You're being obtuse. They were a threat before the Belgrana; they weren't after, as they refused to come out to play. Fact.Hang on a minute, first you say after the belgrano was sunk they stayed away, and now agree they were never in the way in the first place!
Like I say, you don't know your facts - you are just using guesswork...![]()
Sorry, there are enough checks and balances - even in this country - that someone acting as a megalomaniac would not be able to do that. It was overpriced cf continental coal, the wages bill was too high and the cost of extraction was not viable for the economic conditions at the time.Actually (facts again I'm afraid) the pits would have been economical for much of that time
Coal: the fuel of the future. Not.and the subsidies would have been very small compared to the decommissioning subsidies for nuclear power plants!
Conveniently forgetting the high cost of offsetting the years of propping it up in the interim.And now we would have a very profitable industry, instead of a flooded one!
Ok, might be a spot of hyperbole thereYou'd have willingly paid 30+% tax just to keep those pits open at that time, would you?
Facts for this claim please..!
Inspired, I would sayPure guesswork again...
