A minute's conga?
With Mexican waves and triumphant fanfare.
A minute's conga?
And how does this make them different to Thatcher? Those who opposed her - the miners, the unions - were dispatched of as quickly as they were under any of those names, whilst those within her own party she deemed "undesirable" were removed from office and became non-persons under her reign in a very Stalinist manner.
This mark of respect is more for figures within the game, i can't recall too many others outside of football given a minutes silence. To expect an entire sport to honour a political party figure is ridiculous, did we honour Ted Heath, or any other ex PM who's passed away? I'm not sure that we have, so why special case her?
Nsis - I can see why Whelan would think the way he does, he is clearly one who benefited from her floodgate opening policies, but he should keep his brown-nosing to himself. Go to her funeral Dave if you love her so much, just don't involve everyone else.
Without causing controversy, football is traditionally a working class game, the working class would traditionally support Labour. To ask a sport (or more to the point, the fans of it) which is probably more Labour orientated to honour a staunch Tory is more than silly imo.

That's just ridiculous, comparing Thatcher to Stalin. I can't even be bothered to dignify such an ignorant comment with an appropriate response.
This mark of respect is more for figures within the game, i can't recall too many others outside of football given a minutes silence. To expect an entire sport to honour a political party figure is ridiculous, did we honour Ted Heath, or any other ex PM who's passed away? I'm not sure that we have, so why special case her?
How is it ignorant? As well as both of them strongly believing in their ideologies and imposing them on their respective country with an iron will, the only difference between the two is he used bullets where she used a pen - the end results were the same, with opponents in the party cast out never to return whilst citizens of their country who opposed them were swiftly crushed.
Ken Bigley - unfortunately, as the minute's silence was at an England match at Old Trafford, the silence made the anti-Scouser chants much clearer.
Nsis - I can see why Whelan would think the way he does, he is clearly one who benefited from her floodgate opening policies, but he should keep his brown-nosing to himself. Go to her funeral Dave if you love her so much, just don't involve everyone else.
Without causing controversy, football is traditionally a working class game, the working class would traditionally support Labour. To ask a sport (or more to the point, the fans of it) which is probably more Labour orientated to honour a staunch Tory is more than silly imo.
Trying to rewrite history, just because she's dead, is an insult to everyone. What she did and didn't do is well documented. She will be judged on her deeds, not her philosophy, and rightly so.
The cheer-leading happy-clappers should also remember she's dead, not up for election. Who are you trying to convince?
celebrating someones death is pretty disgraceful imo. I'm no fan of thatcher but i'm not gonna rejoice either. She was someone's mum/daughter/etc as well.
Her "crimes" were hardly those of a war criminal or baby murderer were they?
There won't be a minute's silence, because some people at every ground will boo and it will prove to be an embarassment. Love or hate the woman, you shouldn't boo; she's died, everybody deserves some mark of respect at that time.
Thatcher did transform the economy (which was desperately needed), but she replaced manufacturing and other heavy industry will finance and services. That has left Britain relying on being a financial and tourist centre with many service industries, but producing little. As the government has run up debt year after year to plug the balance of payments deficit, many have benefited from her policies for a relatively long period of time, but future generations will suffer. Indeed, we are suffering now because debt has had to be addressed. Her economic policies boosted those who got jobs in these new markets, but she didn't care about the social cost to the rest- those like the miners.