GreekIslandGirl wrote:Erm, if you wish a balanced viewpoint, you'll see that the UK was better than Italy and very, very close to the other two. In fact all four where (within statistical comparisons) virtually the same.
Where did I say otherwise? You're just proving you cannot analyse graphs.
GreekIslandGirl wrote:Erm, if you wish a balanced viewpoint, you'll see that the UK was better than Italy and very, very close to the other two. In fact all four where (within statistical comparisons) virtually the same.
Where did I say otherwise? You're just proving you cannot analyse graphs.
Yes, that was in 1973...
Methinks you need to replace your bucket with a Dunce's hat!
I was analyzing the whole of the graph which YOU posted. Those were the years before she took office - i.e. when the UK was doing comparatively better.
GreekIslandGirl wrote:Erm, if you wish a balanced viewpoint, you'll see that the UK was better than Italy and very, very close to the other two. In fact all four where (within statistical comparisons) virtually the same.
Where did I say otherwise? You're just proving you cannot analyse graphs.
Yes, that was in 1973...
Methinks you need to replace your bucket with a Dunce's hat!
I was analyzing the whole of the graph which YOU posted. Those were the years before she took office - i.e. when the UK was doing comparatively better.
yialousa1971 wrote:Didn't she (the Zionist) deregulate the banks?
During her first trip to Israel in 1965, less than two decades after the Nakba and while Palestinians still lived under martial law, Thatcher spoke highly of Israelis for "their sense of purpose and complete dedication, their pioneer spirit, and their realism." She later advocated that Palestinian self-determination be realized within the context of "some kind of federation with Jordan," which she deemed "the best and most acceptable solution."
In 1986, Thatcher said of Golda Meir, who not only denied the Palestinian right of return but also the existence of Palestinians in general, "I greatly admired her. I greatly admired her as a war leader. I greatly admired her tremendous courage. I greatly admired her as a pioneer. I greatly admired her as a great human being, warm, thoughtful, kind, for all her fellow citizens and for human kind in the world as a whole."