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France protests: President Macron urges parents

Canadian Content
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France protests: President Macron urges parents to keep teens at home


Law & Order | 682 hits | Jun 30 10:26 am | Posted by: Strutz
11 Comment

French President Emmanuel Macron urged parents Friday to keep teenagers at home and proposed restrictions on social media to quell rioting spreading across France over the fatal police shooting of a 17-year-old driver that has resulted so far in the arres

Comments

  1. by avatar Strutz
    Fri Jun 30, 2023 5:34 pm
    OK I get that people are pissed off that this kid got shot but holy crap the amount of vandalism that is taking place is ridiculous. Torching the cars that belong to citizens that have SFA to do with it? Looting stores? FFS.

  2. by avatar DrCaleb
    Fri Jun 30, 2023 9:28 pm
    The French have been known to start removing heads when they feel their government is sub par. ;) A few burnt cars isn't a big deal for them.

  3. by avatar Strutz
    Fri Jun 30, 2023 9:36 pm
    "DrCaleb" said
    The French have been known to start removing heads when they feel their government is sub par. ;) A few burnt cars isn't a big deal for them.

    Sure, no big deal until they discover that the useless punks have torched people alive in their vehicles or in buildings.

  4. by avatar raydan
    Fri Jun 30, 2023 11:29 pm
    The ones causing damage are not protesters.

  5. by Thanos
    Fri Jun 30, 2023 11:36 pm
    French brutality and mercilessness can be awesome to behold when the state unleashes the police or military on internal malcontents. It's actually quite breathtaking. Act like garbage and the French simply will not hold back on treating you like garbage. Overwhelming retaliation for the win. :twisted:

  6. by avatar Strutz
    Fri Jun 30, 2023 11:41 pm
    "raydan" said
    The ones causing damage are not protesters.

    They never are no matter where the "protest" is occurring or why it is. Just a bunch of useless twats and thieves causing mayhem with no regard for the property, belongings or well-being of other people they are aiming their fake anger at. Hopefully no one is killed or seriously wounded by these thugs.

  7. by Thanos
    Sat Jul 01, 2023 4:49 am
    Good analysis here of French quirkiness on racial issues, and with a brief bit of how their intense nationalism (which nearly borders on isolationism) means that France will actually come out ahead when globalization fully breaks down.....


  8. by avatar DrCaleb
    Wed Jul 05, 2023 1:18 pm

  9. by JaredMilne
    Wed Jul 05, 2023 6:26 pm
    You know French King Louis XIV? The one who never actually said "L'etat, c'est moi" but reflected that belief in his attitude to running the country? It turns out that he absolutely hated Paris due to the violent upheavals he experienced during the "Fronde", a power struggled between his mother Queen Anne and her prime minister Cardinal Mazarin on one side and much of the French nobility on the other:



    People in France were complaining about the expansion of royal authority, the high rate of taxation, and the reduction of the authority of the Parlement de Paris and other regional representative entities. Paris erupted in rioting as a result, and Anne was forced, under intense pressure, to free Broussel. Moreover, on the night of 9–10 February 1651, when Louis was twelve, a mob of angry Parisians broke into the royal palace and demanded to see their king. Led into the royal bed-chamber, they gazed upon Louis, who was feigning sleep, were appeased, and then quietly departed. The threat to the royal family prompted Anne to flee Paris with the king and his courtiers.

    Shortly thereafter, the conclusion of the Peace of Westphalia allowed Condé's army to return to aid Louis and his court. Condé's family was close to Anne at that time, and he agreed to help her attempt to restore the king's authority. The queen's army, headed by Condé, attacked the rebels in Paris; the rebels were under the political control of Anne's old friend Marie de Rohan. Beaufort, who had escaped from the prison where Anne had incarcerated him five years before, was the military leader in Paris, under the nominal control of Conti. After a few battles, a political compromise was reached; the Peace of Rueil was signed, and the court returned to Paris.

    Unfortunately for Anne, her partial victory depended on Condé, who wanted to control the queen and destroy Mazarin's influence. It was Condé's sister who pushed him to turn against the queen. After striking a deal with her old friend Marie de Rohan, who was able to impose the nomination of Charles de l'Aubespine, marquis de Châteauneuf as minister of justice, Anne arrested Condé, his brother Armand de Bourbon, Prince of Conti, and the husband of their sister Anne Genevieve de Bourbon, duchess of Longueville. This situation did not last long, and Mazarin's unpopularity led to the creation of a coalition headed mainly by Marie de Rohan and the duchess of Longueville. This aristocratic coalition was strong enough to liberate the princes, exile Mazarin, and impose a condition of virtual house arrest on Queen Anne.

    All these events were witnessed by Louis and largely explained his later distrust of Paris and the higher aristocracy. "In one sense, Louis' childhood came to an end with the outbreak of the Fronde. It was not only that life became insecure and unpleasant – a fate meted out to many children in all ages – but that Louis had to be taken into the confidence of his mother and Mazarin on political and military matters of which he could have no deep understanding". "The family home became at times a near-prison when Paris had to be abandoned, not in carefree outings to other chateaux but in humiliating flights". The royal family was driven out of Paris twice in this manner, and at one point Louis XIV and Anne were held under virtual arrest in the royal palace in Paris. The Fronde years planted in Louis a hatred of Paris and a consequent determination to move out of the ancient capital as soon as possible, never to return.



    So this is a French tradition going back to long before the Revolution.

  10. by avatar DrCaleb
    Fri Jul 07, 2023 12:52 pm
    France Passes New Bill Allowing Police to Remotely Activate Cameras on Citizens' Phones

  11. by avatar Scape
    Sat Jul 08, 2023 5:33 pm



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