Forum Articles
  Welcome back Join CF
You are here You are here: Home | Forum | The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most of the discussions, articles and other free features. By joining our Virgin Media community you will have full access to all discussions, be able to view and post threads, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own images/photos, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please join our community today.


Welcome to Cable Forum
Go Back   Cable Forum > General Discussion > Current Affairs

The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..
Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 13-03-2009, 13:57   #46
Flyboy
Inactive
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 3,375
Flyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful one
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

Quote:
Originally Posted by foreverwar View Post
Because, of course, Arthur was elected by the people of the UK to bring down the government (again, trying to repeat his actions in the 70's with Heath)?

To quote the Labour Leader (Neil Kinnock) at the time -
"The strike was ruined the minute it was politicised and in the mind of Arthur Scargill it was always a political struggle. He fed himself the political illusion that as long as the miners were united they had the right to destabilise and overthrow the democratically elected government. The miners didn't deserve him, they deserved much, much better. My view is Margaret Thatcher and Arthur Scargill deserved each other. But no-one else did."
Well, he'd have had my vote.
Flyboy is offline   Reply With Quote
Advertisement
Old 13-03-2009, 13:58   #47
LondonRoad
Inactive
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Services: 30mb BB, XL TV, V+, TiVo, talk unlimited.
Posts: 4,143
LondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny star
LondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny star
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

Officially the strike ended when the NUM declared it ended. The reality was different.

The way that energy prices fluctuate mothballed mines could have been cost effectively brought back into production. There has been quite a few recent periods when it has been cheaper to produce electricity using expensive imported coal than our own gas. Future generations will be cursing us when foreign powers are holding us to ransom for poorer quality coal than we have under our own feet.

Only last year UK coal were considering opening a pit that they mothballed only 2 or 3 years earlier. I can't remember if they did or not but I remember reading that the pit in question had less reserves than some pits that were closed and not mothballed over the past 20 years.
LondonRoad is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 13-03-2009, 16:56   #48
TheDaddy
cf.mega pornstar
 
TheDaddy's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 19,160
TheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden aura
TheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden aura
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

Quote:
Originally Posted by martyh View Post
i agree that is the problem .It was very shortsighted of the gov. to allow this to happen some of the larger pits should have been maintained .I do remember it was a big political issue at the time (shortley after the strike and the pits started to close ) but as usual maggie got her way and had them closed instead of mothballed
maybe the gov. should look at long term spending over say 10-15yrs to re-open some of the larger ones or even sink new shafts in new fields ..if there are new fields to be found
Lol shortsighted, more like the actions of a vengeful few who knew exactly what they were doing.

---------- Post added at 16:56 ---------- Previous post was at 16:51 ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by foreverwar View Post
a) The "evidence" is hearsay, supplied by Mr Scargill, not exactly an uninterested party in the dispute, who may have an interest in rewriting history to perhaps show him in a more favourable light.

b) "changing the law to suit her agenda" - supposition, not fact - I beg to differ on your premise. Under that viewpoint, it would be equally as valid to state that even if Arthur Scargill had held a ballot and lost, he would still have held an illegal strike - it is too easy to rewrite history to support one side or the other of a viewpoint by changing facts.
Hold on Tory Boy

When the strike was called it was legal, the court of appeal even said so previously. If those in the so called 'safe pits' had listened and shown some unity we might still have a coal industry today, after all where are their safe jobs now? And of course there is also the question of whether they were forced into strike action by the government as well.
__________________
Sports Babble
TheDaddy is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 13-03-2009, 17:01   #49
Chris
Trollsplatter
 
Chris's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: North of Watford
Services: Humane elimination of all common Internet pests
Posts: 38,090
Chris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden aura
Chris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden aura
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

Quote:
Originally Posted by TheDaddy View Post
If those in the so called 'safe pits' had listened and shown some unity we might still have a coal industry today, after all where are their safe jobs now?
Are you for real?
Chris is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 13-03-2009, 17:07   #50
TheDaddy
cf.mega pornstar
 
TheDaddy's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 19,160
TheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden aura
TheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden aura
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

Quote:
Originally Posted by foreverwar View Post
Because, of course, Arthur was elected by the people of the UK to bring down the government (again, trying to repeat his actions in the 70's with Heath)?

To quote the Labour Leader (Neil Kinnock) at the time -
"The strike was ruined the minute it was politicised and in the mind of Arthur Scargill it was always a political struggle. He fed himself the political illusion that as long as the miners were united they had the right to destabilise and overthrow the democratically elected government. The miners didn't deserve him, they deserved much, much better. My view is Margaret Thatcher and Arthur Scargill deserved each other. But no-one else did."
They deserved much, much better from a Labour leader than you as well Neil, you might even have won the top job on the back of it

---------- Post added at 17:07 ---------- Previous post was at 17:06 ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris View Post
Are you for real?
No I am a figment of your imagination, run along and bother some one else if that's all you have to say
__________________
Sports Babble
TheDaddy is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 13-03-2009, 17:21   #51
Chris
Trollsplatter
 
Chris's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: North of Watford
Services: Humane elimination of all common Internet pests
Posts: 38,090
Chris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden aura
Chris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden aura
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

Quote:
Originally Posted by TheDaddy View Post
No I am a figment of your imagination, run along and bother some one else if that's all you have to say
Very funny. You know what I meant. Do you seriously believe there was any likely scenario whereby the miners could have won?
Chris is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 13-03-2009, 20:29   #52
TheDaddy
cf.mega pornstar
 
TheDaddy's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 19,160
TheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden aura
TheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden auraTheDaddy has a golden aura
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris View Post
Very funny. You know what I meant. Do you seriously believe there was any likely scenario whereby the miners could have won?
Hard to say, perhaps they wouldn't have toppled the government, their tactics were working though, we were going through those reserves hoarded before the strike even began, had they had support from the dockers, steel workers and more importantly the Labour party itself it could have been different, Maggie herself said “We were in danger of losing everything,” the strike “could indeed have brought down the government.”
__________________
Sports Babble
TheDaddy is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 13-03-2009, 20:48   #53
Flyboy
Inactive
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 3,375
Flyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful oneFlyboy is the helpful one
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

Perhaps it was situation like the Battle of Britain, where they only had about a week to go before defeat.
Flyboy is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 13-03-2009, 22:36   #54
Arthurgray50@blu
cf.mega poster
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 6,798
Arthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appeal
Arthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appealArthurgray50@blu has a bronzed appeal
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

I think for the first time, l have to disagree with what has been said concerning the mining industry and the future.

We have under our feet, as they say, We have energy that is home produced, and the workforce that can make it work, we have the science that can produce a coal that can overtake all this wind crap that ruins our landscapes, What we have to look at is, we import coal, which must cost a bundle, we have mines that work at the moment and it profitable.

The mining industry was killed off, by an old bag who wanted to take on everyone, and she crippled this country, and she is resented by some people in this country, this country is always looking at ways for power in the future and spending money - your money- which sometimes goes to waste., and also opening up the mines again, you would reduce the unemployment overnight.
Arthurgray50@blu is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 13-03-2009, 23:17   #55
Chris
Trollsplatter
 
Chris's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: North of Watford
Services: Humane elimination of all common Internet pests
Posts: 38,090
Chris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden aura
Chris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden aura
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

Quote:
Originally Posted by Arthurgray50@blu View Post
I think for the first time, l have to disagree with what has been said concerning the mining industry and the future.

We have under our feet, as they say, We have energy that is home produced, and the workforce that can make it work, we have the science that can produce a coal that can overtake all this wind crap that ruins our landscapes, What we have to look at is, we import coal, which must cost a bundle, we have mines that work at the moment and it profitable.
We have energy under our feet, and it is, undoubtedly, just about the most environmentally disastrous energy we could choose. The sulphur, I admit, we can nowadays deal with - only after decades of pouring acid rain on Scandinavia, mind you - but the carbon, we cannot. The technology to remove millions of tonnes of carbon from coal burned on a commercial scale simply does not exist.

As for wind power ruining our landscapes ... I invite you to take a trip up the valleys in South Wales if you want to see what coal mining does to landscapes. Or anywhere there used to be large-scale mining, for that matter. Massive artificial mountains of slag, I think we can do without.
Chris is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14-03-2009, 00:17   #56
LondonRoad
Inactive
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Services: 30mb BB, XL TV, V+, TiVo, talk unlimited.
Posts: 4,143
LondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny star
LondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny star
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris View Post

As for wind power ruining our landscapes ... I invite you to take a trip up the valleys in South Wales if you want to see what coal mining does to landscapes. Or anywhere there used to be large-scale mining, for that matter. Massive artificial mountains of slag, I think we can do without.
Chris, with the upmost respect to you, each and every slagheap is a monument to the forefathers of a large section of our population.

I've never worked down a pit but I know how important they were to our nation. I know how our nation has benefited from the mining industry. I know how dangerous the conditions were. I know the long hours working men spent underground. I know what their reward was for that labour.

Think of the human cost that produced that slagheap and it may not seem so offensive to your eyes.

I actually find wind farms quite aesthetic.... to view from a distance, I wouldn't want one in moby.
LondonRoad is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14-03-2009, 00:20   #57
Chris
Trollsplatter
 
Chris's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: North of Watford
Services: Humane elimination of all common Internet pests
Posts: 38,090
Chris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden aura
Chris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden auraChris has a golden aura
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

You know, if I were a betting man, I'd be prepared to put the farm on Arthur not having had monuments to anyone in particular in mind when he talked about destroying the landscape. I'm pretty sure he meant aesthetics, pure and simple. To which I reply, coal slag is far uglier.
Chris is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14-03-2009, 00:34   #58
LondonRoad
Inactive
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Services: 30mb BB, XL TV, V+, TiVo, talk unlimited.
Posts: 4,143
LondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny star
LondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny starLondonRoad has a nice shiny star
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris View Post
You know, if I were a betting man, I'd be prepared to put the farm on Arthur not having had monuments to anyone in particular in mind when he talked about destroying the landscape. I'm pretty sure he meant aesthetics, pure and simple. To which I reply, coal slag is far uglier.
I couldn't possible comment on you comparing Arthur's beauty with that of a coal slag You clearly have more intimate knowledge than I.

Arthur the coal under our feet wasn't home produced. We were still joined to Europe when all them dinosaurs popped it and most of them were French so really it's their coal if fair's fair.
LondonRoad is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14-03-2009, 08:52   #59
Hugh
laeva recumbens anguis
Cable Forum Team
 
Hugh's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Age: 68
Services: Premiere Collection
Posts: 43,539
Hugh has a golden auraHugh has a golden auraHugh has a golden aura
Hugh has a golden auraHugh has a golden auraHugh has a golden auraHugh has a golden auraHugh has a golden auraHugh has a golden auraHugh has a golden auraHugh has a golden auraHugh has a golden auraHugh has a golden aura
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

Leave it ahhht, you slaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaags!
__________________
Thank you for calling the Abyss.
If you have called to scream, please press 1 to be transferred to the Void, or press 2 to begin your stare.

If my post is in bold and this colour, it's a Moderator Request.
Hugh is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14-03-2009, 09:18   #60
papa smurf
vox populi vox dei
 
papa smurf's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: the last resort
Services: every thing
Posts: 14,600
papa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny stars
papa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny starspapa smurf has a pair of shiny stars
Re: The Miner's Strike - 25 years ago yesterday..

i remember those times with fondness, no heating.no lighting .no work.no tea when i got home [no power] it wasn't easy being an arc welder in those days as the transformer was slightly dead most of the time , we all all had a real fondness for good ole king arthur and his mob ,holding the nation to ransom, we enjoyed being cold and huddled in the dark -the good old days without a doubt .
__________________
To be or not to be, woke is the question Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer. The slings and arrows of outrageous wokedome, Or to take arms against a sea of wokies. And by opposing end them.
papa smurf is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 16:57.


Server: osmium.zmnt.uk
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are Cable Forum