Thanks that made me laugh hard.
Meanwhile, a opinion piece in my newspaper wonders if the UK is headed to becoming a third world nation again, just like they were before Thatcher, when they were begging the IMF to save them, much like Greece is now.
Cheers, though in regards to your latter point, it's an interesting idea. Before Thatcher every group was out for itself, out against every other group in their community, vital services grounding to a halt under strikes and threats of national emergency. Infrastructure was shutting down, in one notable instance, a factory was used to store the dead because cemetery workers went on strike. Whilst it was not 3rd world, it was the Ottoman sick man of Yurop. Talented individuals fled the UK for the USA, fleeing the taxes imposed by the gov in an attempt to maintain order. Civil servants determined wages in an effort to combat the threat of hyperinflation, while politicians told foreign generals that the UK would support their invasions of the UK. No one would help their neighbour because they expected society to help them. Today, it would take war or a global recession for that to repeat, just as it took world war to economically dislocate the UK. I suppose we were lucky Thatcher stopped us from joining the Euro. Ultimately as long as we don't have the blood on our streets to the same level as europe, things are gonna be content. Greece's situation is I think, evidence of what happens to nations that are not powerful enough to sit in the big boy club. Don't forget, for individuals like myself, we did not neglect to notice that Greece was not reduced to ruin by the actions of the IMF alone. The Troika was the European Central Bank, the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, the first two are concerningly left unmentioned.
Also, more bants:
French police attempting to communicate with anons in order to find who leaked Macron's financial connections
*EDIT
What are the long term effects of brain drain?