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320 pages, Paperback
First published August 10, 2017
The important thing we had learned was that, if we were being vilified, if we were being denigrated and if the State was calling us ‘the enemy within’, what did that say about all these other people who, we’d been told for years, were also the enemy within? Perhaps they were just like us. Perhaps they were being unfairly treated. Perhaps they were being lied about. And our perception changed dramatically. (Sîan James)
It was legal to be gay, but it was illegal to ask. It was the same as prostitution: you could do it but you weren't allowed to ask anyone to do it - that was soliciting for an immoral purpose. You had to somehow come together spontaneously to be allowed to do it - provided there were only two of you and it was in private. And private meant in a locked room inside a house with no other person there.
In his wisdom, Arthur Scargill divided the world up and we in South Wales were given Ireland as the place to raise funds. Yorkshire and Kent – the ‘favourite’ coalfields – were given the whole of North America and London. (Hywel Francis)
I perfectly understood the split. Nobody within LGSM was interested in having a diverse group. We had flaming rows about this. For me, it was just blindingly obvious, because there were no black people in LGSM and no women.
And it struck me as the same principle. I don’t think that the leadership of LGSM – because of their Leninism – saw this as important. (Paul Canning)
On the way down, there had been a debate about whether, if you were vegetarian, it was OK to say to a miner giving you his last tin of corned beef that you couldn’t eat it because you were vegetarian. (Ray Goodspeed)