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The French PR Machine Crashes
Laura's Weekly E-Blast! ^ | 03/03/03 | Laura Ingraham

Posted on 03/03/2003 12:32:57 PM PST by FBD

Laura's Weekly E-Blast! http://www.LauraIngraham.com

The French PR Machine Crashes

(San Francisco, CA) Even out here in peacenik-land, one senses that patience is wearing thin for the French. After watching the French Foreign Minister Dominque De Villepin on ABC’s This Week, one Democrat friend asked: "Was he trying to win us over or insult us?" My brother, who speaks fluent French, and is a self-avowed Francophile, has cancelled his trip there this summer. Suddenly Evian costs the same as Poland Springs in the grocery stores.

As US authorities continue to pick off top al Qaeda operatives, it’s time we really start to focus on another threat to our national security —the French. Maybe that’s a slight overstatement--but not by much. Day by day we are learning more about how little we have in common with the country whose people were liberated by our soldiers almost 60 years ago. De Villepin, in the much-heralded interview with George Stephanopolous, unwittingly exposed this growing divide, and his country’s feckless, hypocritical stance against a brutal, dangerous Iraqi regime.

After this Q & A (which was more like Q & Q since he failed to answer Any of the important questions about Iraq), there should be no dispute About the following:

* France prefers an Iraq with Saddam in power.

* France thinks 1441’s "serious consequences" means permanent inspections.

* France thinks 1441’s "immediate compliance" mandate means Iraq should cooperate when it feels like it.

* France doesn’t regret its past role in helping Iraq build a nuclear reactor.

* France thinks Americans are stupid.

Stephanopolous later said he believed De Villepin was attempting to "go over the heads of the US government and speak directly to the American people." Did De Villepin really believe our citizens would suddenly Find the French position credible when he claimed that Iraq was now cooperating "on process and substance"? (Something even Hans Blix does not claim.)

George might as well have been interviewing Tariq Aziz. "You cannot say that a country should disarm and when a country agrees to disarm…that it’s nothing," De Villepin said of Saddam’s last minute decision to destroy his Al Samoud missiles. "He is, we are in the process of being able to disarm," he insisted. So from the warped French perspective, UN weapons inspectors are not only detectives, they are enablers.

Confirming the worst American stereotypes of France’s appeasement mentality, De Villepin warned of "a burst of terrorism" if force is used "prematurely." This illogical thinking would prevent us from ever Acting preemptively, and keep our country locked into a never-ending defensive crouch. It may be the French way, but it’s not the American way.

As exasperating as De Villepin’s answers were, so was Stephanopolous’ failure to press him on his country’s Iraqi oil interests. No matter How many times De Villepin invoked the "world community," we know that France is only concerned with one thing in this debate—France. Its economic interests, its standing in Europe, its ability to stand up to the world’s cowboy superpower—this is what motivates France’s refusal to force Iraq’s disarmament.

What the French may never fully comprehend is that none of that will ultimately matter in a world where weapons proliferation goes unchecked, where dictators are able to manipulate democratic leaders like marionettes. Memo to Jacques: If you want to be considered as a 21st century authority on the perils of war, why not starting spending some money on your own military? But that’s right, De Villepin reiterated that "France is not a pacifist country."

French eateries in San Francisco conspicuously fly large American flags as if to assure prospective customers that "we’re still with you." Yes we remember that after September 11th, France said "We are all Americans." That was a warm and welcome gesture. But today we need more than gestures, we need action and real commitment.

Word of the Week

Penitent adj. Feeling or expressing remorse for one's misdeeds or sins. As in-- De Villepin wasn't the slightest bit penitent about France's role in helping Iraq build a nuclear reactor before the last Gulf War.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: devillepin; france; french; iraq; saddam; sanfrancisco; steponallofus
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To: FBD
You might appreciate this little ditty taught to me by little Kabili twins, (parents had fled Algerian radical Islamist persecution).

They learned it at school where we lived in the Vendee. (That's another story. There are still isolated pockets of brave and decent ones here and there.)

Frere Jacques,
Jacques Chirac,
Ou vas tu, trou de cul?
Tu vas a la messe,
Chasser des gonzeses

ding dang dong.

81 posted on 03/03/2003 6:14:53 PM PST by 8mmMauser (molon labe)
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To: FBD
"..................remarks about French horror over her use of propylene glycol."

"This is the result of a guilty national conscience. Some years ago,
some French wine producers adulterated their product with *eth*ylene
glycol, which has a sweet taste. (Since it is not detected as added
sugar, it evaded the checks that the industry imposed in order to make
sure their wine is pure.)"

"Unfortunately, ethylene glycol, which is also used in antifreeze, is a poison: the kidneys convert it to oxalic
acid, which destroys the kidneys. Leaking sweet antifreeze regularly kills many cats and dogs each year."

"It was a great scandal and embarrassment to the French."



I couldn't find the original news report of the scandal...only this reference to the scandal...

My google search string just wasn't good enough I guess..

Semper Fi
82 posted on 03/03/2003 6:26:50 PM PST by river rat (War works.....It brings Peace... Give war a chance to destroy Jihadists...)
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To: M Kehoe; majordivit; sultan88; Mudboy Slim; cowgirlcutie; Gorzaloon; X-FID
M Kehoe: "To further friendly relations with the French and France (yes, ya'all got some minority populations that could cause big trouble), I will not insult the French today"

Yer a good person M Kehoe...there's always tomorrow!

"Ah, the French; the more you kiss their A$$, the more they $#it on your head!"--Red Gold

Here's another little something I learned about the French recently---
During the Iranian hostage crisis, the French closed the gates to our fleeing diplomats. Locked them out.

They don't deserve your charitable treatment, and you can rest assured they will not return it in kind.

FRegards

83 posted on 03/03/2003 6:37:49 PM PST by FBD (French Basher Dude)
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To: Itzlzha; 8mmMauser
I hope this is right:

Je faire parler non français!

Heh,heh! ;^D

FRegards
84 posted on 03/03/2003 7:07:10 PM PST by FBD (French Basher Dude)
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To: FBD

85 posted on 03/03/2003 7:49:36 PM PST by Leisler
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To: bert
was it the same place Fox rented for Joe Millionaire?

No, the Joe Millionaire chateau was really just a large fancy French house. The Iron Chef chateau was built on top of a castle, and was about 40 feet in the air. A quantum leap in opulence. And this house was still occupied by some useless Duke and Duchess, and obviously not for rent. Seeing something like that makes you glad to be an American, where we dispensed with such nonsense some time ago.

86 posted on 03/04/2003 6:11:32 AM PST by gridlock (tag-line)
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To: river rat
There was a similar scandal in Germany about 1978-80. The German Wine Purity Law (why do the words "German" and "Purity Law" in the same sentence send a shiver down the spine?) prevented the use of sugars, so the winemakers substituted ethylene glycol to sweeten the wines. This process was not limited to the inexpensive brands, IIRC. German wines took a major hit in the market, from which they never really recovered.

They test for Ethylene Glycol in German wines now, but they are still reletively inexpensive. But I just pulled the last German bottle from the rack this week, though. Better Portugese wines are an adequate substitute, especially on the second bottle.
87 posted on 03/04/2003 6:20:32 AM PST by gridlock (tag-line)
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To: gridlock; river rat
Thanks for that info, (scandel about winemakers substituting ethylene glycol to sweeten the wines)

That's enough for me to swear off both French and German wines...let alone their traitorous behaviour.

FRegards,
FBD
88 posted on 03/04/2003 8:17:32 AM PST by FBD (French Basher Dude)
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