Still the Enemy Within

Short of ideas for Xmas presents? Why not pre-order the Still the Enemy Within film about the Great Miners' Strike of 1984-85 on DVD?
Labels: class struggle, film, Margaret Thatcher, police brutality, socialism, the state
'Historical materialism is the theory of the proletarian revolution.' Georg Lukács

Labels: class struggle, film, Margaret Thatcher, police brutality, socialism, the state


Labels: class struggle, Margaret Thatcher, Marxism, socialism

Labels: class struggle, Margaret Thatcher
Margaret Thatcher’s government was defined by overseeing the greatest ever transfer of wealth from the bottom of society to the top. In the name of little people, she handed billions to the richest in tax cuts and de-regulation, a theft from which Britain has never recovered ... Between 1979 and 1992-3, the poorest tenth of the British population experienced a fall in their real income of 18 percent after housing costs, compared to an unprecedented rise of 61 percent for the top tenth. According to Economic Trends, the post-war improvement of life for the poorest 'has been put into reverse [since 1979]. Income has not trickled down, but filtered up from the poorer sections of society to the richer ones'. Put another way, since the year Margaret Thatcher came to power, more than £63 billion has been transferred, in subsidies, from the poor to the rich...
Labels: Margaret Thatcher

Labels: Margaret Thatcher
A quick reminder about the upcoming London Socialist Historians Group conference on Making the Tories History on 26 February in London. For some preliminary/background reading on the history of the Conservative Party, see Simon Basketter's fairly recent four part online series which starts here
Labels: Boris Johnson, David Cameron, George Osbourne, Margaret Thatcher
The rescue of 33 miners in Chile is an extraordinary drama filled with pathos and heroism. It is also a media windfall for the Chilean government, whose every beneficence is recorded by a forest of cameras. One cannot fail to be impressed. However, like all great media events, it is a façade...The accident that trapped the miners is not unusual in Chile, but the inevitable consequence of a ruthless economic system that has barely changed since the dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet. Copper is Chile's gold, and the frequency of mining disasters keeps pace with prices and profits.
Labels: Latin America, Margaret Thatcher
Today marks the twentieth anniversary of the Great Poll Tax Riot of 1990 in central London - the high point of a mass campaign of non-payment by millions of working class people in Britain that was critical to forcing Thatcher from power - and so an event well worth commemorating twenty years on.
Labels: class struggle, history, Margaret Thatcher
[The news that Gordon Brown is considering splashing out, not of course on public sector workers pay or on pensions, but on a state funeral for Margaret Thatcher of all things has prompted the bourgeois media to engage in another bout of beloved nostalgia towards the former Tory Prime Minister and her reign in power. Simon Jenkins in the Guardian for example praised Thatcher as a 'revolutionary'. Given this, I thought it timely to remind ourselves of the reality of what Thatcher 'achieved' - which was of course if anything closer to a counter-revolution in Britain than a 'revolution', by reposting extracts from an article written by the late revolutionary journalist Paul Foot from Socialist Worker in February 1985, entitled succinctly 'Thatcher: class warrior']
Labels: Margaret Thatcher