The Downing Street Years Quotes
The Downing Street Years
by
Margaret Thatcher1,607 ratings, 3.95 average rating, 128 reviews
The Downing Street Years Quotes
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“The belief that the laws of economics and the judgements of the markets can be suspended by clever people — and Nigel Lawson was one of the cleverest people in British politics — is a perpetual temptation to folly. That folly cost us dear. But then the idea that other clever people — and Jacques Delors was one of the cleverest people I met in European politics — can build their Tower of Babel on the uneven foundation of ancient nations, different languages and diverse economies is still more dangerous. Work on that shaky construction is still proceeding.”
― The Downing Street Years
― The Downing Street Years
“What the strike’s defeat established was that Britain could not be made ungovernable by the Fascist Left. Marxists wanted to defy the law of the land in order to defy the laws of economics. They failed, and in doing so demonstrated just how mutually dependent the free economy and a free society really are.”
― The Downing Street Years
― The Downing Street Years
“There I was caught out by the press. I was standing on a heap of cut grass and the Daily Mirror photographer asked me to pick some up. I saw nothing wrong with that, and so I obliged. He took his photograph — and the picture duly appeared the following day with the caption ‘Let them eat grass’. It does not do to be too co-operative.”
― The Downing Street Years Easton Press Leatherbound
― The Downing Street Years Easton Press Leatherbound
“they never quoted the rest. I went on to say: There are individual men and women, and there are families. And no government can do anything except through people, and people must look to themselves first. It’s our duty to look after ourselves and then to look after our neighbour. My meaning, clear at the time but subsequently distorted beyond recognition, was that society was not an abstraction, separate from the men and women who composed it, but a living structure of individuals, families, neighbours and voluntary associations.”
― The Downing Street Years
― The Downing Street Years
“El deseo de ganar nace en la mayoría de nosotros. La voluntad de ganar es una cuestión de entrenamiento. La manera en que se gana es una cuestión de honor.”
― Los años de Downing Street: La autobiografía de la Dama de Hierro
― Los años de Downing Street: La autobiografía de la Dama de Hierro
“en realidad iba directamente al núcleo de la cuestión de cuál debía ser el papel del Gobierno en una sociedad libre. Era tarea del Gobierno establecer un marco de estabilidad —ya fuera estabilidad constitucional, el cumplimiento de la ley, o la estabilidad económica”
― Los años de Downing Street: La autobiografía de la Dama de Hierro
― Los años de Downing Street: La autobiografía de la Dama de Hierro
