In some areas, yes. These miners lived this type of life no matter what era they lived in. But most of 1980’s elsewhere was loud, colorful and very wild.
proud industry which should be prosperous and flourishing today providing worthwhile opportunities of employment likewise many more industries throughout Britain today. unfortunately the diabolical thatcher decided to empty her bowels on British manufacturing. hence the diabolical state of country today. coal is king thatcher the so called iron lady is dead and turned to rust mining communities still alive.
Lived in Sheffield at this time and without Newspaper reports , not much known of this. Sheffield was the most famous 'Steel' industry area in the World . Mining seems unsual operating in inner City areas. 'Ring Roads' take heavy road haulage away from the Center. I was invited to join a music evening in a city center venue with people I shared accommodation. A band from further North playing pleasant music, unexpectedly , during an 'interval' an unpretenious Man with an 'outside' Coat on, stood on the stage , if there was one. Then recited a poem, about this strike he was on. A good applause was given !
I come from a coal mining area, I remember the strike well. However I fail to see how a business that was losing GBP1.2bn per year could be maintained. I also dont see how coal not mined is 'lost to the nation', on the contrary, the opposite seems to be true. However I think this was a very fair report.
Yes I agree with you Alan the mines struggled to get the coal out as you know and the government were buying it from Poland in bulk. My dad used to work in the workshops at Elsecar he got the option just before the strike to move down the road to cortonwood but didn't because they all knew it was about to close so rather than be out of work he stayed at Elsecar only to be made redundant after the strike. So I think it was a waste of time stopping at a pit that closed without prior warning from the office.
This legacy will still live on in the next generation if the schools do the likes of history of coal mining as this kind of topic is lacking so the kids of today know what it was like working and striking , specially working down a deep coal mine
I was a miner and stood firm with my brother miners for all the duration of the strike. People may say i was a fool but when that bond is made with others then we stand or fall together. I knew hardship as did my family and my then wife showed her true colours by deciding to leave after just 6 months of the strike. Many suffered more than this by being threatened by the banks to take their house from them for non payment of mortgage, mental health issues, starvation..........the list is endless. All i can say is this..............i do not, nor never will regret my decision to stand by my brother miners who saw the strike through. If people think Thatcher broke us then they need to think again. I would rather have died a thousand times than knelt before Thatcher.
I'm sorry for all you went through. So glad you never regretted the decision to stand by your brothers, your an inspiration. I'm a woman and my husband knows I'm all for the workers and Solidarity to all who feel they have no other option but to strike. I'm part of The People's Assembly and fully support the RMT and pain them a visit on a picket in Manchester. Solidarity ✊
@Bessie Hillum haha the bigot comment was in regards to what you said about women, bigot. I know all those proposals regarding trade union legislation, they are all bad. Union power is the only way that labour can actually fight for any kind of rights and you and i both know that its just going to suppress any kind of working class voice anymore, but thats what youre in favour of so good for you??? (I dont actually know why you bought it up or what you want me to say about that??) All ill say on that is this - the right to strike and industrial action is a pillar of a democratic and liberal society. When you take away the tiny amount of rights that working people have, you create authoritarian rule. I could care less if you know me or not, youre still a bigot. Say that to more women, i hope more people call you a bigot.
It's about high time Thames via it's current owners got themselves on Freeview/Freesat, etc. with its fine archive of programmes. It would probably be the only channel would ever get me consider going back watching linear TV and pay the licence fee! 👍 Maybe some kind of partnership with Talking Pictures TV? 🤔😉 First programme on the channel: Death on the Rock (Uncut) 👍👍
Miners at thorsby colliery did go on strike Not sure how many went out But there was only 80 men remained at the end I know this as ive got the plate they had made with all there names on 2 of them family members
A very interesting and thought provoking documentary of its time. The NUM officials Jack Taylor and Mick Carter, had raise some serious issues about the future of the coal industry, and the welfare of the miners and their families.
Isn’t it ironic that the greatest threat to the coal industry in Australia ( I’m from Australia) is from the Australian labor party. Yes that labor party that was supposed to represent workers. The Australian labor party has been taken over by progressive greens. It long ago lost its industrial base. What happened in the coal industry in Britain is going to happen in Australia if the labor party ever win national government.
What is going to happen in Australia is the same as Britain because nobody is going to want your coal not even the Indians and Chinese, the stone age did not end because we ran out of stone, in the same way the coal age is ending because we have better sources of energy now.
Some poor people built a house and they called it the labour party they lived in the house for a short while but pretty soon squatters moved in from the universities from the intellectuals from the middle-class -they put the poor people into the basement they keep them down there they let them out to vote just to keep the house standing
I was a teenager when this was happening with out a clue as to what I would do after school. I got an engineering apprenticeship as a toolmaker for a die casting foundry. Fast forward thirty six years and the foundry has closed and the site cleared they lost a lot of contracts to EU country’s
They were undercut by EU country’s and the cost of materials ie aluminium was high and allso electricity prices went through the roof and it was hard for them to get electricity at a competitive price from there supplier. To melt aluminium uses an enormous amount of electricity
@@diggmore1362 the answers are much deeper than that. British industry has been in decline since the 1800s. undercut? No. The fact is that we prices ourselves out of markets because we were so inefficient and, as James Callaghan said, "paying ourselves more than the value of what we produce". Even now, the average British worker is 20% less efficient than the average German. The reasons lie deep in our culture. Chronic underinvestment, appalling levels of skills and education in both workers and management, short termism and an inherent conservatism that means we are very slow to adopt new methods and move into new industries. Andrew Carnegie, the American steel magnet, said over 120 years ago "The reason why America and Germany is making Britain a back number is because Britain is still using machinery and methods that are 20 years out of date."
I'm afraid the problem is a lot older than the EU. The answers are much deeper than that. British industry has been in decline since the 1800s. The fact is that we priced ourselves out of markets because we were so inefficient and, as James Callaghan said, "paying ourselves more than the value of what we produce". Even now, the average British worker is 20% less efficient than the average German. The reasons lie deep in our culture. Chronic underinvestment, appalling levels of skills and education in both workers and management, short termism and an inherent conservatism that means we are very slow to adopt new methods and move into new industries. Andrew Carnegie, the American steel magnet, said over 120 years ago "The reason why America and Germany are making Britain a back number is because Britain is still using machinery and methods that are 20 years out of date."
@@zeddeka one of the things that I was saying in my first comment was that as a teenager in the early 1980s with the industrial decline and then miners strike was how was I ever going to get a job . The foundry that I worked at survived to 2010 it closed with about 100 employees. I had moved on about 18 years before. They could not compete with other company’s. what did not help is that as part of a group of foundry’s they had been stripped of investment in latter years
The first thing we need to understand about the 1984 strike is that it was blatantly illegal, and that it was an extreme departure from established NCB procedure and precedent. This is a classic example of what can happen when a union simply becomes too powerful.
If the market is paying £47 a ton and its costing £60 a ton to produce going on strike achieves nothing other than making the pit closure happen all the quicker.
try saying that to scargill which i already have it simply falls on deaf ears & he still claims he won when all he actually did was help thatcher with the closures so the 84 strikes were for nothing cos 38 years onwards not one pit is in production cortonwood is now a retail park & just about all of them demolished
My Grandfather moved from Wales to Yorkshire before WW2 due pit closure (geological), worked for a time in Yorkshire then quit due awful health: started a small carpet shop and never looked back. The cult of anger towards Thatcher nearly 40 years after ‘84 needs a rethink.
Well how do people like your grandad sell carpets if nobody has a livelihood? Thatcher replaced jobs with welfare and Major created the underclass monster that we have today. Full employment replaced with sink estates, drugs and crime, all thanks to your lady friend Thatcher and the puppet masters that used her to end full employment in the UK.
@@At_the_races Okay, so how do people sustain a meaningful existence without a livelihood? The mines were in decline, but what were they replaced with? Full employment was abolished and replaced with sporadic employment, self-employment and welfare. So where there was once a community of working people, is now a mass underclass littered with degradation, carelessness, violence and crime. Society gets fragmented and the wealth gap gets bigger and bigger...
@@At_the_races Thanks for your neo-liberal history lesson pal, but again livelihoods were taken away from 1979 onwards and replaced with nothing but a fragmented monopoly free market that sent large private industries overseas for the cheap labour and sub-contracted national industries into skeleton crew workforces. Creating a wider wealth gap of the have's and have not's and a whole new underclass problem, that will eventually effect everyone. Do you want to see more cutbacks, more policing cutbacks, unsafe streets, more rioting and more societal deterioration? Then you should keep worshipping thatcherite nonsense and greed, but some of us want to see a more equal society and where nobody needs to be a c**t.
The coal industry had steadily declined since 1910. Nobody wanted British coal when they could buy coal much more cheaply from China and elsewhere. Coal mining in the UK would have ended anyway due to the Climate Change Act.
UK demand for coal peaked in 1913 and has been in decline ever since. To demand coal be dug as long as it exists regardless of cost and demand is the economics of the madhouse. As the world changes then we have to change with time it
The sheer ignorance of this comment - peoples lives and lively hoods at stake, hell a way of life even. Peoples lives are worth more than economic prosperity for the upper class torys.
@@michaelsalt4565 people do buy it, or did still at least back then. Coal was cheaper imported and still is from China than to dig it out of the ground here. That being said we speak enough nower days of protecting british industry, so why not back then? between 1979 and 81 2 million people lost their jobs in industry with a catastrophic impact on peoples lives inducuing mass poverty! Plus if we look at todays politics it could be said that the less interaction and trade done with china the better.
@@michaelsalt4565 should be powering our coal stations and giving the working-class people good jobs mining coal/if the UK ceased to exist overnight if the whole place disappeared along with any global warming affect which is generated by the United Kingdom within seven months China would’ve taken up all of that deficit-we are pissing in a pot as regard to global warming caused by Britain and yet you’re putting the poorest people in fuel Poverty and ripping out working class jobs
Firstly those reserves are of coking coal, & at a loss of £13 per tonne (in 1984 prices) the right decision was made to leave it where it was unmined...
@@_Ben4810 I checked it is 2 hours ago you said - that the electricity company says I owe them £4K the gas people say I’m upto date at the moment having them paid them £2700 last year . And yes that is all today March 2024
@@_Ben4810 and your point is ? Coking coal can make electricity, and the price difference changes. But it’s not just the price on the tin , if you don’t keep the beans in tin , it’s still going to cost to feed the people something else
The Crazy UK! Where is the common cause, Common Strategy and Common Sense? Here we are in 2024 with the Crazy anti fossil fuels as National Policy. We had a Power Generation Body Called the Central Electricity Generating Board.. along with the Energy Secretary back in 84. The strategy should be formed from Balance/ Security and Economics as well as environment. and every interested party should be around the table including the Unions .. IT was Crazy to have 100’s of pits that were small/ exhausted and uneconomic. IT was Crazy to shut the whole Coal industry down and “Dash for Gas” -Stupid on Both counts. We as a nation were well down the road to Carbon Capture Technology for coal burning. Safety needed to be drastically improved to for the remaining Miners but it was doable! Why do we go for Irrational decisions in this country lately We are Mad
@@MrDodgedollar The coal industry had steadily declined since 1910. Nobody wanted British coal when they could buy coal much more cheaply from China and elsewhere. Coal mining in the UK would have ended anyway due to the Climate Change Act.
@@JamesRichards-mj9kwWhich Amounts to diverting Tax payers money into Energy subsidies.. My point is Energy is a Business that is the life blood of any modern economy .. In fact a third world economy too. The British government is simultaneously restricting supply, subsiding a pig in a poke… and we indirectly chopping down the worlds forests to burn in power stations.. Indirectly tearing into the earth ( Mining ironically) to get at precision metals and lithium pits with no environmental standards and child labourers! All because the people making these decisions have a degree in politics philosophy and economics; no profession, Never had a proper job and are pig ignorant!- Fact
@@jerrytugable yes we are still using coal. The NUM position was that coal should be mined regardless of cost and demand. That position is economically unsustainable. The option should have been a managed decline which allowed the miners and communities they lived in to move to new employment. Of course the NUM was opposed to that it was a politically motivated strike to bring down a democratically elected government. Thankfully the NUM failed and the miners paid the price for that failure, so blame the NUM for that
@@CashelOConnolly On 19 April 1984 a Special National Delegate Conference was held where there was a vote whether to hold a national ballot or not. Scargill was opposed to a national ballot as he feared he would lose the vote. So to say Scargill voted against the strike is ridiculous
@@jerrytugable the amounts we use are tiny and ever decreasing. The reason we import it is because the stuff that was still in the UK was largely too expensive to mine out. Long before Thatcher, the British tax payer was having to subsidise coal production because it was so expensive. Coal is not like a crop. It doesn't grow back. Once it's gone, it's gone. If anything, it's the failure of many successive governments. They knew for decades that bit by bit, coal would have to be closed down. And yet they did nothing to plan for the future after that.
Calling a strike, with coal stocks at record level, without a national ballot, and in the summer, it makes you wonder who Scargill was working for, it definitely wasn't the miners.
Back THEN, middle class lefties proudly placed Cole Not Dole stickers in their Volvos' rear windows and NOW they haven't just joined the anti Coal lobby - they act like they invented it! Oh the irony.
South Wales had come out on strike to fight against the closer of Lewis Merthyr colliery the year before and the backing from the English coalfields was very limited.
@@jasonallen9144 Don't have a go at the Welsh boys, Jason. We had been out on strike the year before and received very little backing from the English coalfields. Now they were asking us for help, why should we ?. But we did , and at the end when we all went back, South Wales still had 93% out on strike, more than any English region.
@alunhughes2632 There wouldn't have been any scabs if Scargill hadn't been working for Maggie, why would anyone, with the miners interest at heart, call a strike, with coal stocks at record high, without a national ballot and in the summer.
She was tough, heath caved in. You wonder who the woman was. He was a waste of space for a Tory, As piss weak as labour. You vote Tory for strong leadership and make the tough decisions. People pick on Maggie but someone had get the .uk going again. It was a joke in the 70s.
@@martinjenkins5471 and now we import all our coal to run the last couple of coal powerstations left , amid daily gas price increases due to the market 🤣 at the mercy of a dictator in the kremlin
This is what Brexit Conservative Britain looks like. Nothing has changed since the tories have been in charge again. Everyone going on strike because they left the EU. You thought this would never happen again, but it did just 32 years later.
It was a total joke what this government did with all the coal mines. After I finished working in the coal industry I worked with a company that sealed off a new mine in wales that have never turned a bit of coal out of it utter joke
Why oh why do I expect the Rainbow theme tune to come on after hearing the Thames TV intro?
Thanks ThamesTv, more 70s and 80s politics please!
Even do I’m not English, or living in England, I’m fascinated by this show
@@georgescuion428 Same!
The 1980's was such a gritty time.
In some areas, yes. These miners lived this type of life no matter what era they lived in. But most of 1980’s elsewhere was loud, colorful and very wild.
It's called the tory era.
proud industry which should be prosperous and flourishing today providing worthwhile opportunities of employment likewise many more industries throughout Britain today. unfortunately the diabolical thatcher decided to empty her bowels on British manufacturing. hence the diabolical state of country today. coal is king thatcher the so called iron lady is dead and turned to rust mining communities still alive.
We were starving. Libya and Pittsburgh were our biggest supporters.
Pittsburgh Pennsylvania?
Lived in Sheffield at this time and without Newspaper reports , not much known of this. Sheffield was the most famous 'Steel' industry area in the World . Mining seems unsual operating in inner City areas. 'Ring Roads' take heavy road haulage away from the Center. I was invited to join a music evening in a city center venue with people I shared accommodation. A band from further North playing pleasant music, unexpectedly , during an 'interval' an unpretenious Man with an 'outside' Coat on, stood on the stage , if there was one. Then recited a poem, about this strike he was on. A good applause was given !
I come from a coal mining area, I remember the strike well. However I fail to see how a business that was losing GBP1.2bn per year could be maintained. I also dont see how coal not mined is 'lost to the nation', on the contrary, the opposite seems to be true. However I think this was a very fair report.
Yes I agree with you Alan the mines struggled to get the coal out as you know and the government were buying it from Poland in bulk. My dad used to work in the workshops at Elsecar he got the option just before the strike to move down the road to cortonwood but didn't because they all knew it was about to close so rather than be out of work he stayed at Elsecar only to be made redundant after the strike. So I think it was a waste of time stopping at a pit that closed without prior warning from the office.
You wern,t a miner
TV Eye was called TV Aye in Yorkshire.
Could never imagine cortonwood as a pit crazy am 30 and go there sometimes with my family shopping
Crazy I could never imagine it as a shopping industrial estate 😮
This legacy will still live on in the next generation if the schools do the likes of history of coal mining as this kind of topic is lacking so the kids of today know what it was like working and striking , specially working down a deep coal mine
I was a miner and stood firm with my brother miners for all the duration of the strike. People may say i was a fool but when that bond is made with others then we stand or fall together. I knew hardship as did my family and my then wife showed her true colours by deciding to leave after just 6 months of the strike. Many suffered more than this by being threatened by the banks to take their house from them for non payment of mortgage, mental health issues, starvation..........the list is endless. All i can say is this..............i do not, nor never will regret my decision to stand by my brother miners who saw the strike through. If people think Thatcher broke us then they need to think again. I would rather have died a thousand times than knelt before Thatcher.
I'm sorry for all you went through. So glad you never regretted the decision to stand by your brothers, your an inspiration. I'm a woman and my husband knows I'm all for the workers and Solidarity to all who feel they have no other option but to strike. I'm part of The People's Assembly and fully support the RMT and pain them a visit on a picket in Manchester. Solidarity ✊
@Bessie Hillum bigot comment
@Bessie Hillum haha the bigot comment was in regards to what you said about women, bigot.
I know all those proposals regarding trade union legislation, they are all bad. Union power is the only way that labour can actually fight for any kind of rights and you and i both know that its just going to suppress any kind of working class voice anymore, but thats what youre in favour of so good for you??? (I dont actually know why you bought it up or what you want me to say about that??)
All ill say on that is this - the right to strike and industrial action is a pillar of a democratic and liberal society. When you take away the tiny amount of rights that working people have, you create authoritarian rule.
I could care less if you know me or not, youre still a bigot. Say that to more women, i hope more people call you a bigot.
Get over it.
@@tonytomlinson5869 guess you were not involved much if at all
It's about high time Thames via it's current owners got themselves on Freeview/Freesat, etc. with its fine archive of programmes. It would probably be the only channel would ever get me consider going back watching linear TV and pay the licence fee! 👍
Maybe some kind of partnership with Talking Pictures TV? 🤔😉
First programme on the channel: Death on the Rock (Uncut) 👍👍
Mick Carter a true Gent 🙏
Miners at thorsby colliery did go on strike
Not sure how many went out
But there was only 80 men remained at the end
I know this as ive got the plate they had made with all there names on
2 of them family members
Arthur scargill , the only man to start 1984 with a large union and small house and ended 1985 with a small union and a large house
A very interesting and thought provoking documentary of its time.
The NUM officials Jack Taylor and Mick Carter, had raise some serious issues about the future of the coal industry, and the welfare of the miners and their families.
Yup they all got shafted in the end
While scargill went on to be a millionaire.
2:50 send the video back, and may have to send the tele back. And i was always told people saved and bought things back then.
Isn’t it ironic that the greatest threat to the coal industry in Australia ( I’m from Australia) is from the Australian labor party.
Yes that labor party that was supposed to represent workers. The Australian labor party has been taken over by progressive greens.
It long ago lost its industrial base.
What happened in the coal industry in Britain is going to happen in Australia if the labor party ever win national government.
What is going to happen in Australia is the same as Britain because nobody is going to want your coal not even the Indians and Chinese, the stone age did not end because we ran out of stone, in the same way the coal age is ending because we have better sources of energy now.
Labour closed more mines than the Tories
Some poor people built a house and they called it the labour party they lived in the house for a short while but pretty soon squatters moved in from the universities from the intellectuals from the middle-class -they put the poor people into the basement they keep them down there they let them out to vote just to keep the house standing
@@grahamariss2111 you’re living in cloud cuckoo land even if you write a good story
@@KKTR3 g
You’ve summed it up perfectly. 👍
A country that longer exists
I was a teenager when this was happening with out a clue as to what I would do after school. I got an engineering apprenticeship as a toolmaker for a die casting foundry. Fast forward thirty six years and the foundry has closed and the site cleared they lost a lot of contracts to EU country’s
They were undercut by EU country’s and the cost of materials ie aluminium was high and allso electricity prices went through the roof and it was hard for them to get electricity at a competitive price from there supplier. To melt aluminium uses an enormous amount of electricity
@@diggmore1362 the answers are much deeper than that. British industry has been in decline since the 1800s. undercut? No. The fact is that we prices ourselves out of markets because we were so inefficient and, as James Callaghan said, "paying ourselves more than the value of what we produce". Even now, the average British worker is 20% less efficient than the average German. The reasons lie deep in our culture. Chronic underinvestment, appalling levels of skills and education in both workers and management, short termism and an inherent conservatism that means we are very slow to adopt new methods and move into new industries. Andrew Carnegie, the American steel magnet, said over 120 years ago "The reason why America and Germany is making Britain a back number is because Britain is still using machinery and methods that are 20 years out of date."
I'm afraid the problem is a lot older than the EU. The answers are much deeper than that. British industry has been in decline since the 1800s. The fact is that we priced ourselves out of markets because we were so inefficient and, as James Callaghan said, "paying ourselves more than the value of what we produce". Even now, the average British worker is 20% less efficient than the average German. The reasons lie deep in our culture. Chronic underinvestment, appalling levels of skills and education in both workers and management, short termism and an inherent conservatism that means we are very slow to adopt new methods and move into new industries. Andrew Carnegie, the American steel magnet, said over 120 years ago "The reason why America and Germany are making Britain a back number is because Britain is still using machinery and methods that are 20 years out of date."
@@zeddeka one of the things that I was saying in my first comment was that as a teenager in the early 1980s with the industrial decline and then miners strike was how was I ever going to get a job . The foundry that I worked at survived to 2010 it closed with about 100 employees. I had moved on about 18 years before. They could not compete with other company’s. what did not help is that as part of a group of foundry’s they had been stripped of investment in latter years
Fast forward to 2021 and ask yourself why anyone would want to work down a coal mine anymore. Hard graft and an early death from silicosis.
13:00 typical bloody Cortina
Brilliant cars
We backed em at Barrow Colliery, because we weren't prepared to go to work and leave our workmates at the end of the lane, with no money or future.
Do you know you look at this and you almost think you’re looking at the aftermath it looks so grim bleak and hard and dark
That's South Yorkshire for you.
To me it is nostalgic, controversially and ironically the pits closures put 25 years on my dad's life due to better health choices.
@@ianraybold3513 possibly
My family history on both sides of my family tree all way back to 1700s worked bits 🤣 Barnsley
The first thing we need to understand about the 1984 strike is that it was blatantly illegal, and that it was an extreme departure from established NCB procedure and precedent. This is a classic example of what can happen when a union simply becomes too powerful.
Mrs T gave them a good hiding. Miners were complete fools to be led by the nose by Scargill. The strike was *ILLEGAL* that's all that matters.
If the market is paying £47 a ton and its costing £60 a ton to produce going on strike achieves nothing other than making the pit closure happen all the quicker.
try saying that to scargill which i already have it simply falls on deaf ears & he still claims he won when all he actually did was help thatcher with the closures so the 84 strikes were for nothing cos 38 years onwards not one pit is in production cortonwood is now a retail park & just about all of them demolished
@@jasinere35 I am glad then it was a victory, because imaginechow bad a Scargill defeat would have looked like then!
We now import 6.5 million tonnes of coal a year
And Dole was 15 quid it said so your mathematics at two quid are on the wrong side of the fence straight away regardless of anything else
@@KKTR3 Errr, Only if a mine produces just one ton of coal per miner per week!
My Grandfather moved from Wales to Yorkshire before WW2 due pit closure (geological), worked for a time in Yorkshire then quit due awful health: started a small carpet shop and never looked back. The cult of anger towards Thatcher nearly 40 years after ‘84 needs a rethink.
Well how do people like your grandad sell carpets if nobody has a livelihood? Thatcher replaced jobs with welfare and Major created the underclass monster that we have today. Full employment replaced with sink estates, drugs and crime, all thanks to your lady friend Thatcher and the puppet masters that used her to end full employment in the UK.
Labour closed more mines than the Tories
@@At_the_races Okay, so how do people sustain a meaningful existence without a livelihood? The mines were in decline, but what were they replaced with? Full employment was abolished and replaced with sporadic employment, self-employment and welfare. So where there was once a community of working people, is now a mass underclass littered with degradation, carelessness, violence and crime. Society gets fragmented and the wealth gap gets bigger and bigger...
@@At_the_races Thanks for your neo-liberal history lesson pal, but again livelihoods were taken away from 1979 onwards and replaced with nothing but a fragmented monopoly free market that sent large private industries overseas for the cheap labour and sub-contracted national industries into skeleton crew workforces. Creating a wider wealth gap of the have's and have not's and a whole new underclass problem, that will eventually effect everyone. Do you want to see more cutbacks, more policing cutbacks, unsafe streets, more rioting and more societal deterioration? Then you should keep worshipping thatcherite nonsense and greed, but some of us want to see a more equal society and where nobody needs to be a c**t.
@@At_the_races lol listen, when the rioting kicks off and the shit hits the fan, which it will do... show yourself and I'd love to come meet ya :)
The coal industry had steadily declined since 1910.
Nobody wanted British coal when they could buy coal much more cheaply from China and elsewhere.
Coal mining in the UK would have ended anyway due to the Climate Change Act.
The coal board did the dirty on the men that transferred from Elsecar Colliery, they were just spoiling for a fight.
UK demand for coal peaked in 1913 and has been in decline ever since. To demand coal be dug as long as it exists regardless of cost and demand is the economics of the madhouse. As the world changes then we have to change with time it
The sheer ignorance of this comment - peoples lives and lively hoods at stake, hell a way of life even. Peoples lives are worth more than economic prosperity for the upper class torys.
@@alfielisles6097 you think we should still be mining coal in huge quantities for what purpose given that no one will buy it?
@@michaelsalt4565 people do buy it, or did still at least back then. Coal was cheaper imported and still is from China than to dig it out of the ground here. That being said we speak enough nower days of protecting british industry, so why not back then? between 1979 and 81 2 million people lost their jobs in industry with a catastrophic impact on peoples lives inducuing mass poverty! Plus if we look at todays politics it could be said that the less interaction and trade done with china the better.
@@michaelsalt4565 should be powering our coal stations and giving the working-class people good jobs mining coal/if the UK ceased to exist overnight if the whole place disappeared along with any global warming affect which is generated by the United Kingdom within seven months China would’ve taken up all of that deficit-we are pissing in a pot as regard to global warming caused by Britain and yet you’re putting the poorest people in fuel Poverty and ripping out working class jobs
That's sounds about right but I think it was the way Thatcher ( tories)did everything with that fxxx you and die sort of attutude!!!
Reserves of 1,000,400 tons of coal is enough to power 700,000 households for one year
Firstly those reserves are of coking coal, & at a loss of £13 per tonne (in 1984 prices) the right decision was made to leave it where it was unmined...
@@_Ben4810 😎£€$¥
There is more to life
@@_Ben4810 I checked it is 2 hours ago you said - that the electricity company says I owe them £4K the gas people say I’m upto date at the moment having them paid them £2700 last year . And yes that is all today March 2024
@@_Ben4810 and your point is ?
Coking coal can make electricity, and the price difference changes.
But it’s not just the price on the tin , if you don’t keep the beans in tin , it’s still going to cost to feed the people something else
"But it's not just the price on the tin" 🤣🤣🤣 So you buy your beans at Harrods to safeguard the community of Knightsbridge...???🙄🙄🙄
Scargill destroyed the NUM by starting a fight he could not win.
The Crazy UK! Where is the common cause, Common Strategy and Common Sense?
Here we are in 2024 with the Crazy anti fossil fuels as National Policy.
We had a Power Generation Body Called the Central Electricity Generating Board.. along with the Energy Secretary back in 84.
The strategy should be formed from Balance/ Security and Economics as well as environment.
and every interested party should be around the table including the Unions ..
IT was Crazy to have 100’s of pits that were small/ exhausted and uneconomic.
IT was Crazy to shut the whole Coal industry down and “Dash for Gas” -Stupid on Both counts.
We as a nation were well down the road to Carbon Capture Technology for coal burning.
Safety needed to be drastically improved to for the remaining Miners but it was doable!
Why do we go for Irrational decisions in this country lately We are Mad
@@MrDodgedollar The coal industry had steadily declined since 1910.
Nobody wanted British coal when they could buy coal much more cheaply from China and elsewhere.
Coal mining in the UK would have ended anyway due to the Climate Change Act.
@@JamesRichards-mj9kwWhich Amounts to diverting Tax payers money into Energy subsidies..
My point is Energy is a Business that is the life blood of any modern economy .. In fact a third world economy too.
The British government is simultaneously restricting supply, subsiding a pig in a poke…
and we indirectly chopping down the worlds forests to burn in power stations..
Indirectly tearing into the earth ( Mining ironically) to get at precision metals and lithium pits with no environmental standards and child labourers!
All because the people making these decisions have a degree in politics philosophy and economics;
no profession, Never had a proper job and are pig ignorant!- Fact
@JamesRichards no way in hell it’s cheaper. , that’s political spin bs
@Mrdodgedollar carbon capture green zero bs - a lefty money tax scam on the working man . Nothing less.
Brampton, Twangor Mick Claydon Paul Fitzpatrick Peter jolly 🙏 Mick Auckland
Tesla model 4 at 2:30 🤣
That was Ernie Fastest Milkman In Yorkshire lol
fucking love unions
No Basshead
No future for coal, the mines had to close just a case how that should be achieved. Scargill led the miners over a cliff edge.
Michael Saul We are still using coal, but now we are importing poor quality coal from distant countries, so there obviously *was* a future for coal...
@@jerrytugable yes we are still using coal. The NUM position was that coal should be mined regardless of cost and demand. That position is economically unsustainable. The option should have been a managed decline which allowed the miners and communities they lived in to move to new employment. Of course the NUM was opposed to that it was a politically motivated strike to bring down a democratically elected government. Thankfully the NUM failed and the miners paid the price for that failure, so blame the NUM for that
@@CashelOConnolly On 19 April 1984 a Special National Delegate Conference was held where there was a vote whether to hold a national ballot or not. Scargill was opposed to a national ballot as he feared he would lose the vote. So to say Scargill voted against the strike is ridiculous
@@CashelOConnolly want to try that again?
@@jerrytugable the amounts we use are tiny and ever decreasing. The reason we import it is because the stuff that was still in the UK was largely too expensive to mine out. Long before Thatcher, the British tax payer was having to subsidise coal production because it was so expensive. Coal is not like a crop. It doesn't grow back. Once it's gone, it's gone. If anything, it's the failure of many successive governments. They knew for decades that bit by bit, coal would have to be closed down. And yet they did nothing to plan for the future after that.
Sheep lead up the garden path by Scargill
He did alright out of it !
Calling a strike, with coal stocks at record level, without a national ballot, and in the summer, it makes you wonder who Scargill was working for, it definitely wasn't the miners.
Back THEN, middle class lefties proudly placed Cole Not Dole stickers in their Volvos' rear windows and NOW they haven't just joined the anti Coal lobby - they act like they invented it!
Oh the irony.
South Wales had come out on strike to fight against the closer of Lewis Merthyr colliery the year before and the backing from the English coalfields was very limited.
Don’t see any Welsh miners in this documentary being supportive either.
@@jasonallen9144 Don't have a go at the Welsh boys, Jason. We had been out on strike the year before and received very little backing from the English coalfields. Now they were asking us for help, why should we ?. But we did , and at the end when we all went back, South Wales still had 93% out on strike, more than any English region.
@@alunhughes2632 Don't slag off the English FFS it seems like any excuse to have a go at us. There were Scottish miners too.
@@jasonallen9144 Wasn't having a go at the English boys Jason, there were only two kinds of miners in the 84/85 strike, striking miners and scabs.
@alunhughes2632 There wouldn't have been any scabs if Scargill hadn't been working for Maggie, why would anyone, with the miners interest at heart, call a strike, with coal stocks at record high, without a national ballot and in the summer.
Pip Pip Cheerio
Bob’s your Uncle
Shut it down lad
Maggie was always in charge of the strike, cool calculating smart ruthless lady,,The Iron Lady crushed them.
She was tough, heath caved in.
You wonder who the woman was.
He was a waste of space for a Tory,
As piss weak as labour. You vote Tory for strong leadership and make the tough decisions. People pick on Maggie but someone had get the .uk going again. It was a joke in the 70s.
@@martinjenkins5471 and now we import all our coal to run the last couple of coal powerstations left , amid daily gas price increases due to the market 🤣 at the mercy of a dictator in the kremlin
@@martinjenkins5471 if you wanna see what a Tory world looks like look outside in 2022
Like the COVID checkpoints. If they simply had of said they are visiting family or make some crap up, they would have went through.
Old Reggie Bosanquet..
No it’s not! It’s Sir Alastair Burnet. Look up his images
Boom times today if you're a Chinese coal power generator worker!
This is what Brexit Conservative Britain looks like. Nothing has changed since the tories have been in charge again. Everyone going on strike because they left the EU. You thought this would never happen again, but it did just 32 years later.
Labour caused Brexit.
@@JamesRichards-mj9kw And David Cameron LOVES SHOWING HIS ID CARD TO THE EU! NOT!
It was the best thing mrs thatcher did was to close the coal mines, a great lady
Really have ya seen price of utilities bills lately.
@@fishermansid8861 LMFAO
How many people are going to die, because can't heat their homes this winter. Let's blame Putin? . think about it.
Troll much James?
@@allwrighty100 nowt down pit bottom lad
192nd
Sent the porno machine bk no way💯
First 👾
Almost 1st
@@manatee2500 👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻
It was a total joke what this government did with all the coal mines. After I finished working in the coal industry I worked with a company that sealed off a new mine in wales that have never turned a bit of coal out of it utter joke
It's good. Coal is environmental disaster