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Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Mrs. Thatcher’s fight - For freedom, vs. tyranny

Mrs. Thatcher’s fight - NYPOST.com


With Margaret Thatcher’s funeral today, the generation of leaders who played decisive roles in bringing an end to communism and the Cold War shrinks still further.
Millions of anonymous dissidents behind the Iron Curtain helped to bring their system down too — many of them died doing so in countries such as Lithuania, Georgia and Azerbaijan at the last — just as millions of anonymous “peace marchers” in Western Europe tried unknowingly to shore it up.
But the leaders who did the most to challenge Soviet communism were Ronald Reagan, John Paul II and Thatcher.
Lady Thatcher’s coffin yesterday, in the Crypt Chapel of St. Mary Undercroft beneath the Houses of Parliament in London.
Neal Leon/PA Photos/ABACA
Lady Thatcher’s coffin yesterday, in the Crypt Chapel of St. Mary Undercroft beneath the Houses of Parliament in London.
Mrs. Thatcher’s most significant contribution to the revolutions of 1989 and 1991 (which brought down first the Soviet Empire, then the Soviet Union itself) was her economic revival of the British economy through free-market policies ofeconomic deregulation,sound money and privatization.
Those policies were rooted in the practical economics of a Grantham corner shop and in English provincial Methodism, as well as in the intellectual revival of economic liberalism pioneered by the Institute of Economic Affairs. It was about freedom and opportunity as well as about economic efficiency.
In the early 1960s Thatcher told an IEA meeting of Tory members of Parliament dispirited by the party’s leftward drift that they were in the wrong job if they couldn’t convince voters that the private-sector retailer Marks and Spencer gave them better value than the Co-op or the Post Office. Her 

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