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Tony Benn


CrackpotForeigner

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Immensely principled in his beliefs, which defined that testing cold war period of history. Like him or not, when his name was mentioned, you knew the man and his politics. I personally found him a little too driven, but then I think by the end of the seventies there was a wind of change blowing anyway and a new age was dawning, but he had already more than chiselled his name in the British political stone. 

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Makes you wonder what on earth happened to politicians, when all we are left with are vacuous, X-Factor numpties.

 

R.I.P.

 

Picture the opening scene of The Terminator - skulls being crushed underfoot in a world run by machine politics.

 

This is where we find ourselves in the post-apocalyptic world of disaster capitalism, where there is no place for idealism; survival amongst the wreckage is the only realistic option left.  :)

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Listening to a full-on posh type expound socialist views was a bit of a revelation for this colonial. I suppose he could afford it, but his heart was in the right place and I respected him.

 

RIP Tony Benn.

 

Some facts from Wikipedia (where else?):

 

Vegetarian since the 70's

As a young boy he met Gandhi, since his father was Secretary for India.

Margaret Rutherford, the actress, was a cousin.

The smaller queen's head on postage stamps was his work, although he proposed doing away with it altogether.

A passenger on the last Concord flight, as a guest of the BBC (he had contributed to its development).

Most nobly of all, his workers' co-operative initiative is credited with keeping Triumph motorcycles in production until 1983.

 

A few facts from the BBC

 

 

1. British stamp design. As Postmaster General from 1964-6, the republican Benn wanted to permit the introduction of "non-traditional" designs - of landscapes, portraits of composers and so on - without the Queen's head, but he faced resistance from Buckingham Palace. The compromise that resulted from his campaign - a small cameo silhouette in the corner of pictorial stamps - can still be seen to this day.

 

2. The postcode system. Since the late 1950s, the Post Office had been trialling a method of six-digit alphanumeric codes to sort mail in the Norwich area. In October 1965, under Benn's watch as Postmaster General, the Post Office announced it would extend the system to the rest of the country. Benn also oversaw the opening of the Post Office Tower, now the BT Tower.

 

3. BBC Radio 1. Benn introduced the 1967 Marine Broadcasting Offences Act that closed down the pirate radio stations which were transmitting offshore around the coast of Britain. The legislation made it almost impossible for the likes of Radio Caroline to keep going and paved the way for the launch of Radio 1 in September of the same year.

 

4. E in Concorde. As minister of technology from 1966-70, Benn was responsible for the development of the Anglo-French supersonic airliner. Others can take credit for designing and building it, but Benn successfully resisted Treasury efforts to cancel it because of spiralling costs. He also restored the letter "e" to the project's name, which had been removed by former Prime Minister Harold Macmillan after a falling out with Charles de Gaulle. "E stands for excellence, for England, for Europe and for the entente cordiale," Benn said.

 

5. The rucksack with a built-in seat. Long a keen amateur inventor - he bolted a chair onto the roof of a car for his 1970 election campaign - Benn proudly showed off his creation, the "frontbencher", at the age of 83. "I was carrying around a stool and a rucksack and thought it would better if I put them together," he said. Less successful than his other innovations, he offered Sir Richard Branson the opportunity to manufacture it, but the tycoon turned him down.

 

He also had plans to save British Leyland but unfortunately they were never put to use.

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Heard him speak a couple of years ago. Even in his eighties he was a tremendous orator. His final message was that every generation has to refight the struggles that previous generations have fought. Have to say, in today's world those words were never truer. RIP Tony, and where's my tin hat.

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seemed to be a firm believer in what he fought for even if in my view he was wrong. However I wish more politicians had their own beliefs and stuck to them. So I admire him for that 

 

RIP. 

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May have been born into wealth but he cared about the right people unlike Cameron and Osbourne. A man of conviction and a true lefty. He will be sadly missed RIP

 

 

Says it all for me. Some cracking posts in this thread most of which show the man the high level of respect he so very much deserves. Those that don't say far more about the person posting than they do about Tony Benn.

 

RIP Tony. One of the last of a very rare breed of politicians.

 

 

 

That's a bit naughty considering the posts in the Margaret Thatcher thread

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Bye Tony. How amusing to see the vile creatures like Rifkind, Cameron and Blair trying to frame some suitably nuanced, slightly respectful words which in no way reflect their hatred of and fear for the ideas you spent your life promoting. Pathetic oafs. Self-serving publicity, as usual. Their hypocritical kowtowing is a recognition of the power of ideas, nothing at all with respect for the dead.

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