Paul Crowley (
ciphergoth) wrote2008-06-19 09:22 am
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Hooray for Thatcher?
OK, so it's far from clear he actually tried to do it, and if he did he doubtless did it for personal gain, but if he did, it looks like overthrowing the government of Equatorial Guinea and bringing in the main opposition party might actually have been a good thing to do. I mention this here only because AFAICT the news reports seem to be treating it as if Equatorial Guinea was a perfectly nice democracy until he came along.
Don't worry, I'm not turning Tory. It's just that I don't feel motivated to catalogue every single evil and stupid thing they do, but when they do something that might not be either evil or stupid it's surprising enough to blog about. If Boris does something that is only one of evil and stupid I'll probably blog about that too.
Don't worry, I'm not turning Tory. It's just that I don't feel motivated to catalogue every single evil and stupid thing they do, but when they do something that might not be either evil or stupid it's surprising enough to blog about. If Boris does something that is only one of evil and stupid I'll probably blog about that too.

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Yes, the coup plotters were after some enormous offshore oil reserves that were discovered in the late 1990s. Private Eye has been tracking this one; IIRC there were rumours of one of the big oil multinationals being behind the plotters.
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But I'd just like to note that coups driven by the avarice of American oil corporation boardrooms do not have a reliable track record of delivering happiness and wellbeing and liberty to the subjects of the odious dictators who are to be overturned for not sharing their oil revenue. (See also: Iraq, Iran in the 1950s, Nigeria, etcetera.)
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Of course one can't ever say for sure with counterfactuals, but I strongly suspect it'd would have made things worse.
Can you give (m)any examples where coups have clearly been a good thing for the people of the country? Because I can think of plenty where it's been pretty disastrous. (Plus some, admittedly, where it's made precious little difference in the short term.)
And as you get on to below, the question of who's doing it is more than incidentally germane to guessing the likely effect. Anyone carrying out a coup is, ipso facto, the sort of person likely to get involved in a coup attempt, and let's be honest, that sort of person isn't likely to be good news for the populace in general.
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No-one with accountability was proposing to do anything about the situation, so the choice Thatcher might feel he faced was either unaccountable mercenaries coming to the rescue, or no-one coming to the rescue. Is it clear that the latter is better for anybody?
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(And that there is no backwards B character in Unicode)
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