She is a woman, and she is the only female British Prime Minister to date and the longest-serving Prime Minister of the 20th century. She took the lead in carrying out the new economic reform of the UK, vigorously promoted the privatization of state-owned enterprises, and made the British economy re-emerge, but now people are regarded as the initiator of the weak financial system supervision and the economic crisis and the European debt crisis. She launched the Falklands War without hesitation, and almost wiped out all of Argentina's navy and air force in the shortest time in the face of the country's economic collapse, but she won the supreme honor and strong people's hearts for her. She and Reagan worked together to penetrate Eastern Europe in an all-round way, which directly ended the Cold War, but was regarded by many as a typical villain who interfered in the internal affairs of other countries. She strongly resisted the formation of the euro zone, fearlessly protected the dignity of the British Empire and the image of the pound, but made today's Britain fall into the embarrassing situation of turning its back on Europe. Her tough and uncompromising style of life has almost never failed in diplomacy, which has brought the British Empire to its highest international status so far since World War II, only to lose out to another tougher man on Hong Kong. She is the kind of person who will continue to be controversial even in the history books after a thousand years, so as a contemporary person, she can only respect her and ignore other things.
PS I'm personally curious to know what happens when two women meet at Buckingham Palace every Monday? nation? politics? family? child? Or cosmetics?
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The Iron Lady reviews