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Cracker Squire

THE MUSINGS OF A TRADITIONAL SOUTHERN DEMOCRAT

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Location: Douglas, Coffee Co., The Other Georgia, United States

Sid in his law office where he sits when meeting with clients. Observant eyes will notice the statuette of one of Sid's favorite Democrats.

Sunday, May 09, 2010

The Iron Lady: The British stood their ground when they were under terror siege.


Margaret Thatcher

Peggy Noonan writes in The Wall Street Journal:

After he left office in 1974, former British prime minister Edward Heath was the target of two assassination attempts. The IRA [the Irish Republican Army] bombed his London home while he was away—haplessness among terrorists did not start in Times Square—and tried to blow up his car. But in October 1984 they got close to killing a sitting prime minister. In Margaret Thatcher's memoir, "The Downing Street Years," she recounts with understatement and precision the bombing of the Grand Hotel in Brighton.

She was up late working on a speech. "At 2:50 a.m. Robin Butler asked me to look at one last official paper—it was about the Liverpool Garden festival." Four minutes later "a loud thud shook the room. . . . I knew immediately that it was a bomb." It had been placed above her suite, which was now strewn with glass. She made her way, covered in plaster dust, out of the hotel, met with aides, slept in her clothes for an hour at a police facility, woke to the news reports—five dead, including a cabinet minister's wife—and turned to her remarks to the Tory party conference. "I was already determined that if it was physically possible to do so I would deliver my speech." Urged to return to No. 10 Downing, she said, "No: I am staying."

"I knew that I could not afford to let my emotions get control of me. I had to be mentally and physically fit for the day ahead. I tried not to watch the harrowing pictures. But it did not do any good. I had to know each detail of what had happened—and every detail seemed worse than the last."

Contemporary politicians, please note: In the rewrite of her speech, Mrs. Thatcher removed "most of the partisan sections." This "was not a time for Labour-bashing but for unity in defense of democracy."

After she delivered it, the "ovation was colossal." "All of us were relieved to be alive, saddened by the tragedy and determined to show the terrorists that they could not break our spirits."

Harold Evans remembered it. "That day she was wonderful. She truly was the iron lady."

I wonder if David Cameron will be anything like her.

2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Noonan is ridiclous- no mention of the violence that England exported to Ulster or the that Bush exported to Iraq with his misguided war.

6:55 AM  
Anonymous Elliott Broidy said...

She sure did!

12:03 PM  

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