04.08.13

Thatcherism lives in America

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle at 9:07 am by George Smith

We just don’t call it that.

From Germaine Greer in 2009, writing for the Guardian:

Thatcher’s strength derived directly from her limitations. If she had been better read, if she had been afflicted with imagination, if she had had a sense of humour, if she had had anywhere near as much insight into the lives of ordinary people as she claimed to have, she would have been unable to pursue her headlong career, riding roughshod over the consensus towards the property-owning debtor economy in which we now struggle. If socialism had been in better shape, she would not have been able to turn it into a dirty word or confuse it with totalitarianism and state monopoly capitalism. If the trade unions had not betrayed their own class, if they had understood the importance of
organising all workers, including women, including those in the service sector, if they had not institutionalised inequality, the people might have defended the cause of labour.

Thatcher thought that she and Reagan overthrew the Soviet Union, but the fact is that, like old Labour, it simply fell apart. The Thatcher phenomenon was only made possible by the weakness and indecisiveness of the opposition. It is justice of the most poetic kind that Thatcher’s is now the evil empire and Thatcherism a dirty word.

Institutionalized inequality — that’s us.

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