"Mining union exploits genuine miners to agitate for fall of democratically elected government and fails"
There you go, enquiry over.
[TW]Fox;30165356 said:What proportion of currently serving SYP officers were either on duty or in positions of power and influence in 1982?
What proportion of currently serving SYP officers were even BORN in 1982?
This sort of feeling is just irrational and causes more problems than it ever solves.
I didnt think it was a secret what Thatcher did to the miners and the unions, this wasnt just down to the SYP,
I'm old enough and northern enough that the event has no impact on me either way. I'd like to say I'm firmly neutral on this and I'm struggling to see what the constructive purpose would be on any inquiry.
Mining was unprofitable and was dying - What Thatcher did was correct.
Mining was unprofitable and was dying - What Thatcher did was correct.
It was Scargill who turned it into a war, instead of facing facts.
Police officers were justified in kicking the **** out of those yobs.. Inquiries cost the tax payers millions.. And it will be all for nothing.
Quite the little Nazi stormtrooper aren't we. However most people in Britain still think the police should be held to account for what is criminal behaviour. Just because you wear a uniform does not give you carte blanche to do as you see fit. There is an iconic picture about the time of a mounted police officer in the process of clubbing a female who is taking a photograph. What needs, urgently, to be addressed is allowing police officers to retire rather than face prosecution. It gives the rest a bad name and reinforced the view of corrupt police.
I was 19 at the time and one of the expolited ones. I was never into politics and ended up blindly following and believing everything the union told us. However, I'm a lot older and wiser now (wife won't agree though) and looking back I can see that although we went on strike for the right reasons (loss of jobs, communities etc) we were hijacked by people with their own agenda. I still believe to this day that if Arthur Scargill had called a proper ballet then all the miners would have come out on strike and things could well have turned out differently.
I made my own mind up several years later by leaving the pits and joining the Army. That in itself caused a rift between my father and me as he saw it as me selling out and joining the establishment. He still can't talk about my Army career now even though I've seen and done things I never would have had I remained a miner.
There would be no prosecution here, it is not a court, just an enquiry. Same as at Hillsborough.
There was much more corruption in the 1980's police than now, but we have moved on and it is 2016. I think that an enquiry would reinforce a bad image for the police today which would be undeserved and not a reason to hold one.
I disagree, regularly prosecuting police officers gives the impression the State will not tolerate criminal policemen and is a warning to other officers. The theory that it was all yesterday and we have all changed so we will just ignore all previous criminal behaviour reinforces the public view that the State will protect as far as possible corrupt policemen. Prosecution can follow the inquiry even though the inquiry could not do so themselves.
yes but when the police were doing the states work not the peoples it's a bit awkward.
but then it's unsurprising that a tory govt don't want to look into it.