1. She supported the retention of capital punishment
Most of the British public probably did, too.
2. She destroyed the country's manufacturing industry
She got rid of old-fashioned industries that we didn't need anymore, such as coalmining. Every other Western economy ended up doing the same later on, so Thatcher was merely ahead of her time. Name a Western economy now which has a huge manufacturiing industry. There isn't one. Western economies are service economies now.
4
. She abolished free milk for schoolchildren ("Margaret Thatcher, Milk Snatcher")
A policy which she was opposed to but was forced into doing it by the Treasury (and Thatcher was the EducationS ecretary at the time, not the PM). Thatcher wrote in her autobiography: "I learned a valuable lesson [from the experience]. I had incurred the maximum of political odium for the minimum of political benefit." It remains popular belief that Thatcher abolished free school milk for all ages. In fact milk for secondary school pupils was abolished by Edward Short, her predecessor as Education Secretary, whilst free milk for infants was abolished by Shirley Williams.
5. She supported more freedom for business
Good.
6. She gained support from the National Front in the 1979 election by pandering to the fears of immigration
Millions of British people have fears about immigration and she was right to address those fears. Unlike the Left, who ignore people's concerns and condescendingly call them "racists" just for airing their fears about immigration, Thatcher actually took those concerns on board.
7. She gerrymandered local authorities by forcing through council house sales, at the same time preventing councils from spending the money they got for selling houses on building new houses (spending on social housing dropped by 67% in her premiership)
This was Thatcher's Environment Secretary Michael Heseltine's doing, not Thatcher's.
Proponents of the Right to Buy argue that it gave working-class council tenants opportunities to get on the property ladder which they would not otherwise had had without the Act.
8. She was responsible for 3.6 million unemployed - the highest figure and the highest proportion of the workforce in history and three times the previous government. Massaging of the figures means that the figure was closer to 5 million
Oh dear. What often never gets mentioned (usually by the Left) is that unemployment was already rapidly increasing BEFORE Thatcher came to power. The unemployment rate had already hit 1.5 million under her Labour predecessor James Callaghan and it's almost certain that unemployment would have continued to rise rapidly even had Thatcher not come to power.
Britain in the 1980s was always facing an immensely painful transition, partly because so many difficult decisions had been postponed for so long, but also because the stark reality of globalisation meant that major industries - notably carmaking, shipbuilding and coal-mining - were doomed even before she took power. No matter who came to power in 1979 all these manufacturing industries and their resultant jobs were already doomed in Britain.
9. She ignored intelligence about Argentinian preparations for the invasion of the Falkland Islands and scrapped the only Royal Navy presence in the islands
In 1981 the Royal Navy was being reduced in size. The British military suffered cuts. The Argentines (wrongly) interpreted the failure of the British to react as a lack of interest in the Falklands due to the planned withdrawal (as part of a general reduction in size of the Royal Navy in 1981) of the last of the Antarctic Supply vessels, HMS Endurance, and by the British Nationality Act of 1981, which replaced the full British citizenship of Falkland Islanders with a more limited version.
11. She presided over the closure of 150 coal mines; we are now crippled by the cost of energy, having to import expensive coal from abroad
See above. These coalmines and similar industries in Britain were already doomed, no matter which party and which PM were in power in the Eighties.
13. She privatised state monopolies and created the corporate greed culture that we've been railing against for the last 5 years
Again, a good move. The people, rather than the government, now these companies.
14. She introduced the gradual privatisation of the NHS
No, she didn't.
16. She pioneered the unfailing adoration and unquestioning support of the USA
What's the problem with that? Isn't Britain allowed to have any allies? Remember it was Thatcher and Reagan which ended the Cold War and brought freedom to millions of Eastern Europeans.
17. She allowed the US to place nuclear missiles on UK soil, under US control
No, she didn't. This was a NATO decision of 1975, four years before Thatcher came to power.
18. Section 28
Good.
The amendment stated that a local authority "shall not intentionally promote homosexuality or publish material with the intention of promoting homosexuality" or "promote the teaching in any maintained school of the acceptability of homosexuality as a pretended family relationship".
Yet if anyone tried to tell a local authority to promote heterosexuality the PC Brigade would be up in arms.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Section_28#cite_note-2
19. She opposed anti-apartheid sanctions against South Africa and described Nelson Mandela as "that grubby little terrorist"
Well, she was right about Mandela.
Having said that the Thatcher government was opposed to apartheid, although she believed sanctions would disproportionately injure Britain and neighbouring African countries and make thousands of black workers iN South Africa unemployed. She argued that political and military measures were more effective.