheid. She helped this country protect Augusto Pinochet from prosecution for his crimes. She befriended other international miscreants. Was she an evil monster? Probably not. But she did plenty of things to this country and people living in it that can be justifiably disagreed with. I am not at all proud of what we are today.