Margaret Thatcher — "I am not a wet, I am a warrior."
I am not a wet, I am a warrior.
I am not a wet, I am a warrior.
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"I stand for the belief that we can and must reverse the trend of socialism."
"I always cheer up immensely if anything is said to me that is particularly wounding, because I think, 'There is someone who need not be considered.'"
"It is better to be a lion for a day than a sheep all your life."
"I seem to smell the stench of appeasement in the air."
"The greatest danger to this country is not communism, but complacency."
British Prime Minister (1979-1990) whose free-market reforms and confrontation with trade unions defined the late-20th-century right. Closely associated with Ronald Reagan (her closest international ally). For an intellectual contrast, see Tony Benn, Labour cabinet minister and democratic-socialist figurehead — Benn was the loudest parliamentary opposition to Thatcherism throughout the 1980s. His diaries and Thatcher's autobiography are the two opposing histories of the period — Britain's class politics is structured around which view was right.
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