by Ceffer ➕follow (5) 💰tip ignore
Comments 1 - 18 of 18 Search these comments
The thing is, they still think they live in democracies.
They don't.
Patrick saysThe thing is, they still think they live in democracies.
They don't.
Esp. France is sad to see. Yeah they have had unfettered muslim/african immigration against t their will for a long time, but the national jab mandate is a whole new level. They need a new revolution
Esp. France is sad to see.
Problem was he was close to 65ish and I'd have killed him with one punch.
mell saysEsp. France is sad to see.
France has been a thorn in the globes ass forever. I don't care about the history, buildings or any of that shit. Naturally born French people are complete entitled ass holes. I was 30 seconds from beating the living fuck out of a guy in Costa Rica. Rudest absolute piece of shit I've encountered. Problem was he was close to 65ish and I'd have killed him with one punch.
He was telling the servers to fuck off. Was pissed we had a cabana by the pool that we PAID for. Was yelling at my kids. Yelling at the other dad with us who is a legit ju jitsu fighter and could have ripped his arm off. He's more zen as he has to control his ability. I got in the guys face. My interactions with the French has been poor at minimum. They're a holes. We weren't even bothering this guy, just sitting there. I know it's not common in Europe, but the guy didn't even ti...
Just piss on his leg and shoes... what can he do after that?
Maybe there is hope for France.
The word for money in Irish and French is simply the same word as for silver. There's a reason.
richwicks saysmell saysPatrick saysThe thing is, they still think they live in democracies.
They don't.
Esp. France is sad to see. Yeah they have had unfettered muslim/african immigration against t their will for a long time, but the national jab mandate is a whole new level. They need a new revolution
If Macron is given the guillotine, I'm buying beers and food for anybody that wants to come the following weekend to celebrate it.
$5,000 limit. I have to eat too.
I...
Repeatedly, the president has gone back on his word. Last August he boldly declared that France ‘must learn to live with the virus,’ urging people to show unity.
Weeks later he lost his nerve and imposed a lockdown that had a touch of martial law about it, with a 6 p.m. curfew and the closure of all restaurants, bars, cinemas and theaters. When France began emerging from that confinement in April, he dismissed the idea of an obligatory health pass because there ‘will never be a right of access that discriminates among the French. It cannot be made compulsory for access to everyday places.’
Last November, and again this May, he vowed never to make vaccination compulsory, saying he ‘respected’ an individual’s choice on the matter.
This is why many French have lost faith in Macron, and few believe that the health pass will be a temporary measure. They fear it is the first step of a digital surveillance system modeled on the Chinese Communist party’s method of controlling its people, rewarding or punishing them depending on their behavior.
In an op-ed for Le Figaro last week the philosopher François-Xavier Bellamy warned that France and western Europe was facing a challenge to its civilization: either it goes the way of totalitarian regimes or stays true to their ‘intangible rules on which are founded our democracies. Fundamental freedoms, equal rights, civic friendship are not privileges for calm times but the principles that make us who we are.’
Above all, Macron has betrayed his fine words of previous years.
Above all, Macron has betrayed his fine words of previous years.
patrick.net
An Antidote to Corporate Media
1,194,747 comments by 13,923 users - gabbar online now