Far East Cynic

Margaret Thatcher

Margaret Thatcher died today, at the age of 87.

As a result, thanks to our British satellite system,  we have been watching voluminous coverage of the memories of her life. What strikes me the most is how very different it is from the gushing American coverage. It speaks volumes about the naiveté of Americans in general, and conservatives in particular.

The British coverage on BBC has been much more even handed-unsparing of her failures while quite laudatory of here achievements-which were many-and trying to give a balanced picture of a life that shaped a great deal of Great Britain's post World War II history. American coverage, particularly on Fox-which I have the misfortune to have on my Sky system-not so much.

Americans tend to view her as a British version of Reagan, but in reality she was very different. Consider:

Thatcher slashed, but there was no Reaganesque free candy. She lowered the rates, but she also raised other taxes, such as the value added tax. She was about sacrifice, cutting government subsidies and programs in a way that Reagan never matched. Millions of people went on the dole because of her cuts, whereas the recession in the U.S. did not result from Reagan cutting the budget but from Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker slamming the brakes to wring inflation from the economy. (Reagan did reappoint Volcker once.)

Thatcher called Reagan "the second most important man in my life." And both drew strength from the other. It helped at home. It was hard for Americans or Britons to dismiss their leader as a crazy outlier if your most important ally had an elected leader with a similar worldview. Bill Clinton and Tony Blair would mutually reinforce each other in the same way as they took on their own party's established interests. When Thatcher and Reagan differed, as on the Falklands war, where the Reagan Administration had coddled the "authoritarian" regime in Buenos Aires, it strained the relationship but never broke it.

 

Consider too-that America later brow beat Britain into its wars,  but when the British Navy could have really used our help-in the form of AEW aircraft and refueling, we did the minimum acceptable to get by. The US could have done far more to support Britain in the Falklands, support that it had richly earned, but the US failed miserably in the undertaking. And a year later-it invaded an island where the Queen was head of State without so much as a "by your leave" to the British government.

Americans should also remember that whatever success she had came at a painful cost. 3.3 million were unemployed with no hope of a job. The economy went into recession and the dole was being withdrawn unless you could "prove" you were actively searching for work.  It ruined millions of people's lives and put millions more into unproductive boredom and hardship. It cost the country £40b in lost productivity and the only thing Margaret did was make it worse.  Furthermore, just as in America 20 years later-it accelerated a gap between the wealthiest 1% and the majority of the population. Tony Blair came to power in part because of that-just as Barak Obama did some 10 years later in the US. Americans tend to forget how bad it really was in Britain for a great while.

Here is a point of view you will not hear on American TV-but probably should:

Thatcher was an evil, twisted woman who encouraged greed and isolation. she decimated the North of England and virtually destroyed my father during the miner's strikes.

I remember one Christmas particularly, during that dark time. The rotary club turned up at the door with a food parcel complete with turkey, veg and a small bottle of sherry.

This was our Christmas – all I can recall of Thatcher's wonder years was imminent threat of redundancy and penury.

Maybe Thatcher did something good for the country, but as a child growing up in Newcastle, I am at a loss as to what this good actually was.


Conservatives in America will love the woman because they will view her through the prism of her friendship with Ronald Reagan. She was, like Reagan, probably what her country needed at the time-but one must never forget the actual facts of her time in office, which had a lot of bad to balance out the good. Just as it was with Reagan.

Regardless of what one thought of her-she did a lot to earn a great deal of respect. However one should never forget the undercurrent that came with that legacy and the deep divisions she fostered in her country. British politics still lives in her shadow-for both better and worse.

But the key point is this: those who admire the deceased public figure (and their politics) aren't silent at all. They are aggressively exploiting the emotions generated by the person's death to create hagiography. Typifying these highly dubious claims about Thatcher was this (appropriately diplomatic) statement from President Obama: "The world has lost one of the great champions of freedom and liberty, and America has lost a true friend." Those gushing depictions can be quite consequential, as it was for the week-long tidal wave of unbroken reverence that was heaped on Ronald Reagan upon his death, an episode that to this day shapes how Americans view him and the political ideas he symbolized. Demanding that no criticisms be voiced to counter that hagiography is to enable false history and a propagandistic whitewashing of bad acts, distortions that become quickly ossified and then endure by virtue of no opposition and the powerful emotions created by death. When a political leader dies, it is irresponsible in the extreme to demand that only praise be permitted but not criticisms.

  1.  
    For me, I will be isolated from all but the BBS when I get to Korea.  I'll especially miss the Bloomburg babes.   

  2. Grant;
    You are going to SOUTH Korea eh?
    SOUTH Korea has access to any station, at least via the worlds fastest internet or satellite etc. You should have no trouble in accessing any information from anywhere.

  3. I know SK's broadband is rated at 100Mb, but I rarely watch TV News via the internet.  I guess I can start.  I had satellite TV last time I was three, but the basic chanels were nothing of interest as far as news broadcasts go.  My Korean is not good enought to keep up with their news.  I can read a Korean newspaper in hangul as long as it is not filled with Chinese Characters.   

  4. Grant..
    good luck..the last time I was in SK was in 1987.
    I may have to take a farewell tour soon as I spent four years there MANY years ago and would like to see Choungju City one last time……
    And don't forget to take your daily KIMCHI, the universal all ii one health food!!!!!

  5. Ah, Kimchi…garlic cloves too.  My SO is from Chongju originally, but migrated to Seoul and worked on the Yongsan Army Garrison where I first met here in 1988.  We went different ways then got together on my next tour that started in 1994; we were married in 1995.  All is good, except for the complaints that this and that in Korea is better than what it is in the US.     

  6. Grant;
    Many times I have read the disdain of certain folks about  Americans hyper nationalism..a flag on every house and "our country is the best in the world" etc etc..evidently they have never met a Korean!!!!
    and yet, polling data IN Korea report that a huge number of Koreans want to emigrate…imagine that?
    Again good luck….just watch out for subway Line #1 late at night which is full of drink ajushees and is infamous among expats for virulent anti americanism(evidently all waygooks are Americans, except the women who are obvioulsy RUSSIAN whores..sigh)

  7. Ah, the subway line 1.  There were a couple of GI kidnaped off of that line back in the '90s by a group of HUFS students.  The Korean legal system found them guilty of some violaton and sentenced them to a fine and suspend jail term.  Then there was the time 2 off duty MPs got chased and beaten by a mob somewhere between Seoul Station and Yongsan.  They were found guilty too.  I try to avoid that line if I can as lots of Miguks get bad luck during the trip. 

  8. I believe we all tend to forget the bad things and remember just the good things when someone dies, it’s human nature. History, will have the final say in how “Maggie T” will be remembered.