Haltickling
2nd Level Green Feather
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The respect is mutual, milagros. It's always a pleasure to exchange arguments and views with somebody who can articulate his opinions without attacking a person! 😎
Haltickling said:So, what does that tell us about Americans, when their President is Mr. Bush? 🙄
You're certainly right if you take the literal meaning of race and racism.areenactor said:not to attack hal, but he has used a term in this thread, repeatedly, incorrectly. "racism". france is not a race, it is an ethnic country. judeism is not a race, it is a religion. do they still teach that all countries/groups are races in germany hal? i had thought that went out with all the other trapings of nazism.
and i repeat, this is not an attack on hal!
steve
desdemona said:ok, just for a little cultural break...
Les Ricains (words by Michel Sardou)
Si les ricains n'étaient pas là
(If the Americans hadn't been there)
Vous seriez tous en Germanie
(You would all be in Germany)
A parler de je ne sais quoi
(Speaking of I know not what)
A saluer je ne sais qui
(Greeting I don't know who)
Bien sûr les années ont passé
(Of course, the years have passed)
Les fusils ont changé de mains
(Guns have changed hands)
Est-ce une raison pour oublier
(Is that a reason to forget)
Qu'un jour on en a eu besoin
(That one day we needed them)
Un gars venu de Géorgie
(A boy from Georgia)
Qui se foutait pas mal de toi
(Who didn't care much about you)
Est v'nu mourir en Normandie
(Came to die in Normandy)
Un matin où tu n'y étais pas
(One morning when you weren't there)
Bien sûr les années ont passé
(Of course the years have passed)
On est devenus des copains
(And we've become friends)
A l'amicale du fusillé
(Through the "Gun club")
On dit qu'ils sont tombés pour rien
(You could say they died for nothing)
Si les ricains n'étaient pas là
Vous seriez tous en Germanie
A parler de je ne sais quoi
A saluer je ne sais qui
Please excuse my mean translation. I've always found it a somewhat touching tribute about how the French conveniently forgot about the gratitude they felt on D-Day. But I've also witnessed the French celebrating and commemorating those who died in the battle to liberate them. I just don't think it's something any country appreciates having to be reminded of - a dark time when it needed help from foreigners to escape foreign domination. I also find it interesting that such pieds noirs authors like Albert Camus were active in the French resistance - even though the sentiment was and still is against them. I don't pretend to have the historical or political backgrounds of Milagros or Hal and I haven't the patriotic stance of steve, but I do think France as a country has a vast cultural diversity - much like that found in the U.S. Maybe familiarity breeds contempt?
You're a complete and utter so-and-so, Hal.Haltickling said:The respect is mutual, milagros. It's always a pleasure to exchange arguments and views with somebody who can articulate his opinions without attacking a person! 😎
Haltickling said:Is this another French-bashing thread or what? THE FRENCH don't exist as an entity. Just as Americans shouldn't be judged by Bush, Germans not by Hitler, Cambodians not by Pol Pot, you shouldn't judge the French by any single individual, let alone politicians!
ticklebutton said:In the 2000 election, only 105,405,100 voted -
50,456,002 voted for Bush
50,999,897 voted for Gore
It was one of the closest elections in the history of the United States.