"Whatever else may be true of her,
Thatcher engaged in incredibly consequential acts that affected millions of
people around the world. She played a key role not only in bringing about the
first Gulf War but also using her influence to publicly advocate for the 2003
attack on Iraq. She denounced Nelson Mandela and his ANC as "terrorists",
something even David Cameron ultimately admitted was wrong. She was a steadfast
friend to brutal tyrants such as Augusto Pinochet, Saddam Hussein and Indonesian
dictator General Suharto ("One of our very best and most valuable friends"). And
as my Guardian colleague Seumas Milne detailed last year, "across Britain
Thatcher is still hated for the damage she inflicted – and for her political
legacy of rampant inequality and greed, privatisation and social breakdown." To
demand that all of that be ignored in the face of one-sided requiems to her
nobility and greatness is a bit bullying and tyrannical, not to mention warped.
As David Wearing put it this morning in satirizing these
speak-no-ill-of-the-deceased moralists: "People praising Thatcher's legacy
should show some respect for her victims. Tasteless." "