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Thursday, 7 March 2024

The Nineteen-Eighties

I missed most of the nineteen-eighties. I was working as a university researcher, writing a thesis in my spare time, and volunteering with the Samaritans. As well as all that, my mother was in and out of hospital with breast cancer, and then died. It left little over for anything else, and I gave no great thought to events taking place around me. Even the re-runs of old Top Of The Pops programmes from that time have seemed refreshingly new to me in recent years. 

Yet, in Britain, it was a decade of great change: to commerce and industry, to individual and national identity, in lifestyle, and in politics. Almost every week there was some new controversy about the morals of the young and the state of the nation. Most of it went over my head. 

So, forty years late, I have been back in the nineteen-eighties. I started with a 2016 television documentary, “The 80s With Dominic Sandbrook”. If nothing else, it is wonderful nostalgia. 

It takes us through the years of Margaret Thatcher and the IRA Brighton bombing, her “special relationship” with Ronald Reagan, and her nation of young computer programmers. Our hearts and minds are invaded by Japanese video games and VCR video nasties such as Cannibal Holocaust, much to the outrage of Mrs. Mary Whitehouse, a puritanical Christian campaigner. We fall under the influence of the American consumerist dream, and the lifestyles of television shows such as Dallas. There is the civil unrest of racism, and we are terrified by the “gay plague” of AIDS, fought with surprisingly frank publicity and the example of Princess Diana. There is a gradual increase in sexual tolerance and acceptance of diversity. We go to war with Argentina over the Falkland Islands, and with the striking miners. 

Is it rhetoric to say “we went to war” with the miners? It was certainly planned like a military campaign. The miners and other trade unions had been causing trouble for years, and the Thatcher government was determined to see them off once and for all. A sweeping programme of pit closures was announced, bringing miners out on strike throughout Yorkshire and elsewhere. The government had prepared by stockpiling mountains of coal at power stations, and were fortunate that the Nottinghamshire miners stayed at work, thinking their jobs were secure. An information assault was mounted, branding the miners as “the enemy within”, portraying then as uncouth animals making outrageous demands, prepared to be violent if not met. The image and persona of their leader, Arthur Scargill, seemed to fit perfectly. The mainstream media reinforced it, with reporting doctored to portray the miners in an unfavourable light. It had elements of regional and class snobbery designed to appeal to voters sympathetic to a right-wing government. 

But another documentary, made to correspond with this year’s fortieth anniversary of the strike, gives a different perspective. “The Miners’ Strike: A Frontline Story”, recalls the personal experiences of fifteen men and women involved in different ways: striking and strike-breaking miners from working and striking areas, their families, and members of the police force. It is powerful stuff, with harrowing recollections of hardship and brutality. 

One of the worst incidents occurred at Orgreave near Rotherham on the 18th June, 1984, where the miners planned to carry out peaceful secondary picketing. The police allowed them to approach and assemble without hindrance, and then brutally attacked them. The police were armed with batons, shields and riot gear, and hacked down the miners from horseback. It was like a medieval rout. At the time, it was widely presented as an act of self-defence by the police, but, later, miners were compensated for assault, wrongful arrest, unlawful detention and malicious prosecution. 

The strike ended after a year when the defeated miners went back to work. Essentially, they had been trying to defend their communities. They accepted that mines had to close, but not that it had to be done so abruptly, leaving whole villages near-destitute. You cannot “get on your bike and look for work”, as one cabinet minister told them, when you have a mortgage on an unsaleable house, and there is no work to be had anyway. And you can’t go to university late like I did when you have a family. The changes could have been introduced gradually, with support, as with later pit closures. Many of the affected areas never recovered, and remain amongst the poorest in Europe. 

Even now, there are many who choose to believe the media propaganda of the day, rather than recognising Margaret Thatcher and her Conservatives as uncaring, self-serving leeches who sold off the country’s assets and gave away the money. 

At the end of his programme, Dominic Sandbrook wonders how Britain might have looked had the miners and IRA succeeded. Would it have remained a trade union fortress holding out against globalisation and the advance of technology? No, it would not. Change was unstoppable, and trying to hold it back would have been futile. But it did not need to be handled with such incompetence.    

LINKS

The second of three parts of the series “The 80s With Dominic Sandbrook” (59 minutes) is online and apparently accessible without restriction at: https://clp.bbcrewind.co.uk/6b0ca8405623eacd3c490e87398bb3b9  

Currently there appear to be no legitimate copies of parts 1 and 3 online. 

“The Miners’ Strike: A Frontline Story” (89 minutes) is on the BBC iPlayer (UK only): https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m001wm1x/miners-strike-a-frontline-story 

However, much more is generally available on the BBC website (search for “The Miners’ Strike”), such as: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-scotland-68442261 

20 comments:

  1. I remember this time well Tasker. The brutality, the comrsdeship between men whose livelihoods were threatened in an area where getting a different job was going to be nigh on impossible.and where many of these hard working men had families and whose whole way of life was about to be destroyed The Government of the day have nothing to be proud about.

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    1. I have found it interesting to look back at this period again because, as mentioned, I was very much tied up in my own little world then. I remember incidents such as being annoyed one day when trying to get to Nottingham, I was stopped by police and had to wait a long time in a queue and was then thoroughly interrogated, but still did not take any deep notice of things.

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  2. Hi Tasker. I remember Heavy Metal, The Battle Of Bean Field and myself going on a CND march in London with over 200000 people in attendance.

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    1. I have just looked that up and can see it was a similar kind of frame-up in Wiltshire. It makes the country sound like a police state. It could easily have gone that way. It still could.

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  3. Naturally, I applaud this blogpost. Under Thatcher, The State did all that it could to crush the miners and their communities. No wonder they burnt an effigy of her in Goldthorpe on the day that she died (April 8th 2013) and "Ding Dong - The Witch Is Dead" became a hit record - for she was the real "Enemy Within".

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    1. I find it hard to believe that there a many who admire her to this day. Blinkered people who talk about what a wonderful free democracy we have. We do not score as highly on the list of free countries as we might like to think.

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  4. I missed a lot of the 1980s too -- not in terms of the news (I kept up with that) but in cultural terms, missing movies, books and music of most of that decade. That's when I graduated from law school and was first in private practice. No time for anything but work. Once things settled down in the 90s, I had to go back and catch up but there are still big gaps.

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    1. I missed most of those things too. I've just added also that my mother was ill and then died of breast cancer during the decade. Today's constant news is more difficult to ignore.

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  5. 'She' was evil with a complete lack of empathy. Magnanimous in victory? Not even that. It is pleasing that this terrible period is still well remembered.

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    1. I doubt the families affected will ever forget it. The last video link is of a Scottish miner - went to work at the mine aged 14, no qualifications needed, then aged about 40 the whole area is thrown out of work. What alternative employment were they supposed to find? A lot of the pits were only said to be uneconomic because of subsidised coal from Eastern Europe.

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  6. I was full time at university and working a 40 hour week job at nights for 5 years of the 80's and like you, although those things all made news in NZ I failed to pay the necessary amount of attention of critically analyse what it meant for you (or us). The umbilical cord with Britain was cut for us in 1974, and what we went through in the 70s to adjust to what that did to our traditional markets for our primary exports may have hardened us somewhat to the economic adjustments people of GB had to face a decade later. We were being told to face up to free market forces and figured the rest of the world go do worse than to learn what that did to an economy and the lives of ordinary working folk....life without trade tariffs and export subsidies.

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    1. As mentioned in previous response, it was "free market" was sup
      subsidised competition from other countries. As has happened more recently to monopolise the manufacture of solar panels and the like. I wish our governments would get wise to dirty tricks and adopt them themselves.

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  7. Your country and mine suffered from the eighties, from Reagan and Thatcher. Trickle down economics was a no more realistic than Thatcher's uncompromising single mindedness.

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    1. The only place the trickle seems to lead from here is out of the country where the government can't get it back.

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  8. Bouffant hair and a handbag. Always immaculately dressed, Thatcher ruled like a prim matron. That was her 'go to' charm for all those people who voted for her. She was a woman of her time. I only ever saw the plight of the miners through the news. I was angry about the police brutality and like Northsider also remember 'The Bean Field' .
    Was this distraction politics something we see today when the pill is to bitter to swallow? I wish there was an answer to the so called 'growth factor', making jobs for people when they become redundant after it is felt their industry is no longer needed.

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    1. There are parallels with today. I'm sure we still have a lot of slanted news coverage about issues such as Ukraine.
      I don't know about the economics, but surely we could be making more of our own things where there are people looking for work. It does not seem to me as if the full costs and benefits (including social ones) are taken into the picture.

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  9. Like I said in my comment on Neil's post about the strike, most of what I know about it comes from two sources: My late husband (whose maternal family were all miners) and the recently read book "Northerners - A History".
    I was a teenager in the 1980s (born in 1968) and much more interested in music and clothes and (to an extent) boys than politics, and even less so in a different country, when there was a lot going on in mine.

    Today I spoke to Mary, my mother-in-law in Yorkshire; she turned 90 today. She gets the Daily Mail delivered every morning, and you can tell every time the conversation drifts to certain topics, which I then always try to steer towards other, less controversial topics - I have no wish arguing with her. In her opinion, Margaret Thatcher was great simply because she was a woman and "showed them". Mary's world is very black and white, and it is short of a miracle that she loves me even though I am German.

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    1. That last sentence made me laugh. The Daily Mail can be very entertaining but some readers believe it without question.
      I think that last video link of the Scottish miner might work for you (even I need the subtitles). There is real hatred there. You should be able to see the Sandbrook one as well if you want an hours thoroughly watchable entertainment.

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  10. Hello Tasker

    I really enjoyed reading this post.

    I was born towards the end of this decade. Since childhood, I've been fascinated by the fact that I was born in the year the Soviet Union collapsed. It's amazing time to be born in the eclipsing of a old empire, like those during WW1 who were born in the fall of the Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian empires. I was wondering what that moment was like? Did it stand out? I know - from what i've read - there were huge celebrations over the fall of the Berlin wall across Eastern Europe.

    Also, you say you were writing your thesis? What subject? Did you finish it? I love how you included footnotes. A true academic. Next time, you'll probably include a bibliography!! :)

    Liam.

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    1. Thank you. The thesis was about computers in special education. I am just writing another post about the 1980s which touches on it, probably ready by tomorrow.
      If you have time, the Dominic Sandbrook programme is great. Unfortunately only this one out of the programmes three in the series is in the archive.

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