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Sour to the grave

As far as I can remember, it has been the practice of people to respect the dead. No matter how bad a person had been in his or her lifetime, they are generally forgiven. Only the nicest things are highlighted and the not so pleasant one are conveniently forgotten or omitted in the eulogy.
It is accepted that the person in question would be adequately dealt with in the afterlife by the powers above and the aid of The Book.
As a deviant from the norm, people of the working class of Britain, mainly miners, have been keeping their grudge of discontent all these years and have no qualms displaying it now. Even amongst the vast majority of the 'others', there are those who feel that the world now is a worse place than before she came to the picture. With the combo of Thatcherism-Reaganism, where greed is good, we are now left with a messy world of living in credit and mortgage.
I suppose the changes in the world are inevitable with or without Thatcher. Desperate situations demand desperate measures! Caught between the devil and the deep blue sea, when economy was unresuscitable, the majority thought the grocer's daughter with her degree had the right chemistry to spark to the laissez faire British economy. And she sure did- her way!
For that matter, the electorates are to be blamed for collectively deciding on such a leader in desperation to come out of their economic doldrums. Just like the Germans for choosing a certain dropout from Art School as their leader......

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