Posted on 09/04/2006 4:45:08 PM PDT by shrinkermd
Change in France will eventually result in changes in foreign policy as well.
Viva la 30 hour work week!!!
America suffered from the exact same folks that Sarkozy describes.
And in 1968, too - the year of that ludicrous circus better known as the Democratic Party Convention.
Yes, he dares to speak the Truth. Good for him. It is exactly the problem. And that stinking thinking that goes with it -- PC stuff, hedonism, anti-authoritarianism.
Bravo Sarko!
Give credit to Sarkozy for deftly out-manouevering DeVillepin who was Chirac's hand picked successor.
While I believe that foreign policy will move slightly toward greater cross-Atlantic co-operation, Sarkozy will have the same problems his predecessors have had in attempting to "roll back" Socialist labor laws. Communist thugs in the public unions control transportation in France and can bring (and have brought) France to its knees. I was in France in '95 when strikes forced close to 100,000 small businesses to close.
Thatcher broke the death grip that militant labor held on the UK economy. Let's hope Sarkozy will do the same.
Sarkozy is good for France as well as the greater "West."
Sounds like Ronald Reagan! Good luck to him.
And therein lies the problem with France. If Thatcher and Reagan had never existed, Sarkozy might have a chance to reform the labor laws.
As it is, any attempt to apply an "Anglo-Saxon" model, or even to be seen as supporting anything like a Thatcher/Reaganite revolution will meet with immediate rioting in the streets (and not by the muzzies, by the CGT and other openly communist unions).
Perhaps. But why the GDP per capita in France and UK is almost the same?
Good speech but we shall see where it leads.
LePen ended up in second place last election and even got 21 percent of the vote in the face of all out campaign to support Chirac.
A big chunk of public opinion is for that kind of message in France but do they understand that France must change or go further down the tubes economically.
BWAHAHAHA!
I was a student in France in 92. I shipped a crate of stuff to myself from the USA, and thanks to a dockworkers strike, it arrived 5 months later, a week before I was to leave.
We moved over in '91 and deliberately had our stuff shipped to Le Havre rather than Marseilles because of that possiblity (not to mention just flat out having our stuff stolen) despite the fact that we were moving to Nice (about 90 minutes from Marseilles and a 12 hour drive from Le Havre).
BTTT
Whatever Sarkozy's intentions, whatever majority sends him into office, whatever mandate he can claim, he will still have to deal with organized opposition that can put a million people in the streets. That's the real problem here. If he can break a general strike then there's hope for economic reform, but if an alliance of socialist unions and university brats shuts the country down his good intentions will fail.
If aging Rocker/Elvis impersonator, Johnny Hallyday is supporting Sarko, the world will follow.
Sarko is an excellent candidate, very pro-free market, pro American, who has a vision of France as a working society, not a society of free loaders.
Taking on the 68ists in the current atmosphere takes a lot of courage, as does taking on the Islamic immigrants.
Sarkozy is everything that Chirac isn't. And Chirac doesn't like him and is intimidated by his popularity.
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