Not that Morrissey needs any help with his arguments, since his wits, his music and his words speak by themselves and they leveled him where he is now and will be forever: very high, indeed. But there are some remarkable facts:
- This politician -sadly a woman, meant by nature to bring life to this world, not to supress it- is politically responsible for the serial killing of babies of another animal species, like we are. There aren't no logical explanations for holocausts, save greed and hate.
- When Morrissey protested against this unnecessary sacrifice, in the line of thought which binds all his life in a very coherent way, she was disrespecful and mocking in a topic that sensitizes him as well as millions of human beings, such as animal abuse and cruelty.
- Tragically, we live in a world where huge injustices and cruel killings occur daily and usually go unnoticed by the public, unless someone takes the risk to denounce them.
- Also those complaints usually go unnoticed, unless the complainant make an extraordinary event or remark to call public attention to the psychopath we are ignoring, as the victims of Stockholm Syndrome we are.
- I think that was the course of action taken by Morrissey to draw attention to the injustice of the existence of royalty and the criminal actions of Margaret Thatcher. Since he is a celebrity (as the serial killer politician said) he knows how to attract public attention.
Speaking of it, guillotine was up not to par to kill Margaret Thatcher. She should have been slaughtered to death with a kitchen knife like a baby seal. Not only by the miserable life she sponsored for a good part of the English population during his rule (misery is a kind of death). In addition to that:
"Power-mad, Thatcher destroys the miners with relish, a damned and unhappy soul smiling victoriously when, under her peace-by-force military instructions, an Argentinian ship full of young teenage soldiers is blown up even though it poses no threat whatsoever to British troops. The Belgrano is outside of the Malvinas Exclusion Zone and sailing away from the islands, and Thatcher cannot defend her actions when cross-examined on television by a member of the public" (Morrissey, "Autobiography")
As a family member of a survivor of the massacre of Belgrano I thank Moz its mention in his book. He couldn't have done it, but he mentioned it. My relative was 19 years old then. He was abducted a year before by the most cruel dictatorship that endured Argentina as a free country, to act as a conscript soldier. A dictatorship supported tactically and ideologically by the CIA, coincidentally Thatcher friends. Yes, the business of war...
I love you MOZ