George1959
Senior Member
At least Charles and Macron should not walk side by side, since then it could be possible, that an erratic bullet might hit Charles instead of Macron.
I saw that. People at the top of a company or government are frequently far removed what or who they are in charge of. They are also good actors and frequently condescending. I wonder if he was actually told don't wear the watch and forgot he wasn't supposed to wear it. It wasn't about the look or messaging it was he simply forgot what his aids told him.Macron's sleight of hand.
The French also get a generous thirty days annual leave plus eleven days of public holidays. Sacré bleu!I am jealous of the French:
"Under a new law, pushed through parliament without a vote last week, the retirement age for most French workers will be raised from 62 to 64. That will still keep France below the norm in Europe and in many other developed economies, where the age at which full pension benefits apply is 65 and is increasingly moving towards 67."
they were reporting that as £80,000 in the early papers, but they've since corrected it to £2,800I saw that. People at the top of a company or government are frequently far removed what or who they are in charge of. They are also good actors and frequently condescending. I wonder if he was actually told don't wear the watch and forgot he wasn't supposed to wear it. It wasn't about the look or messaging it was he simply forgot what his aids told him.
I agree. There is great unity there. That's how things get accomplished.I haven't followed this closely but I am impressed by the ability of the French to stage a protest.
Nope, I was serious. I thought she was a great chancellor! But I can only base this on the positive reports voiced in Canada! I am sure you know things about her that I'm not aware of.I hope you're kidding.
Um, yes.I am sure you know things about her that I'm not aware of.
This is why the system is flawed. Giving power to one person is always a mistake...Tony Blair is responsible for much of what is happening in Britain right now.This should have been voted on in Parliament & not decided on by one man.
except the UK has an even higher retirement age and it's goung up again to 67 in 2026... the changed the Retirment age overnight a few years ago, and women in particualr who were months away from retirement, and retirment packages were suddenly informed they had to carry on working much longer.. Extremely unfair, everyone very angry, Inflation is extremely high now, Mortgage rates are set to go up again. Our energy bills are through the roof... people are having to choose whether to eat or heat .... but do we burn things down...NO...While we in the USA have always observed unrest in France, with strikes, etc. as the norm... this is likely not just a French thing, this time around. In this case the French government has managed to outrage various sectors, which have seemingly become united over the retirement changes.
I would suspect the high inflation, with no real indications of any easing in the foreseeable future, has a lot to do with it. Something that seems to be a big issue across all of Europe. We just seem to be focusing on France, in this instance.
The same in Germany. The French people are much more powerful. The Germans tried a revolution in 1848, but it failed. Lenin wrote: "If the Germans want to do a revolution, they at first buy a platform ticket".except the UK has an even higher retirement age and it's goung up again to 67 in 2026... the changed the Retirment age overnight a few years ago, and women in particualr who were months away from retirement, and retirment packages were suddenly informed they had to carry on working much longer.. Extremely unfair, everyone very angry, Inflation is extremely high now, Mortgage rates are set to go up again. Our energy bills are through the roof... people are having to choose whether to eat or heat .... but do we burn things down...NO...
..or invade Poland...The same in Germany. The French people are much more powerful. The Germans tried a revolution in 1848, but it failed. Lenin wrote: "If the Germans want to do a revolution, they at first buy a platform ticket".![]()
I don't think America would have won it's independence without the French navy. For sure their own revolution was styled on ours. I wish Americans still had the solidarity the French display. We are thoroughly divided and conquered here, much like the U.K.After last week, the burning of Town Hall entrance at Bordeaux, The strikes and demonstrations intensify, protest in the West of France against new water reservoir, and throughout all cities against Macron.
The French bond with United States and its tradition of protest and revolution dates to the 1700s, French and Indian War, support with funds and men at US Revolution (Gal. Lafayette). Indeed the French Revolution was inspired by the American Revolution, indeed, Benjamin Franklin was a much loved and great aficionado of France. The French Constutionelle was based on the American Constitution. The old French still recall the support in WWI and Liberation of France in WWII.
Some of the photos in the news are in familiar places... I am taking precautions against the garbage piles, and interruptions of transit.
Bon Soiree!
Jon
No problem at all. But it wasn't a revolution and it went awfully wrong. And all this because a mad painter from Austria came to Germany. No in fact it's not funny, it's a tragedy...or invade Poland...sorry couldn't resist
Good.but do we burn things down...NO...