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The Miners' Strike and Me

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The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby keving » 13 Mar 2014 02:14

Watched this programme tonight on ITV. If you didn't see it, you should watch it on catchup tv.

If you were living in the UK in 1984 you would be hard hearted not to sympathise with the miners and their families. Emotional to watch if you, as I did, had close relatives working in Yorkshire pits.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Jim » 13 Mar 2014 06:54

Have to agree Kev, lived for ten years in a mining village, I saw what happened to it's people some even commuting suicide because they lost their jobs, it was not about money this strike, some seem to think it was, it was all to do with closing pits, I'm sure they regret this as now they buy coal from Eastern Europe/China at three times the cost, thanks Mrs T..
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby emgee » 13 Mar 2014 08:47

Arthur Scargill would NOT have a vote.......not Mrs Thatcher's fault, down to the NUM.

Alan

Alan what on gods name are talking about, of course it was Thatchers fault, she wanted and got mine closures, the miners went on strike to save pit closures not more cash as Thatcher got, they failed because that evil lady got the Police on full overtime made it almost illegal to strike, now the UK is paying for her really stupid acts, she went on to be a Billionaires the rest of us may as well gone to hell..fact!! just watch that TV program last night, even a true blue like you will maybe have a little compaction for the now ex miners...Jim
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Jim » 13 Mar 2014 10:58

He may well have been a fool but his heart was in the right place unlike Thatchers..the miners wanted to keep their jobs as you have said, at least Scargill knew this and now the UK really pays for it's coal, and not only coal but iron & steel, another Thatcher folly, what a truly stupid woman, she got fantastically rich while those hard working miners were sent to hell by her. Sorry obviously she was never a hero of mine.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Peer Gymp » 13 Mar 2014 11:51

emgee, kingsdale. agree 100%
Arthur Scargils ego lost them the 100% support of all the mine workers and the rest of the trade union movement and to say that his heart was in the right place well just look how he's carrying on with his own union in court battles.
He wouldn't have a vote therefor to give in to him the trade union movement and the UK would have handed power to a dictator.


Milo

If the Cypriot gas goes the same way as North Sea Oil and Gas it won't change anything for Josepe gasadopulous (Cypriot Jo Public).
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Admin » 13 Mar 2014 11:55

John (peer gymp) rubbish get your facts correct..stick to your bass guitar, you obviously know nothing.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Radio » 13 Mar 2014 11:59

It is often overlooked that Harold Wilson closed more pits than Maggie Thatcher.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Admin » 13 Mar 2014 12:08

What do you know just how many pits closed after that altercation? Wilson never came close to Thatchers closures, our area went from seven pits to one (that is now closed) in five years..
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby KG » 13 Mar 2014 12:09

The left always did have selective memories and when they can't win the argument they resort to personal abuse.

Have you forgotten the constant strikes that brought Britain to its knees? The power cuts? The three day week? The bodies unburied and piling up in the mortuaries? The bags of uncollected rubbish? The shoddy car production? The constant stoppages at the ports, that interrupted the supply of food?

As for coal, it was cheaper to import it half way round the world than dig it out of the ground. Steel and ships could be produced elsewhere far more cheaply. Britain was paying itself more than it earned and it was as unsustainable as the debt mountain that more recently brought Britain to its knees. The markets for British heavy engineering disappeared.

When will you realise that there is no such thing as democracy? The individual does not matter one jot. Trade union power challenged the power of the state, and that would never have been allowed to happen, whoever was in charge. It just happened to be Margaret Thatcher. It was 35 years ago - get over it!
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby canonpyon » 13 Mar 2014 12:57

Admin wrote:John (peer gymp) rubbish get your facts correct..stick to your bass guitar, you obviously know nothing.


I would expect the Administrator to be above such abuse
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Jim B » 13 Mar 2014 13:16

KG wrote:. The markets for British heavy engineering disappeared.


Believe me British Engineering is still there though usually producing quality under foriegn names like ABB, Alsthom etc.; I've worked on heavy Engineering projects all my life and made a very good living out of it and the markets are still there but it was due to lack of investment that the UK became uncompetative and that was very little to do with Unions. Come on the project I'm on right now and you will see all the precision equipment made in the UK forty years ago is now made in Germany and mainly Italy and usually to a lower standard than ever came out of British factories like English Electric, GEC. NEI, Parsons etc . If the British workers were so bad why did Nissan, Toyota, Tata and a host of other multinationals invest heavily in the UK.

Quentin Letts of the Daily Mail (no less) did a documentry on the car industry and even he conceded that it was more due to lack of investment than Unions that caused the demise of the industry. Only people who weren't affected by the destruction of Britains Insustrial base under Thatcher can say "Get Over It".

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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Firefly » 13 Mar 2014 13:24

KG

Good post, totally agree.

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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Jim B » 13 Mar 2014 13:35

Jackie.

Being honest I wouldn't have expected anything else; though I very much doubt you've had the Ignominy of being thrown out of work through no fault of your own.

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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby P.villas » 13 Mar 2014 15:11

KG

Good post, I also totally agree. :D :D
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Jim B » 13 Mar 2014 16:00

P.villas wrote:KG

Good post, I also totally agree. :D :D



Why??

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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Radio » 13 Mar 2014 16:43

During Wilson's time in office @ 290 mines were closed; during Thatcher's time the figure was @ 160. Not passing judgement or posting an opinion, merely putting some facts into the discussion.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby jersey » 13 Mar 2014 16:52

Interesting Radio ,
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Memory man » 13 Mar 2014 17:09

Some more facts:-

During Harold Wilson’s government more mines were closed than under Thatcher. But the closures had been agreed with the union and the National Coal Board on the basis that those mines didn’t have enough coal left or were genuinely economically unviable.

If you add up the figures from 1947 to 1997 you see the real picture??– 345 pits were closed under Labour governments but 597 went under the Tories.

A total of 235,000 mining jobs were lost under Labour but 458,000 under the Conservatives.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby tonee » 13 Mar 2014 17:26

Hi
I lived in South Wales for twenty years.A very good friend of mine was chief engineer of the massive steel works at Llanwern,it was British steel then.The nearest coalmine was Merthyr Tydfil,about 15 miles away.
I asked him his views on the miners strike.He told me that Llanwern imported its coal from Poland because it was cheaper.
People also forget to mention the"flying pickets" at the steelworks,very violent.
Also the miner who was killed in a taxi after strikers dropped a massive boulder on it from a bridge.
There are arguments on both sides of the camp but the sheer violence involved cannot be excused!
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby tonee » 13 Mar 2014 17:55

Hi Hudswell
Yes,you are correct,it was the unfortunate taxi driver.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby sandra d » 13 Mar 2014 19:02

Some great post's but this is 1 argument I'm staying out of ,some didn't like what I wrote last time, but I will say you had to live in a mining village and come from a mining family to see and know what really went on, and the cost of getting the coal out, nuff said.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Firefly » 13 Mar 2014 19:04

JB actually you're wrong, I have lost a job through no fault of mine, I was made redundant when the company I worked for closed. But I expect you to come back and say that isn't what you meant.

Know what ? I wouldn't have expected anything else from you either, seems we can all have an opinion as long as it agrees with yours, or are you just a misogynist ?

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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby jersey » 13 Mar 2014 19:27

Shame Sandra d, you have been bullied into not posting your real opinions.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Kia Picanto » 14 Mar 2014 03:00

It makes me laugh when I read opinions of Arthur Scargill, from one or two with selective memories. He tried to buy the London flat (which the NUM paid the rent on), under the (Tories) Right to Buy scheme. He stated afterwards (after he was sussed), that he would have transferred the flat into the NUM name. Well, he WOULD say that, wouldn't he? :lol:

He screwed the miners, no question about it. Awful weasel-like man, without a socialist bone in his body.

I watched the programme 'The Miners strike and me', on TV and yes, it was very moving, particularly the son whose father still refuses to speak to him, because he was a strike-breaker. How dreadful, and shame on the father. The behaviour of the police was shocking too. One of the places mentioned, Easington, isn't far from me. After the pit closed, almost the entire workforce went 'on the sick' - indeed, the town had the highest % of people claiming Incapacity Benefit in the entire country. It remained that way for years, even though many of the miners had reached retirement age, or died.

I have a close friend, whose husband still calls former friends/colleagues 'Scabs'. He stayed out on strike, but it was his wife and small son who suffered the most. They had to rely on food parcels being sent from Russia. She begged her husband to return to work, but he refused. They almost lost their house, were often hungry and cold. Was it worth it?

Incidentally, before I'm admonished for having a view that differs from others, I'm also from a mining family.

KG - spot on, good post.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Jim B » 14 Mar 2014 06:26

Jackie

Misogynist; Hmm!! I’ll have to ask my wife about that or possibly my two daughters or even my four Granddaughters or I could ask our numerous female friends if I’m one though somehow I think they would all say no. ;;)

You are quite welcome to your opinion whether you’re a man or a woman even if you don’t let a few facts get in the way of your argument but I don’t have to agree with it just like you don’t have to agree with mine.

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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Sadie » 14 Mar 2014 10:37

During the miners strike I was at college and travelled between Horbury/Wakefield/Castleford/Ackworth & Hemsworth all mining towns & villages.
All buses had to be got or changed at Wakefield bus station where I remember miners wives & families shaking tins for money as they had none for food, clothing etc etc. I have to agree with a previous poster - I had an ex boyfriend who was a miner and they did as little as possible and wanted thousands for doing it, I'm not suggesting it was not a dangerous job and I certainly would not have wanted to work in the pits, but the miners did bring the country to it's knees and Margaret Thatcher was, in my opinion the first one brave enough to take them on.
There were other casualties of this strike, I used to go drinking in Wakefield and got involved in several heated debates about the strikes with striking miners, who took great pride in the fact that they were making weapons that would be used primarily to injure the police horses!!
It was also commonly talked about that whilst miners & their families were hungry & cold Arthur Scargill was still sending his children to private school and his contribution to the strike was to put on hold his new Jaguar!!! Probably an urban myth......but no smoke etc.

There will never be a 100% agreement about what was & wasn't right and there was blame on both sides, I do think however that it's sad that friends & family members STILL don't speak to each other 30 years on [-(
Being a Yorkshire Lass I had to have my say :lol:
We are here for such a short time.....only regret things you didn't do. Be kind and be happy :)
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Firefly » 14 Mar 2014 12:35

Jim B

Quite so, and the fact that you have daughters and granddaughters is an accident of birth, not choice. So shall we respect each other's views in future ?

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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby sandra d » 14 Mar 2014 15:37

Shame Sandra d, you have been bullied into not posting your real opinions,
Don't think many would like it,even at school in a mining village I couldn't wait to leave and get away maybe I was different, I use to look at my mam and other women and knew I just didn't want the life they had.,ye my dad and brothers worked hard I'll never take that from them. and I come from a long line of mining family's,coal and ironstone.Villages round here seem never to have moved on,and when Margaret Thatched died the next village to our's had a massive celebration which was on television it was awful I felt ashamed as did a lot of others,they had a coffin and effigy of her burning with a rope round her neck stood there cheering all with a drink in their hand, but yet most of them were to young to remember the strike and some weren't even born and the pit in their village was nicknamed "the sunshine pit" cos every time the sun shone they went on strike, I rest my case.One other thing I'd say 80% of mining houses used gas central heating as coal fires were "mucky" and because they didn't get their free tons of coal (10 a year) they were given a gas allowance of this I know is true.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Jim B » 14 Mar 2014 15:46

Jackie.

It just shows how little you know about me;


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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby sandra d » 14 Mar 2014 16:00

Kia Picanto

Same here,my cousins husband went back after 9 month his young son of 10 started hoarding food frightened his mam and dad would starve and was on the verge of a nervous breakdown at 10 year old,so his dad said enough I'm going back to work my son comes before anyone, my cousin all of 4ft 11 walked over the picket line with him,she was spit at, dog muck and all sorts were thrown at her but she did it, and men and women called her son a scabbing bst among other things,yet these were miners who wanted support,this was in the Sunderland area.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Firefly » 14 Mar 2014 18:07

JB

I don't know anything about you, and I hope you will forgive me for not falling over backwards to either, but as you don't know anything about me either, stale mate I think. That said I do know that if I post my opinions without insulting or accusing another poster, I should have the same courtesy extended to myself. It seems to me it is a childish reaction to failure, to show disrespect or discourtesy to another.

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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Firefly » 14 Mar 2014 19:08

jersey I am happy to comply with your wishes, if everyone else does.

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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby jimgward » 16 Mar 2014 14:38

kg

This year, Wall Street paid its bankers, brokers and financiers, more in bonuses than Wall Street made in profit.

This is the root cause of financial issues and always has been.

Investment goes into supporting the rich, non-industrial sectors, while industry is left to rot.

Britain is still allowing this to happen.

When will learn that vast divides between rich and poor is not always down to entrepreneurship, hard work or brains.

As Tony Benn once said (RIP) "If we can find money to kill people, when can we find money to save or feed people?" (Or similar)
When I die, I hope to pass away quietly in my sleep, like my Grandfather did....... not screaming like the passengers in his car......."
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Firefly » 16 Mar 2014 17:31

As I see it, the big unions have been the cause of a lot of British industry loosing out. Which country will order ships from another country, when the workforce is 'down tools' at the drop of the union leaders hat ? Delivery dates not guaranteed, prices forced up by demands for pay increases. It was the same with many other industries, if our production cannot be relied upon, prospective purchasers will vote with their feet. There will always be men who gain great satisfaction from controlling a workforce, and not necessarily for their good, or that of the country, it's just one way to wield power.

The unions should stick to protecting and providing for their workers, not to bringing the country to it's knees, and then blame the government.

Now I know many of you won't agree with that, no problem, I'm happy you have your opinion, this is just mine.

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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby explodingaardvark » 17 Mar 2014 06:56

Whilst I was in UK my philosophy was that I voted in the general election for a government to look after those things that governments do, whilst I voted in my union for things that unions should do i.e. get the best deal with employers regarding working conditions and other things at a job level. It was never my opinion that unions should be interfering in national government. however it should work both ways.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby kazanddave » 17 Mar 2014 08:43

double post
Last edited by kazanddave on 17 Mar 2014 08:45, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby kazanddave » 17 Mar 2014 08:44

Coming from a mining area I hated both Thatcher and Scargill, but more the former. From 1978-1982 I lost 3 jobs and spent approximately 18 months on the dole, I eventually moved from the North West to the South East and haven't looked back since, however I had no ties, and friends of mine would have found this harder to do as most had families.

By selling off the manufacturing industry and promoting more of the service industry which Britain has to rely on today, in effect the Tories put all our eggs in one basket. Laying off thousands of workers who although I admit where probably too highly paid, this meant that they no longer paid taxes based on those salaries and were forced to take money from the government in the form of unemployment benefit etc or take lower paid jobs.
When the crash of 2008 happened it was said that the UK wouldn't have been in such a bad state if we still had a manufacturing industry.
The service industry amounts to 75% of the UKs GDP and is admired and wanted by some members of the EU, who have already tried to have it moved to the European mainland. If that happened..........

People forget that if it wasn't for the unions there may still have been 6 day weeks, none or very little paid holidays and in some cases no paid sick leave.
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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Firefly » 17 Mar 2014 15:04

Dave,

There are many workers in the UK on zero hours contracts, many with no rights under two years employment, many who still do not get paid sick leave. Things are not that rosy, in spite of the unions.

In the sixties I joined a union, the only woman in my town, in that union at that time, The Post Office Engineering Union. When I needed their help, they totally dismissed my complaint out of hand, I never joined another.

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Re: The Miners' Strike and Me

Postby Jim » 20 Mar 2014 07:53

Dave I worked most of my life in a foundry, I was not at all highly paid, my last years annual pay was £21.000 seven shifts rotating, nights days and afternoons seven days a week, it was hard hot and very unrewarding, in fact I hated factories but working all hours I did manage to get out early at 54, I reckon another year in there would have seen me off as many of my workmates did, I hated the Tories, Thatcher in particular, I wish she had come and tried what we had to do, but she's gone and just look what is left of industry in the UK, gone never to return, now you have workers (the lucky ones) who never make anything, just the ability to push a pen around, thanks Maggie and co!! god help those in the UK..because the Tories never will, there alright Jack!.
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