It must be a blast living in a total fantasy world at all times… one of these days I’ll have to drop acid, touch myself while reading Howard Zinn and go cry to coal miner unions… then, and only then, I might understand bogs.
Thatcher Ranks as One of the Greatest Leaders of Britain In a Thousand Years - The New York Sun
The New York Sun was a politically conservative[1][2] weekday daily newspaper published in New York City from 2002 to 2008. When it debuted on April 16, 2002, adopting the name, motto, and masthead of an otherwise unrelated earlier New York paper, The Sun (1833–1950), it became the first general-interest broadsheet newspaper to be started in New York City in several decades. Since 2009 the Sun has operated as an online-only publisher of political and economic opinion pieces and occasional arts content.
So the source of the "great" rating for the witch is an on-line pol op site that failed as a publication?
The PIRA's view?
October 12, 1084, Grand Hotel, Brighton,
England. The IRA claimed responsibility the next day, and said that it would try again. Its statement read:
Mrs. Thatcher will now realise that Britain cannot occupy our country and torture our prisoners and shoot our people in their own streets and get away with it. Today we were unlucky, but remember we only have to be lucky once. You will have to be lucky always. Give Ireland peace and there will be no more war.
Margaret Thatcher's secret admiration for IRA hunger strikers
When IRA prisoners threatened to starve themselves to death if they were not recognised as political prisoners, Baroness Thatcher’s response was typically unbending.
bobby sands
Bobby Sands, who died on hunger strike in the Maze prison (pictured right)
Gordon Rayner
By Gordon Rayner, Chief Reporter
7:00AM BST 23 Apr 2013
But privately, Lady Thatcher admitted to having a certain admiration for Bobby Sands and nine other prisoners who died on hunger strike, saying she had to “hand it” to them and describing their deaths as a “terrible waste of human life”.
Their deaths also made her realise that she would be a terrorist target for the rest of her life, and she wrote about being “absolutely terrified” whenever she walked into a crowd after that.
Sands, who was elected as an MP during his own hunger strike, was the best-known of the prisoners who demanded that members of paramilitary groups should be treated differently from other prisoners at the notorious Maze prison in Ulster.
They wanted to be given better conditions than other prisoners, such as the right to wear civilian clothes and the right not to do prison work, but Lady Thatcher refused to budge.
Sands, jailed for possessing a handgun, died in May 1981 after 66 days on hunger strike, the first of ten prisoners to die over the course of the following four months.
In personal papers unearthed by her biographer, Charles Moore, she wrote: “You have to hand it to some of these IRA boys”, describing them as “poor devils” because “if they didn’t go on strike they’d be shot [by their own side]…What a waste! What a terrible waste of human life!”
The deaths of the prisoners were blamed by republican terrorist groups on Lady Thatcher, and she knew it made her a prime target who would “forever” have to be protected (and who narrowly escaped the IRA’s attempt to assassinate her with the Brighton bombing of 1984).
Despite the Iron Lady’s refusal to complain about her status as a target, she was always nervous of crowds and saw every gift as a potential terrorist bomb, particularly after the 1991 assassination of the Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, killed by a Tamil suicide bomber pretending to show her devotion to him by touching his feet.
Lady Thatcher wrote: “[When] you walk into a crowd – it’s always absolutely terrifying. Or if someone hands you something – look at Rajiv Gandhi – hidden in flowers.”
Following the death of Sands, John Hume, the SDLP leader who was later a joint recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, begged Lady Thatcher to allow the prisoners civilian clothes and free association with each other, but she refused, saying: “The people who had been killed by the Provisional IRA had had no choice. The hunger strikers had a choice,” according to a minute of their conversation.
Love you Acamp, respect your politics, don't like over simplistic labels, have no use for anyone like Thacher.