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AIBU?

To think that celebrating the anniversary of someone's death..

81 replies

Itisnoteasybeingdifferent · 10/04/2017 20:29

Is very nasty regardless of who the person was?

So there have been a number of very devisive politicians. And quite a few who carried out mass murder. But to mark the anniversary of their passing as a cause for celebration?

I ask because someone posted a comment (on another forum) about having champaign on ice to celebrate the death of a well known politician a few days ago.

OP posts:
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Meekonsandwich · 10/04/2017 20:30

Do you celebrate bonfire night?

Case closed.

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DancingHouse · 10/04/2017 20:31

Easter next week. Hmm

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StillDrivingMeBonkers · 10/04/2017 20:32

Bonfire night isn't celebrating the death of a politician.

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kerryob · 10/04/2017 20:34

What type of celebrating? Yay the bastards dead, or let's celebrate the life of someone we loved & want to remember?

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originalbiglymavis · 10/04/2017 20:36

You can have services of celebration for the dead bit that's people you like and remember fondly. Not Hitler or Pol Pot.

Who done what then?

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FeckinCrutches · 10/04/2017 20:39

I'm assuming OP is talking about Martin Mcguiness?
Not actually an anniversary of someone you love and raising a glass.

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AcrossthePond55 · 10/04/2017 20:39

I don't celebrate Hitler's death, but I can certainly see why some people would. Especially if they are of the generation that was impacted by WWII, or had family members or friends lost to the Holocaust.

So I guess it would depend on the magnitude of what that particular 'politician' did or was responsible for.

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EdmundCleverClogs · 10/04/2017 20:40

How would one go about celebrating a death? Fireworks and a hearty round of 'ding dong the witch is dead'? Not that I'm condoning that kind of thing....

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Havanaclub · 10/04/2017 20:41

Its my Dad's anniversary today.

I loved him to bits. I don't care about anyone else today. Sorry.

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Dawndonnaagain · 10/04/2017 20:43

I'd have celebrated Thatcher's death if I'd remembered on Saturday. This jogged my memory. Don't give a damn what you think.

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Itisnoteasybeingdifferent · 10/04/2017 20:44

Few days back was the anniversary of the death of Mrs Thatcher.

I am no fan of hers. And on another ocassion I would discuss at lenght the things she did. But not just now. What I can't get my head round is someone making a point of celebrating her dying. She had dimentia and was a husk of her former self when she died. Why?

Genuine question.

OP posts:
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Sandsnake · 10/04/2017 20:44

I'm guessing you're referring to Maggie Thatcher? In which case, yes - celebrating the anniversary of her death is absolutely pathetic.

And sorry to be pendantic but Bonfire Night isn't actually celebrating anyone's death - just the stopping of the Gunpowder Plot. I don't think Guy Fawkes and the rest were executed until the following January.

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Sandsnake · 10/04/2017 20:44

Oh Havana, I'm sorry to hear that.Flowers

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ExplodedCloud · 10/04/2017 20:45

Edmund where were you when I needed someone to skip about with like Munchkins singing that song?

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LagunaBubbles · 10/04/2017 20:47

She didn't have dementia when her policies caused so much misery and hard ship.

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EdmundCleverClogs · 10/04/2017 20:48

In all seriousness, Itisnoteasybeingdifferent I don't understand why anyone would 'celebrate' a death in a negative way. However, just because someone ends up with a horrible end-of-life illness, it doesn't excuse terrible things they did in life. Two separate issues there. You can speak ill of the dead, being gleeful of death is highly distasteful though.

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BabychamSocialist · 10/04/2017 20:52

I wished I'd remembered her anniversary on Saturday, DP would've opened a bottle of champagne.

Horrible, horrible woman who had lots of blood on her hands. I don't care if she had dementia or was a 'husk of her former self' - she was a nasty, vile woman and I saw her policies destroy my community first hand.

When you've sat playing Bingo with your mum on a Saturday night, and people crying when they win the prize of a tin of stewing steak, all because of her forcing people on strike and refusing to help anywhere past Watford, you can tell me that we shouldn't celebrate her death.

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originalbiglymavis · 10/04/2017 20:55

Because it achieves nothing.

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HostaFireAndIce · 10/04/2017 21:00

Easter next week

If you're suggesting that Easter is a celebration of someone's death, I think you have misunderstood...
But yes, I agree entirely, OP. By all means, continue to think ill of the dead if they deserve it, but actually celebrating someone's death is beyond crass.

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ComputerUserNotTrained · 10/04/2017 21:12

Thatcher was a heinous individual who did the country a great deal of harm, but I don't celebrate her death. Why would I? Her death did nothing to right the wrongs of her government,

Had she ever lost a general election to a good, decent party who had the country's interests at heart, then I'd have celebrated.

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RachelRagged · 10/04/2017 21:13

She didn't have dementia when her policies caused so much misery and hard ship.

Indeed.

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Havanaclub · 10/04/2017 21:14

Sandsnake

Thank you so much.

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myusernamewastaken · 10/04/2017 21:17

I lost my darling dad 17 years ago today....he was aged just 56....my thoughts are also only with him and my mum who died 4 months later aged 52.

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Owllady · 10/04/2017 21:20

I think the OP means celebrating the death of someone they hate rather than loved ones marking the anniversary of the death of someone they loved
The two things are different imo

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Havanaclub · 10/04/2017 21:23

@myusernaewastaken.

Hugs to you. We will never forget. May they rest in peace.

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