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'French' Becomes a Dirty Word in U.S. Campaign
Reuters ^ | 10/26/04 | Sandra Maler

Posted on 10/26/2004 8:05:05 PM PDT by nypokerface

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - For centuries the very mention of France has conjured up images of elegance and sophistication but in an increasingly heated U.S. presidential campaign, "French" has become a dirty word.

Capitalizing on anti-French sentiment among some Americans following France's decision not to back the war in Iraq, some Republicans have repeatedly accused Democratic contender Sen. John Kerry of "looking French."

The conservative press has jumped on the bandwagon, spurred by an anonymous Bush adviser making the comparison to The New York Times. Wall Street Journal commentator James Taranto, for example, has many times referred to Kerry as a "haughty, French-looking Massachusetts Democrat."

President Bush and his campaign have not characterized Kerry in such a fashion publicly and the Bush campaign declined to comment. "Pas de commentaire," said spokesman Reed Dickens jokingly.

"It should be a compliment but in this context it means that Kerry would defer to France and Germany rather than defend his country," said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Center for Public Policy at the University of Pennsylvania.

Kerry has French relatives and speaks the language fluently. "I thought America was the great melting pot and I don't see why Mr. Bush is picking out a nationality to criticize," said Kerry spokeswoman Stephanie Cutter.

"It's exactly that kind of attitude by Mr. Bush that has led America to be alone in the world."

Ever since French President Jacques Chirac held his ground at the United Nations early last year and refused to follow America into war with Iraq, there has been a backlash against things French in middle America.

In the wake of the war, U.S. lawmakers ordered French fries renamed "Freedom" fries in the cafeteria of the U.S. House of Representatives.

"When you have Americans dumping fine French wine down their sink in protest at Iraq, you see the depth of the sense of betrayal," said Francoise Meltzer, a humanities professor at the University of Chicago.

'PUNCHING BAG'

The attacks against France during the campaign prompted the French ambassador to Washington, Jean-David Levitte, to protest to U.S. authorities this month.

"... We've been a bit too much as France the punching bag of the electoral debate," Levitte said recently during a speech at Johns Hopkins University.

Hall said this anti-French sentiment was relatively new.

"The level of international awareness in the United States is so low, I don't think the American public in general had a clear impression of France," she said. "If anything, prior to this concept, most Americans would assume 'looking French' would have been a compliment. People would take it as a synonym for being attractive, worldly and cultured."

Meltzer, a dual French-American national, says the anti-French sentiment is mostly a phenomenon among middle Americans -- middle in terms of geography and class -- a main group of voters, along with Christian fundamentalists, targeted by the Republican Party.

"There is a kind of rage among middle Americans that the French are ungrateful because 'we saved you in 1944 and now that we need you, you're not there.' The French didn't come through after Americans came through for them," Meltzer said.

"It's true that America helped the French during World War II but after all, without the French, it would not have won the American Revolution, and none of this has anything to do with whether the French should be in Iraq," she added.

While Bush and Kerry share the same background -- upper class from New England -- Bush has cultivated his Texan roots and affects a slangy speech, with broken sentences and uneven pronunciations like "nucular" instead of "nuclear."

Kerry, on the other hand, is perceived as a multilingual intellectual who speaks with an expansive vocabulary, proper grammar and syntax.

"Not only does Kerry speak French. He speaks English well," Meltzer said. "In addition his wife is foreign -- she speaks with an accent and she speaks her mind... That further contaminates Kerry. He's part Jewish, he grew up Catholic, he studied in Switzerland and he speaks French -- this all combines to make him 'French', not really American.

"French really means un-American," she added.

Although Bush has a French tailor, Georges de Paris, and until recently enjoyed the culinary delights of White House French pastry chef Roland Mesnier, he has publicly shunned things foreign.

While on trip to France in May 2002, he chided an American reporter for asking Chirac a question in French during a joint news conference in Paris. "He memorizes four words and plays like he's all intercontinental," Bush sneered.

Kerry, on the other hand, has even on occasion spoken French on the campaign trail. Opinion polls show Europeans overwhelmingly want him to win.

"Anybody who has been at the Statue of Liberty (a present from France) knows that America's greatest strength is its mix of nationalities and I think it's time for Mr. Bush to take one more trip to the Statue of Liberty to find out what America is all about," Cutter said.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: axisofweasels; nonallyfrance
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1 posted on 10/26/2004 8:05:06 PM PDT by nypokerface
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To: nypokerface

So what. I don't like the coward french either. So, WHAT!Q


2 posted on 10/26/2004 8:06:47 PM PDT by RetiredArmy (If Kerry wins the election, the Republic as we know it, IS OVER! Done. Finished.)
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To: nypokerface

Oh, I see. So it is all fine and dandy for Chirac and Schroeder to capitalize on anti-Americanism to get elected, but put the shoe on the other foot and sacre-coeur!!!


3 posted on 10/26/2004 8:09:25 PM PDT by FlipWilson
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To: nypokerface
Ever since French President Jacques Chirac held his ground at the United Nations early last year and refused to follow America into war with Iraq, there has been a backlash against things French in middle America.

Not only didn't he follow, he threw his considerable corpus into the door frame and tried to keep us out as well. France sold weapons to Iraq up until a few weeks of the invasion, threatened Turkey with exclusion from the EU if it permitted us to invade from the North (the 4th Infantry Division had to be reloaded on boats and sailed a quarter of the way around the world to invade, weeks late, from Kuwait), took bribes from the Saddam regime in return for kickbacks and lobbying for ending sanctions, and on and on. The French can no longer be considered an ally. At best they're a rival, at worst an enemy.

4 posted on 10/26/2004 8:11:25 PM PDT by John Jorsett (Kerry-Edwards: FORGING AHEAD)
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To: RetiredArmy

When someone says, he looks French, it makes me think of smelly armpits, an unwashed look. Actually, sKerry should return to his roots and take his wife with him. This country would be much better off without that duet.


5 posted on 10/26/2004 8:14:25 PM PDT by IceAge
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To: nypokerface
Let's not forget that a french ship supposedly allied with John Paul Jones fired on him.

It's been a long time since I read about it, but I think the french ship was the Bon Homo something.

6 posted on 10/26/2004 8:14:46 PM PDT by Slump Tester (John Kerry - When even your best still isn't good enough)
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To: nypokerface

What condescending asses! If you are sick and tired of the French, that must mean you are middle-class, stupid, fundamentalist Christian clods, is that it?


7 posted on 10/26/2004 8:22:26 PM PDT by Another Thought
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To: nypokerface

The French stink!


8 posted on 10/26/2004 8:23:18 PM PDT by MeekMom ((HUGE Coulter fan!!!) (Life-long Python Addict))
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To: ex-rushie

His wife can go back south from where the b**ch came from. She is pure garbage.


9 posted on 10/26/2004 8:23:21 PM PDT by RetiredArmy (If Kerry wins the election, the Republic as we know it, IS OVER! Done. Finished.)
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To: nypokerface
"I don't see why Mr. Bush is picking out a nationality to criticize," said Kerry spokeswoman Stephanie Cutter.

There you have it! The Kerry campaign doesn't understand why "French" is derogatory.

10 posted on 10/26/2004 8:27:12 PM PDT by Uncle Miltie (Global Test. Didn't need tax cut. Give Iran nuclear fuel. Never waivered on Iraq.)
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To: nypokerface
Can we ask the frogs to come pick up the 37 fighter jets they sold to Saddam and he later buried? They're cluttering up the desert.

Thanks in advance...

11 posted on 10/26/2004 8:31:38 PM PDT by Deb (A Democrat Stole My GREEN Sweater!!!)
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To: nypokerface
"The level of international awareness in the United States is so low, I don't think the American public in general had a clear impression of France,

He's lucky the public doesn't know more.

12 posted on 10/26/2004 8:36:07 PM PDT by Shermy ("Stay the Course- Part Two!")
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To: nypokerface

I've never heard the President say anything bad about the French. Did I miss it? Now I've said bad things about the French -- will not even buy Loreal mascarea any more.


13 posted on 10/26/2004 8:38:47 PM PDT by Arizona Carolyn
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To: nypokerface

C'est la vie, Frenchy.


14 posted on 10/26/2004 8:44:53 PM PDT by hyperpoly8 (Illegitimati Non Carborundum)
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To: nypokerface

I worked on a multi-million dollar project in Antwerpen Belgium. The project Team consisted of about 48 Europeans. Five of whom were French. NONE of the French team memebers ever went to dinner with us. They are total snobs, they strut around like peacocks. The Germans, English, Belgians, and Spanish Team members hated the French's guts. And we were the ones that fixed their Advanced Pricing problems/Issues in the software implementation. The French pricks just sat back and smoked cigs all day long. I called my boss and requested that I be a Project Manager on another assignment. "F" the French.


15 posted on 10/26/2004 8:49:51 PM PDT by Cobra64 (Babes should wear Bullet Bras - www.BulletBras.net)
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To: nypokerface
French also means hand-kissing, back-stabbing, atheistic terrorist appeasing cowards.
By the way I am of mostly French ancestry and I am thankful my relatives escaped that God forsaken hole and came to the greatest nation in the history of the world..America.
16 posted on 10/26/2004 8:50:26 PM PDT by Jorge
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To: nypokerface
Kerry/Edwards
For a French Start

17 posted on 10/26/2004 9:02:27 PM PDT by syriacus (I'm commanded to LOVE appeaseniks, but I don't have to VOTE for one as Commander-in-Chief)
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To: nypokerface
"French really means un-American," she added.

She got that right.

18 posted on 10/26/2004 9:33:01 PM PDT by knuthom
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To: nypokerface

As the American Company, French's Mustard has frequently stated, the only thing in common with their product, the most famous hot dog mustard in the world and the real French Government is that they are both yellow.


19 posted on 10/26/2004 9:56:04 PM PDT by jws3sticks (Hillary can take a very long walk on a very short pier, anytime, and the sooner the better!)
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To: nypokerface
Hall said this anti-French sentiment was relatively new

Well ya we used to like them around the time they helped us fight against the British but then it went down hill from there. So 100 years or so is relatively new I guess.

YOU CHEESE EATING SURRENDER MONKIES
20 posted on 10/26/2004 10:21:15 PM PDT by festus (All Your Electoral Votes Are Belong To Us !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
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