The ramifications, whichever way it goes, will no doubt be far-reaching.
It was only last year he decided to read his reflections back.He said: "There were two pages about how I was feeling. I'd written a lot about my wife and how she had supported me throughout it all."
Mr Duffy, who spent 16 years working at Brodsworth, remembered the excitement of receiving his first full wage packet."I felt like a millionaire, but we were conditioned to be quite frugal so we didn't go on a spending spree or anything like that."Ken Warnes, a miner who had worked at Westthorpe Colliery in Killamarsh near Rotherham and Worsop in Nottinghamshire, had been surviving on about £2 a day while on strike.
"We all knew it was coming to an end and that we were losing," he said.Despite counting himself as one of the lucky ones, as he did not have children to support, going back to work meant he could start earning "a decent wage" again.
"It was very arduous but I didn't have family," he said.
"Many of the miners that did, it was heart-breaking especially coming up to Christmas when they couldn't buy their kids anything."We can also reveal more from Mr Murray's other deleted LinkedIn posts, made on the day of the Southport attack.
This one repeats the Al-Shakati name:"BBC news are lying. The Child murderer was from Africa. He was on MI6 watch. His name is Ali Al Shakati."
"I see people stil [sic] believe what the left wing media say because it suits their own left wing woke agenda. It's because of these sort of people the reason why this has happened in the first place."Mr Murray appeared to have become a credible source on social media for many. One woman on Facebook posted in support of him, asking others "You believe media/news over the people who was the witness…[?]"