― Tadeusz Suchodolski, Wednesday, 22 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 22 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― Momus, Wednesday, 22 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― Ally, Wednesday, 22 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)
Ally -- would your opinion of the French change if I told you that when I was over there (Summer '95), they had big "Laughing Cow" billboards all over the place? (or, in French, "la vâche qui rire")
I love French vintage ads though. I have 8 of them in my apartment right now.
http://www.demon.co.uk/momus/coppertone.jpeg
― Momus, Thursday, 23 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― jel, Thursday, 23 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)
Still, great philosophers, pouty actresses, St.Etienne footie club in the 70s, Air & Daft Punk clinch it. They rule.
― Omar, Thursday, 23 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― Emma, Thursday, 23 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― Ally, Thursday, 23 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― DV, Thursday, 23 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)
Hard men of Europe standing up to the Islamic Empire or cheese eating surrender monkeys kowtowing to terrorist threats?
― Ned Trifle II, Tuesday, 26 January 2010 16:35 (sixteen years ago)
more contrarian than either tbh
― Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 16:41 (sixteen years ago)
Kind of like flag-burning in the U.S., this is really a bullshit issue. How many women in France actually wear burkas?
― Mit der Kattzheit kaempfen Goetter selbst vergebens (Michael White), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 16:43 (sixteen years ago)
367.
― Colonel Poo, Tuesday, 26 January 2010 16:45 (sixteen years ago)
Great. One more thread I have to stay out of when I'm drunk and cranky.
― fields of salmon, Tuesday, 26 January 2010 16:53 (sixteen years ago)
let's see.. forbidding arab women to cover their faces in public buildings = they stay at home almost entirely! what a great leap forward for modernisation and equality!
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 January 2010 16:57 (sixteen years ago)
(and yes i know muslim =/ arab and also that most muslim women don't cover their faces at all, i.e. what M White said)
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 January 2010 16:58 (sixteen years ago)
tracer kind of otm 'forbidding' them to do this doesn't really seem the way forward.
― Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:00 (sixteen years ago)
whatever happened to the liberté part of the equation?? seriously i wonder if french politicians have lost their goddamn minds
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:25 (sixteen years ago)
laicité in schools is one thing - uniforms promote discipline and minimize class difference, plus they're minors and the whole thing is paid for and run by the state - but full grown adults?? picking their kids up from school or whatever?? what the shitting fuck
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:27 (sixteen years ago)
fwiw i think kids should be allowed to wear the veil and/or headscarf in school. it's the difference between positive and negative freedom - the freedom FROM religion - or even seeing the ornamental manifestation of religious belief - and freedom FOR religion, i.e. having those ornaments if you want.
i've actually heard that kids basically didn't start giving a shit until it became forbidden - that's when the headscarf started really catching on in school
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:30 (sixteen years ago)
Tracer, the ruling against the niqab is "in places where ID is required to be shown/personal identification is important". Examples such as post offices and banks, I'm leaning toward "you might have a case".
Examples such as public transportation are pretty ridiculous -- first of all it's no other Joe Citizen's fucking business who you are on PT, and second, that's the time I would MOST want to be hidden from view. Fuck, *I* am tempted to wear a burqua on the subway, it would stop a bunch of sleazy fuckers being sleazy. Plus you don't have to demurely cross legs as no one can see up skirt anyway.
― Reading makes my ovaries hurt (Laurel), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:38 (sixteen years ago)
I wonder if any of those women drive. I'm guessing not, but maybe I'm getting my prescriptive rulings confused.
― Reading makes my ovaries hurt (Laurel), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:41 (sixteen years ago)
how often is it the case that schoolkids are wearing such items in non-faith schools (or schools where they are in a distinct minority for doing so, which is really a situation to avoid i think) tho? there must be far fewer cases of this than burka wearers - supposedly only around 2000
― mdskltr (blueski), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:41 (sixteen years ago)
how often is it the case that schoolkids are wearing such items in non-faith schools
Do you mean, how many girls from Muslim families are enrolled in public schools who have personally chosen or whose families have chosen for them to wear the veil? Seems like that number probably changes every day, tbh.
I happen to think the school ban is BS, tbh.
― Reading makes my ovaries hurt (Laurel), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:43 (sixteen years ago)
Sorry, I should specify: schools prohibit any kind of headscarf at all, even if it leaves the face uncovered.
The current French ruling for public places is against the niqab, a veil that covers the lower half of face (everything except the eyes).
― Reading makes my ovaries hurt (Laurel), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:45 (sixteen years ago)
laurel is correct (muslim girls don't wear veils anyway i don't think?) so blueski the number of girls that wear the headscarf in school is theoretically nil, since they're forbidden to do so by national law
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:46 (sixteen years ago)
I am also thinking that I saw a drop-dead gorgeous and extremely stylish Muslim woman on the subway the other day in wide-legged jeans, a long belted coat, and a silk scarf wrapped around head in classic Hepburn/starlet-in-a-convertible style. Make-up and eyebrows were impeccable, personal style was impeccable, obv she had money. Totally gorgeous and modern and still modestly dressed & scarved.
Do not understand who could find the time to object to that, she was a pleasure to behold.
― Reading makes my ovaries hurt (Laurel), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:53 (sixteen years ago)
pic or it didn't happen
― mdskltr (blueski), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:55 (sixteen years ago)
i just hope they don't ban fever ray from french award shows
― mdskltr (blueski), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:56 (sixteen years ago)
That women should be liberated from exaggerated modesty (I don't think there's much modesty in ostentatious modesty, really) and patriarchal control is praiseworthy but to do so by diktat of law is merely to exchange the petty tyranny of enforced social codes for the petty tyranny of the State and the underpinning of this move in France stems pretty transparently (to me, at least) from not only hypocritical (as Tracer points out above) but also racist/nationalist prejudice. It's easy to be tolerant to people who are just like you, less so, apparently, if they're not.
― Mit der Kattzheit kaempfen Goetter selbst vergebens (Michael White), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 18:10 (sixteen years ago)
One of my kids' classmates, a student from Algeria, wears a headband rather than a headscarf, and that's considered acceptable by the school (this is just outside Paris).
I've only seen one woman in anything like a full-body covering here in France.
At my kids' school last month, they sang Christmas carols in class, religious ones, not just your "happy holidays" stuff (although they did that too). This is an ordinary public school. I have some Jewish friends who find this offensive. I don't know what the Muslim kids think. I think the French consider this acculturation, since they don't generally profess the faith anymore.
― Euler, Tuesday, 26 January 2010 19:23 (sixteen years ago)
ime lapsed catholicism is the official religion of france
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 January 2010 20:48 (sixteen years ago)
And Marxism
― Mit der Kattzheit kaempfen Goetter selbst vergebens (Michael White), Tuesday, 26 January 2010 21:40 (sixteen years ago)
I've only seen one woman in anything like a full-body covering here in France
seriously? this is common enough in ruralish ireland tbh
― Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 10:02 (sixteen years ago)
― Mit der Kattzheit kaempfen Goetter selbst vergebens (Michael White), Tuesday, January 26, 2010 6:10 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark
i basically agree with this, but don't find a conclusion that easy to reach. it's a difficult dilemma for a liberal secularist, because this is a very strange kind of "freedom to". (i think it's evasive to characterize it as such, really -- we're talking about children.)
― free the charmless but occasionally brilliant Dom Passantino (history mayne), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 10:11 (sixteen years ago)
(i don't agree with all of it. i don't think the state is enforcing a "tyranny" by doing this ffs.)
― free the charmless but occasionally brilliant Dom Passantino (history mayne), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 10:12 (sixteen years ago)
I read this the other day:
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1953382,00.html
Now the French Must Prove They're French:
"What a lot of people don't realize is that with the increasingly strict obligation to prove your citizenship, you can walk into a state administration today to have your ID or passport renewed, and walk out virtually a stateless person," says Naulleau, 48, whose family had been posted to Baden-Baden, Germany — about 30 miles from the French border — when he was born in 1961. "The situation is creating a two-class system of citizenship in which French nationals born abroad or to foreign parents are treated as inferior, and forced to prove their worthiness of being French more than others."Read more: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1953382,00.html#ixzz0do5jbogZ
Read more: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1953382,00.html#ixzz0do5jbogZ
― De que estas hablando? (Tannenbaum Schmidt), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 10:23 (sixteen years ago)
history mayne you don't think this decision is tyrannical? then what is it?
what do you think of this?
Others will opine that one cannot be a true citizen if one hides one's face, because one is thus refusing human interaction. Yet some people wear dark glasses out of shyness or pure obnoxiousness, and nobody would think of denying them their right to humanity. The security-based objection, requiring one to bare one's face in order to have the right to pick up one's children from school, for instance, or if so required by a police patrol, is legitimate in the abstract, but only if one conveniently forgets the fact that in practice, the new generation of women – among the many we have surveyed – do not in fact refuse to comply.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2010/jan/26/proposed-veil-ban-in-france
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 10:34 (sixteen years ago)
from that above link: "Pseudo-feminist rhetoric cannot conceal the fact that it is indeed the voluntary veil which is being fought, and not the imposed article."
― De que estas hablando? (Tannenbaum Schmidt), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 10:43 (sixteen years ago)
yep
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 10:45 (sixteen years ago)
as an atheist liberal i still think that believing in whatever wacky comfort blanket gets you thru shd be a basic right, really
― I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 11:07 (sixteen years ago)
and any and all actions arising from that belief? Cos that's the edge that we're treading with this, even if in this case it's a bit of a silly example?
― Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 11:12 (sixteen years ago)
xpost: no, its a case of the French old guard and "intelligentsia" unable to deal with the difference
― De que estas hablando? (Tannenbaum Schmidt), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 11:19 (sixteen years ago)
and any and all actions arising from that belief?
Nah, course not. "Rights" is a tenuous and wobbly notion that is purely metaphysical outside of the realm of enforceable law imo but actions that don't actively harm others ought to be outside of the state's power I think. The chain of logic that would make wearing religious symbols an act of harm is a lot longer than the chain that you could create to argue for lots of other acts that states don't see fit to legislate for.
― I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 11:29 (sixteen years ago)
I did make that point yesterday, yeah. Not great that the demographics of working age people went for Le Pen.
― gyac, Monday, 25 April 2022 12:21 (three years ago)
"vote for the crook not the fascist" has been the equivalent slogan since at least 2002, when jacques chirac face off against marine's dad
Reminds me of Anthony Crosland's comment on the Labour Party leadership contest between Harold Wilson and George Brown, "A choice between a crook and a drunk."
― Was Hitler a Hobbit? (Tom D.), Monday, 25 April 2022 12:27 (three years ago)
he was just tired and emotional tom
― mark s, Monday, 25 April 2022 12:31 (three years ago)
le pen’s signature policies are not tremendously different from the tories or the republicans afaict?
― Tracer Hand, Monday, 25 April 2022 12:40 (three years ago)
Not sure she was arguing for French soldiers to be exonerated from shooting civilians was she?
― gyac, Monday, 25 April 2022 12:42 (three years ago)
Or for shipping asylum seekers to the middle of Africa?
― Was Hitler a Hobbit? (Tom D.), Monday, 25 April 2022 12:43 (three years ago)
Indeed and ffs
― Tracer Hand, Monday, 25 April 2022 12:45 (three years ago)
She wanted a referendum to amend the constitution to allow discriminating against non-nationals for access to jobs and welfare. A fascist move that the Tories and Republicans might like in theory, but are not actually proposing.
― Zelda Zonk, Monday, 25 April 2022 12:53 (three years ago)
non-residents already have to pay for healthcare in the UK, it’s not a huge psychological next step
― Tracer Hand, Monday, 25 April 2022 13:01 (three years ago)
Huge news in France, that just two weeks ago seemed unthinkable: the four major left and center-left parties have struck a left-wide coalition deal, the first of its kind in decades, that gives them a shot to wrestle power from Macron in the June parliamentary elections.— Taniel (@Taniel) May 4, 2022
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 5 May 2022 08:44 (three years ago)
Interesting development but colour me sceptical. There are a lot of people in the Socialist Party that hate Melenchon more than Macron. Even if such an alliance succeeds in the legislatives, the chances of it all falling apart within weeks, to Macron's ultimate benefit, are high.
― Zelda Zonk, Thursday, 5 May 2022 09:00 (three years ago)
Yeah the last tweet of that thread is watch this space.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 5 May 2022 09:01 (three years ago)
On Melenchon's evolution.
Mélenchon 2017-2022: from tribune of the people to radical socialdemocrat. A short 🧵— Paolo Gerbaudo (@paologerbaudo) June 13, 2022
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 13 June 2022 09:28 (three years ago)
It's that Jeremie Le Quorbyn again.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2022/06/14/support-jeremy-corbyn-shows-danger-french-left-claims-emmanuel/
― Doodles Diamond (Tom D.), Wednesday, 15 June 2022 11:03 (three years ago)
yes. yes. YES https://t.co/sox6oaeiWS pic.twitter.com/aOIK4zYgoj— 「𝘁𝗮𝗿𝗮𝗰𝗵𝗮𝗿𝗮」 (@tara_chara) June 15, 2022
― mark s, Wednesday, 15 June 2022 12:33 (three years ago)
qu'en est-il des dimensions relatives dans l'espace?
The footage and the applause is so good.
‘Whereas capital works to dominate the long term through the short term… our own model seeks to harmonise the rhythms of production with those of nature… We are going to nationalise time’ — Jean-Luc Mélenchon. Amazing that any national-level political leader can talk like this https://t.co/Yb5wkepwUd— David Broder (@broderly) June 14, 2022
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 15 June 2022 12:40 (three years ago)
Macron just lost his parliamentary majority, and Mélenchon's left-green alliance is set to win 150 to 180 seats. Gonna be hard to be Jupiter nowhttps://t.co/iwmafa1CfJ— Vincent Bevins (@Vinncent) June 19, 2022
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 19 June 2022 19:47 (three years ago)
This is a more thorough assessment.
Some thoughts (to be continued as the night goes on):1) Biggest news by far is that France's far-right finally has a bloc in parliament that matches its electoral strength. This is the logical conclusion of institutional normalisation, but 80+ députés for the RN is still huge.— Emile Chabal (@emile_chabal) June 19, 2022
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 19 June 2022 20:05 (three years ago)
Henri Bergson to thread!
― Ride into the Sunship (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 19 June 2022 20:20 (three years ago)
Or even justhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AKcwJD3ky38
― Ride into the Sunship (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 19 June 2022 20:21 (three years ago)
Rachel Kéké, a hotel chambermaid who led a 22-month strike, was elected as an MP with France Insoumise. Her first comments were to women cleaning workers at the National Assembly: ‘I’m going to be taking a look at their working conditions!’ https://t.co/kCxp2dgRSZ— David Broder (@broderly) June 19, 2022
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 19 June 2022 22:13 (three years ago)
54% of people stayed away, and that's how the far-right win.
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 20 June 2022 09:44 (three years ago)
Can't say I love the analysis but it's a neat summary.
"There is, finally, a resource of another order: hatred of the police – insofar as it is a driving force. When power lets loose its henchmen, two radically different results can follow: intimidation, or the tenfold multiplication of rage."https://t.co/IlZfsPp4Qm— Yukon Cornelius 🔥🇨🇦🔥 (@NeeedlesEye) March 30, 2023
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 3 April 2023 11:31 (two years ago)
incredible optics by a master politician.. jam through legislation to rip two years of retired life away from elderly workers with one hand then push for legalizing euthanasia of the aged with the other https://t.co/FXqQByKL9L— yung🛠walken (@as_a_worker) April 3, 2023
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 3 April 2023 19:42 (two years ago)
Looks good.
Video summarizing last night's riot in Lyon. (not mine, I only added filters) pic.twitter.com/bcjG2NE35V— ⛛ Anarchia! 🏴☠️🏳️⚧️🦜 (@ThCollierPerles) April 18, 2023
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 18 April 2023 12:35 (two years ago)
Guess what happened next. You won't believe!
The prosecutor is asking for 8 months imprisonment. For picking up €20 in front of a Sephora.— meerie jesuthasan (@durianist) July 4, 2023
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 4 July 2023 19:52 (two years ago)
the night courts
― calzino, Tuesday, 4 July 2023 19:56 (two years ago)
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/dec/20/france-immigration-bill-passed-controversy-emmanuel-macron-marine-le-pen
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 20 December 2023 09:45 (two years ago)
Love how this racism is described as controversial
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 20 December 2023 09:49 (two years ago)
France's interior minister said at the National Assembly, that he had ordered authorities in the French overseas department of Mayotte to arrange deportation flights for African migrants to the Democratic Republic of Congo, as Paris seeks to clamp down on illegal immigration. pic.twitter.com/jBQcT17GPb— African News feed. (@africansinnews) October 2, 2024
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 3 October 2024 11:08 (one year ago)
🚨 BREAKING: Prosecutors asked that far-right French lawmaker Marine Le Pen be found guilty of embezzlement and sentenced to five years in prison — a judgment that threatens to torpedo her expected presidential bid.Full story: https://t.co/RsuZMw8S68 pic.twitter.com/dj2zWqMmZn— POLITICOEurope (@POLITICOEurope) November 13, 2024
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 13 November 2024 23:45 (one year ago)
Lmao get fucked
― gyac, Thursday, 14 November 2024 00:54 (one year ago)
If Le Pen is taken out, her very popular mini-me Jordan Bardella is standing by so the RN will still have a winnable candidate for the presidential election. Unlike in the US, where they had 4 years to get Trump on insurrection charges and if he'd gone down, his popularity wouldn't have been so easily transferable.
― Zelda Zonk, Thursday, 14 November 2024 01:29 (one year ago)
Rooting hard for a conviction / ineligibility, the facts are clear, but she might just escape it because of her stature / the precedent / apparently it's a widespread practice.
― Nabozo, Thursday, 14 November 2024 08:10 (one year ago)
Macron is such a loser.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 4 December 2024 20:47 (one year ago)
Keep digging:
Macron has said he intends to carry out his full mandate as president, meaning he would stay on until 2027.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 5 December 2024 19:10 (one year ago)
might be hard to govern successfully when the parliament can't form a government
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 5 December 2024 19:14 (one year ago)
time for the sixth republic! doin it brazil-style!
― mark s, Thursday, 5 December 2024 19:23 (one year ago)
lol father in law visiting so we watched the speech
His spin is that there is an alliance between the far left and far right to prevent the democratically elected parliament from functioning
Has promised to submit a new name for prime minister in a sort of national unity govt which presumably excludes both the FN and the left...leaving him with little choice, really don't see how he could pull that one off
Real agrieved South American dictator vibes in the delivery, kinda startingly agressive when you're used to ukpol. Then pivots to a "we need more civility" thing which also came across very insincere
― Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 5 December 2024 19:27 (one year ago)
jupiter mode
― mark s, Thursday, 5 December 2024 19:29 (one year ago)
Mark you'll be pleased to hear my father in law has protest voted in the last I don't know how many presidentials because he believes the current system to be tailored for De Gaulle, no longer fit for purpose and that there should indeed be a 6th republic to change this
― Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 5 December 2024 19:29 (one year ago)
he's right! france it's time, i can fix you
(not by being president to be clear)
― mark s, Thursday, 5 December 2024 19:32 (one year ago)
Emperor.
― if you like this you might like my brothers music. his name is Stu Morr (Tom D.), Thursday, 5 December 2024 19:41 (one year ago)
“I enjoy food! destiny has brought me this lamb chop!”
― mark s, Thursday, 5 December 2024 19:44 (one year ago)
he should watch his step, politically motivated violence is coming back, baby!
― vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Thursday, 5 December 2024 19:59 (one year ago)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c62dzgy0q37o
Excellent news.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 19 February 2026 17:42 (four days ago)
A feminist anti-immigration group called Némésis said Deranque had been outside the venue to protect its members. Némésis has blamed Young Guard for the attack - an allegation it denies.
― colonic interrogation (gyac), Thursday, 19 February 2026 18:22 (four days ago)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c62dzgy0q37o🕸Excellent news.
what the fuck the BBC is paywalling now to us yanks?
― Toe Bean Sprout (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 19 February 2026 19:19 (four days ago)
fuck you beeeb i just use a vpn and tell you i’m from Scunthorpe
― Toe Bean Sprout (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 19 February 2026 19:23 (four days ago)