Only for ages 7-11. Her predecessor, Edward Short, had already stopped free milk at secondary school age in 1968, while Shirley Williams would withdraw it for ages 5-7 in 1977.
Thatcher: ''There is no such thing as society, only individuals.''
People: Let's make her sobriquet "The Iron Lady"
Thatcher: Nice, but there is no such thing as Iron. There are only 4 shells, 26 protons, 30 neutrons, and 26 electrons, all of which are individual components and have no relation :)
Hopefully, my joke wasn't Thatcher's exact view on Chemistry, as she briefly studied chemistry at Oxford. Maybe that's why she switched to practicing law so quickly.....
^as I understand it, isn't Chemistry about the structure of the atom and Physics more to do with how atoms interact? We learnt about protons and the like in Chemistry in school but that is the limit of my knowledge
@brandybuck, I think it is actually the complete reverse of what you said, how atoms (and larger molecules) interact is a chemical reaction, very specifically studied in chemistry, and the structure of an atom is quantum physics (though hugely impacts how atoms interact and is therefore very important for chemistry). There is obviously a huge amount of overlap, but I thought it was funny how you said the exact opposite of what my definition would've been
Yeah, agreed with brandybuck, I've taken more chemistry classes than I can count, and the structure of the atom has always been part of my chemistry curriculum. At the same time I'll acknowledge that chemistry and physics overlap a lot, and if you're talking about the energetics or forces of an atom, I would consider that physics.
The 'poll tax' was never officially called that, it was the Community Charge. That's accepted as an answer, but it should probably be the other way round - i.e. accept 'poll tax', but have the official name as the answer.
Nearly every time I hear Thatcher's name, I think of Rik Mayall's character Rick "the people's poet" from The Young Ones. Writing hilarious scathing poems, breaking the fourth wall with comments like "Neil, the bathroom's free, unlike the country under the Thatcherite junta", and of course, threatening that he'll blow up London with the bomb in their kitchen if she doesn't do something to help "the kids" by that afternoon.
I'd ask people consider whether celebrating someone's death, regardless of who they are, is really a good look.
The extra fact that the person in question is a democratically elected PM who won a 100+ seat majority in her third general election - Blair only won a 66 seat majority in his 3rd GE - suggests that the history might be a little more nuanced than Twitter and Facebook bubbles lead many of us to believe.
@Alex, I agree with you. I'm not British so I may not have the knowledge on Thatcher that British people do, but even if she was a bad person, I feel like it's not right to actively celebrate her death. Like her or not, she was the first female head of government in the West, which IMO is a pretty big achievement (something that still hasn't happened in America yet). Also, even if you hate her, there's always people out there who love her--her supporters yes, but more importantly, her family and friends. If you actively cheer her death, how does that make those people feel?
I'm totally fine with people criticizing the dead and pointing out their flaws, but celebrating is a bit much.
Just in case AlexThirkell's comment seems to come out of nowhere, I had to delete a lot of hateful comments. There were many more on this quiz than, for example, the quiz about Hitler.
Feel free to hate Margaret Thatcher but if you are celebrating the death of a democratically-elected leader, you can do it somewhere else. I hear Twitter is good for that. JetPunk is a hate-free space.
I'm going to try to report on this trivia as objectively as possible, but nearly 75 years after its initial release, "Ding-Dong the Witch is Dead" performed at #1 on Scottish singles charts and #2 on the UK singles chart. The counter-campaign, which encouraged sales of a song called "I'm in Love with Margaret Thatcher" to make it chart higher, only topped out at #35 on UK singles charts. Whether you are in either camp, it's still true that openly despising Thatcher and celebrating her demise is by no means a niche political stance (especially in places victimized by British imperialism). It's sociologically inaccurate/incomplete to insinuate otherwise, that it's only social media "bubbles."
And, yes, here is not the best place to celebrate like that, I'm not surprised that QM would remove comments.
that's like laughing at someone for hating Ronald Reagan today. the effects of their reign are still felt today and tarnish the names of the countries they represent—why wouldn't people be pressed about them?
Maybe accept "NUM" (National Union of Miners) as a type-in for the strike question? I was stumped until I realised it was just a general word that was wanted.
People: Let's make her sobriquet "The Iron Lady"
Thatcher: Nice, but there is no such thing as Iron. There are only 4 shells, 26 protons, 30 neutrons, and 26 electrons, all of which are individual components and have no relation :)
Respectable PM, but that quote was bonkers.
Good Times! :-)
The extra fact that the person in question is a democratically elected PM who won a 100+ seat majority in her third general election - Blair only won a 66 seat majority in his 3rd GE - suggests that the history might be a little more nuanced than Twitter and Facebook bubbles lead many of us to believe.
I'm totally fine with people criticizing the dead and pointing out their flaws, but celebrating is a bit much.
Feel free to hate Margaret Thatcher but if you are celebrating the death of a democratically-elected leader, you can do it somewhere else. I hear Twitter is good for that. JetPunk is a hate-free space.
And, yes, here is not the best place to celebrate like that, I'm not surprised that QM would remove comments.
Shouldn’t the first ‘in’ be an ‘as’?
"For 3 million you could give everyone in Scotland a shovel, and we could dig a hole so deep we could hand her over to Satan in person"