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Thatcher`s Delinquents
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Thatcher`s Delinquents 13 Dec 2010 20:47 #44

If this news is surprising to any good person, they need to wake up and tune in. I know from personal experience of promoting the movement and website and just listening to peoples general attitudes on approaching me at the events I attend at just how deep these attitudes go. All too often you would not believe who comes out with the worst type of crap… Yeah, fully paid up union members & socialists! They`ve not only sold out, but are now kissing the arse of `Thatcher`.

Two quotes; Joseph Goebbels, propagandist to Hitler (fascist Germany, World War 2)

“If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it.”

“Think of the press as a great keyboard on which the government can play.”

As stated in our welcome to the website “Hated, loathed & shunned our Country has turned on us” but unlike the Jews whom the fascists persecuted then “to Bail out the Rich”, we will not be corralled and be put to a slow death.


Sympathy for those on benefits is lowest since Thatcher's time

The public is now less sympathetic towards people claiming benefits than at any time since Margaret Thatcher left office, the longest-running study into Britain's social attitudes reveals.

Just 27 per cent of people think that the Government should spend more on benefits while only half believe the state should provide a "decent standard of living" for everyone.

The number of people who think the Government should redistribute income has fallen by around a third since Margaret Thatcher left office. The findings are revealed in the latest British Social Attitudes report conducted by the National Centre for Social Research.

The study, published annually for almost 30 years, concludes that while the public remains concerned about the gap between rich and poor this is not matched by support for welfare and redistribution. It suggests that the Coalition Government's plans to reform and cut back on the benefit systems chime with the public mood.

"It is 20 years since Margaret Thatcher left office, but public opinion is far closer now to many of her core beliefs than it was then," said Penny Young, chief executive of the National Centre for Social Research.

"Our findings show that attitudes have hardened over the last two decades, and are more in favour of cutting benefits and against taxing the better-off disproportionately."

Source; Independent
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