Posted on 04/20/2007 11:27:17 PM PDT by bruinbirdman
As a foreign student at the ENA (Ecole Nationale dAdministration) I learnt how to make policy presentations to prime ministers by giving them three options. But what if there are four, some joker asked. When you have no more than five minutes, the instructor replied, not only will you find that there are always three, but the first and the last will be phony choices, and the middle one will be the only option.
To me Ségolène Royal and François Bayrou seem non-options, and Nicolas Sarkozy the single choice. Yet what could he do, if elected? The countrys problems can be summed up in one dispiriting phrase: les droits acquis acquired rights. Handing them out is electorally sweet, taking them back virtually impossible. Think of our own NHS: a Stalinist bureaucracy promising everyone everything free, which many politicians and professionals know can never work, but which popular sentiment makes untouchable. Apply that immobilisme to whole swaths of French life and you can see the new Presidents predicament.
With typical chutzpah Jacques Attali, former head of the Bank for Reconstruction and Development, disagrees, claiming that we are all simply jealous of the French quality of life. A kind of communism that works, was how a French sociologist once described his country. Anyone who has landed at a stylish, efficient airport, driven on an exquisitely cambered motorway, taken the TGV, or pondered how high taxes, better services and a relatively small income span can go together, knows what he meant. But it was a French author, Louis-Ferdinand Céline, who once described Russia as a vegetating catastrophe, and for all its charms and successes vaunted by Attali, that is how France sometimes feels.
The death of real communism has released a Hokusai-size wave of competition from the Far East in its wake, which points to more outsourcing, freer labour markets, social security cutbacks and the rest. In France, these will be ferociously resisted. Prescribing a dose of Thatcherism or Blairism is simplistic. The French are not only financially but also philosophically opposed to changes they believe would impoverish France humanly and culturally. Jacques Chirac proclaimed Anglo-Saxon liberalism the enemy not just of France, but of Europe, and millions on the Left and Right would agree. A highly educated French friend, who tells me he has barricaded himself in a vigorous abstentionism for the elections, thinks protectionism is the only choice, and he is far from alone.
So France this weekend faces both a moment of truth and a limited field of action. What could Mr Sarkozy do on immigration? After the recent riots he suggested that compulsory integration was failing, and perhaps the multicultural British had the answer. Ironically it was the moment that Trevor Phillips, chairman of the Commission for Equality and Human Rights, began admitting that multiculturalism was a recipe for segregation. If both policies have similar results in practice ghettos, unemployment, alienation, riots or terrorist attacks where does France, with twice as many Muslims as Britain, go from here?
In foreign policy the options are equally few. Mr Sarkozy could unfreeze relations with America only as far as opinion in a secularised culture, which delights in regarding George Bush not just as a moron, but a God-struck moron, would allow. As for Europe, it is at the top of no ones agenda.
And what could any president do about culture? It is not only in economics that there is a sense of backwardness, even if French productivity remains higher than ours. Young people envy the British cultural scene, for all its froth, but it is Americas all-round superiority that truly hurts: in universities, in science, in orchestras, in films, in the best popular culture, in literature. Where is the French E.O. Wilson, or Don DeLillo? Where are The West Wing, The Sopranos, The Simpsons? Like us they can nod their heads sadly but knowingly at the Virginia shootings, but they are not so prejudiced as to believe that one atrocity defines a country. The new president could increase cultural subsidies farther, but the best American universities, like The Simpsons, are financed privately.
A Frenchman once described America as having no identity, though wonderful teeth. But what happens when Frances own identity fades, and its teeth are still not the best?
God knows the French can be provoking, and their chumminess with Saddam Hussein, whose payroll included senior French diplomats, tainted whatever moral authority they aspired to over Iraq. Yet to take pleasure in what a Frenchman once called their société bloquée blocked society would be stupid. Who but a political primitive would want to see the most beautiful country in Europe, with huge reserves of culture and intelligence, fall into decline, or social mayhem?
So I look forward to being confounded, and to seeing a victorious Mr Sarkozy take on his countrys acquired rights and win, while preserving French difference. It could even encourage us to address our own blockages reconfigure the NHS, step up selection in schools, and renationalise the railways. The trouble is, France being so inalienably French, I still dont see how he could do it.
Thanks for posting. An interesting read on the dilemma of one of the most complex, hidebound cultures on the planet.
Pretentious superiority may have its charms, but I'll take a country with functional plumbing any day of the week, thank you.
I agree and feel it couldn’t happen to a more deserving group of people.
To my shame, I have a distant ancestor that is french. He DID end up a good frenchman, though. He hung himself in an apple orchard.
I am also glad he is not a direct lineage, but of marriage into my family.
“claiming that we are all simply jealous of the French quality of life.”
Yes, thats what I was crying in my beer tonight over. Oh how I wish we had average double digit unemployment, negative GDP growth, and muslim car burning riots.
It would be a repeat. I watched it on TV last year.
Or was it picked up by the network for a second season.
I wouldn't, but then the authors description of "huge reserves of culture and intelligence" does not describe France.
Their Socialist Party candidate for president, currently #2 in polls, Segolene non-Royal, refuses to sing the French national anthem.
Kinda reminds me of Hairy "Quisling" Reid. He is so jealous of the frogs defense policy he is practicing waving the white flag.
yitbos
Why are you dwelling on Frances best points?
Modern France is a very large, and (currently) attractive, museum.
I like museums, but there are plenty of them to chose from.
Even the Eiffel tower was built by a man whose real family name was Bönickhausen.
Ribbit ribbit ribbit ribbit ribbit ribbit
he sounds confused
> Anyone who has landed at a stylish, efficient airport
Huh? If he’s thinking of CDG here, he’s way off base. It might be stylish (in parts) but it’s not efficient. Look at the new addition. Not only did the roof fall in, but it’s a triumph of form over function. It looks nice, but all that glass means it’s impossible to keep cool in summer. Typical.
After the recent riots he suggested that compulsory integration was failing, and perhaps the multicultural British had the answer. Ironically it was the moment that Trevor Phillips, chairman of the Commission for Equality and Human Rights, began admitting that multiculturalism was a recipe for segregation. If both policies have similar results in practice ghettos, unemployment, alienation, riots or terrorist attacks
Even the writer doesnt get it. He implicitly buys the myth that the problem with these hostile, violent groups which refuse to be assimilated is the policy of the western governments and our people.
Its ISLAM, stupid !!! The religion of death is at war with us, always has been, always will be.
Thanks for the ping. You have beautiful pictures on your home site.
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