Showing posts with label France's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label France's. Show all posts

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Critic of France"s Hollande says it with dung

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Critic of France"s Hollande says it with dung

Monday, October 21, 2013

Maximum Shakespeare: In Performance: Frances Barber


By Robin Lindsay, Emma Cott and Erik Piepenburg


In Performance: Frances Barber: Frances Barber performs a scene as the title character in the Donmar Warehouse production of Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar,” at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn.





The Donmar Warehouse’s all-female production of “Julius Caesar,” directed by Phyllida Lloyd, is set in a high-security women’s prison. In this scene, Caesar, played by the actress Frances Barber, addresses the senate right before he is assasinated by conspirators (or in the case of this version, fellow prisoners), including his close friend Brutus.


In one of the play’s most famous scenes, Caesar says:


“I am constant as the northern star,


Of whose true-fixed and resting quality


There is no fellow in the firmament.”


“Julius Caesar” continues through Nov. 9 at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn.




NYT > Arts



Maximum Shakespeare: In Performance: Frances Barber

Thursday, October 17, 2013

France"s "Front National" Fights Jewish Hegemony

 

October 17, 2013



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(Left. FNP Supporters. France is one of the few Western countries to have a strong nationalist party.)


Pierre Laporte is a patriotic young Frenchman. We asked him to report on the Front National Party, which recently made gains in local elections. He believes the PFN represents French resistance to domination by Organized Jewry and Freemasonry


whose policies are satanic in character.


by Pierre Laporte


(henrymakow.com)


France is ruled by Freemasonry and Organized Jewry. One is designed to serve the other. The will of French citizens, their vote, the survival of their history, their heritage, their culture and ancestral religion (Catholicism), does not matter to this clique.


Their aim is to destroy every root, every memory, every link to the past, every vestige of religious meaning, and above all, any shred of patriotism left in the heart of the French people. That’s why they always emphasize the dark side of French history and ask the French people to genuflect in front of Jewry and the holocaust.


The aim of Organized Jewry is not to exert a benevolent and impartial power for the benefit of mankind and its general well-being. Its aim is to replace God, and to be worshiped the same way.


For century, France was the bastion of Christianity and stands in the the way of the Jewish globalist agenda. They do not want any nation left standing that could challenge their domination. Organized Jewry’s thirst for power, greed for money, ignorance of moral and religious ideals all are behind our present culture of death and destruction.


“PROGRESS AND CHANGE”


In France, behind every call for “progress” and “social change,” you always find a Jew.


The removal of death penalty was initiated by the Jewish lawyer Robert Badinter. The abortion law was perpetrated by Jewess Simone Veil. The “anti-racist” groups were all set up by Jews. (SOS Racisme was created by the Jew Julien Dray and the Jew Harlem Désir; all chairmen have been Jews since then, up to today with the Jewess Cindy Léoni).


As in every country they settled, French Jewry has created many groups to exert pressure on the host people to disarm legitimate resistance to their Luciferian agenda.


The survival of French people as autonomous entity doesn’t matter to them, because they simply don’t regard themselves as any part of it. Their sole allegiance goes to their tribal entity, Freemasonry, and for some, Israel, but not to France and its people.



JUDEO MASONIC CONTROL



jmlp.jpgHence, they made of the Front National and [its founder] Jean-Marie Le Pen (left) their number one enemy. He  refused to bow in front of the Jewish power. Therefore,  he had to face this occult power that control everything and hold  the destiny of France and of its people in its hand, just as they control the fate of the American people (leading them to bankruptcy)…


History is stubborn; that’s why they are suppressing the young generation. (Jewish Freemason Minister for Education Peillon removed Louis XIV, Napoleon, and François 1er from school books last year…).


Only the colours of events appear to change, but in fact the meaning of history remains the same.


But let’s make one thing very clear. We are obviously not talking about individuals here. We are talking of Jewish Money Power and all its proxies, mainly Freemasonry (B’nai Brith, Bilderberg, Skulls and Bones, CFR, Trilateral Commission, etc.) We are talking about a centuries-long agenda of subversion that is now close to fruition.


The two most important Jewish populations – outside of Israel – are to be found in France and in the U.S. That alone explains the recent policy of war carried out by the French government.


Hollande1.jpgThe current President of France is the Marrano Crypto-Jew Hollande (left)


The current minister for Foreign Affair is the Jew Fabius


The current minister for Education is the Jew Peillon


The current minister for Economy is the Jew Moscovici


Obviously they are all Freemasons…


I could draw the same list about people on the media (press, TV, etc) university and so on. French people are getting more and more aware of it. But  they cannot yet understand how Jews can be so evil toward them when they hold the best positions in most sectors of economy (particularly in media, culture and of course banking). They enjoy much higher status than the average French citizen. But it’s surely not enough for them…


Jean-Marie Le Pen was told by a high ranking B’nai Brith member that they feared that their “thought control” will fail to prevent him from being elected in 2002; and thus for years, the Front National was the main subject of concern of organized Jewry. That is the reason behind the media campaign of slander on the party and its President.

The “Republican Front” (Front Républicain) was put in place by the other opponent parties (Socialist and UMP) during an assembly of B’nai Brith (Masonry exclusively for Jews). It was an agreement among political parties to combine their vote whenever they were facing a Front National member during an election… (That’s the democratic ethic of the political elite in France, to bypass the vote of citizen in order to maintain their grip on all position of power…)


This is how the Socialist party and the Leftists ensured their election.



Part Two – Tomorrow





Visit Neobiotica.com








henrymakow.com



France"s "Front National" Fights Jewish Hegemony

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Analysis: France"s Hollande in tight spot on pension reform


French President Francois Hollande delivers a speech during a ceremony to mark the 130th anniversary of the Alliance Francaise, the institution which promotes French language and Francophone culture abroad, at the Elysee Palace in Paris, July 16, 2013. REUTERS/Ian Langsdon/Pool

French President Francois Hollande delivers a speech during a ceremony to mark the 130th anniversary of the Alliance Francaise, the institution which promotes French language and Francophone culture abroad, at the Elysee Palace in Paris, July 16, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Ian Langsdon/Pool






PARIS | Sun Jul 21, 2013 5:27am EDT



PARIS (Reuters) – President Francois Hollande may only manage a lightweight reform of France’s indebted pension system, with trade unions preparing street protests and his own Socialist Party warning it would oppose painful measures.


Fellow Europeans say France risks damaging its own standing and that of the euro zone among investors, and upsetting southern members struggling with harsh reforms, if it fails to address the deficit in its pension funding.


But left-wing lawmakers are determined to prevent any erosion in the old-age provision enjoyed by the French.


Hollande, who has already excluded any outright rise in the retirement age from the bill due before parliament in September, faces resistance to his more modest plan of extending the 41.5-year contribution payment period required for a full pension.


Aside from the risk of protests and strikes hitting Europe’s second-largest economy, Hollande’s room for maneuver is further crimped by the fact that even a tiny revolt among back-benchers would scupper his three-seat parliamentary majority.


“It will be an intermediate reform: one that is just enough to appease markets but not brutal enough to upset things at home,” said economist Henri Sterdyniak of France’s OFCE economic observatory.


Contrary to common international perceptions that the French enjoy cosy retirements, the average pension is only 60 percent of working-age post-tax income versus the 69 percent average for industrialized countries.


Yet the fact that pensions are almost entirely borne by the state means public spending on pensions is 14.4 percent of output versus 12.9 percent in the EU.


The pension pot has been depleted by rising unemployment and without reform, the funding gap will balloon from 14 billion euros ($ 18.40 billion) currently to 20 billion euros by 2020.


Hollande said on Thursday he was determined to achieve a reform sturdy enough not to require further tweaking before 2020, yet he was well aware of the dangers of forcing through more than unions and left-wing voters will swallow.


“We have to be very careful, but at the same time, we need to reform,” he told reporters over dinner at the Elysee Palace.


All past efforts at pension reform – including a modest 2010 revamp under conservative Nicolas Sarkozy aimed at tiding the system over to 2020 – have encountered weeks of demonstrations and costly industrial strikes.


Yet while France’s highly liquid bond market has held up well since it lost its last major AAA credit rating on July 12, analysts say foot-dragging on pension reform could see Hollande punished with higher borrowing costs.


“A lot more than the deficit of the pay-as-you-go system by 2020 is at stake,” said Deutsche Bank economist Gilles Moec.


“The pension debate could anchor Hollande in investors’ perceptions as a reformer, ready to take large political risks,” he said. “Any watered-down reform could fuel an already pervasive sense that ‘France doesn’t get it’.”


DOUBLE STANDARDS?


Hollande has no intention of touching the retirement age that Sarkozy raised to 62 from 60, having fulfilled a campaign promise to roll it back for those who started work early.


He believes a fairer way of making people work longer is to accelerate a process already under way to lift the mandatory pension contribution period to 41.5 years between now and 2020.


A government-commissioned panel has advised acting soon to extend that period to up to 44 years, while proposing other measures such as making well-off pensioners pay more tax.


While Hollande favors those options, his Socialist Party has stated its opposition to any speeding up of the extension of the contribution period before 2020. It has also come out against trimming annual pension increases to below inflation, another option under consideration.


Some observers see the party’s line more as political posturing than heralding a revolt by its parliament deputies. But it risks raising the alarm in Brussels, where the EU wants France to deliver a substantial reform in return for giving it two extra years to bring its overall budget deficit into line.


“It sends the completely wrong message if a leading EU nation cannot meet agreed reform targets,” said a senior euro zone diplomat. “A lot of very painful measures have been taken in southern Europe and there shouldn’t be double standards. The euro zone’s standing depends on these difficult decisions.”


Hollande has hinted he will spare the public sector from any major changes, avoiding the wrath of 5.3 million employees whose pensions are based on their last six months’ pay – typically the highest in their career – as opposed to the private sector which uses a formula based on a worker’s best earnings over 25 years.


Instead his plan to extend the contributions period and to strip tax exemptions from the wealthiest pensioners aims to spread the pain across the whole population. Government sources deny he will water down his plans.


“He has taken risks with reforms to labor laws and family benefits and he’ll do the same with pensions,” said one adviser.


“He doesn’t want to have to start over every two years.”


Frustratingly for the reformers in Hollande’s team, opinion polls suggest a majority of voters would back a bolder reform than his own Socialist Party.


A June survey by BVA found 75 percent of respondents want public sector pensions brought more in line with private-sector ones. In a May Ipsos survey, 66 percent wanted the pay-in period lengthened beyond 41.5 years and 61 percent wanted the legal retirement age raised.


Still, Hollande, with his approval ratings mired below 30 percent, is loath to run the slightest risk of big protests so close to municipal elections in March where the far right is set to make gains due to gloom over rampant unemployment.


Already, the hardline FO and CGT unions have called for demonstrations against the pension reform on September 10.


While they may be moving out of touch with overall public sentiment, the unions have enough clout to draw hundreds of thousands onto the street, playing on overall disillusionment with Hollande that boosted anti-gay marriage protests.


Socialist Party politicians say they don’t want to derail Hollande’s reform, but they do want to have a say in it.


“We’re not putting sticks in the government’s wheels, we’re putting boundaries around them,” said Socialist lawmaker Marie-Noelle Lienemann, part of the party’s left wing. ($ 1 = 0.7611 euros)


(Additional reporting by Robin Emmott in Brussels and Elizabeth Pineau in Paris; editing by Philippa Fletcher)





Reuters: Top News



Analysis: France"s Hollande in tight spot on pension reform

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Opening Sprint on Corsica Culminates in Chaotic Finish In Tour de France’s First Stage


BASTIA, France — The Tour de France’s first visit to Corsica started uneventfully Saturday, as riders rode calmly out of a picture-perfect harbor town under sunny skies.


But as the peloton arrived in Bastia nearly five hours later, the race became unglued: a team bus stuck at the finish line threatened the opening stage’s conclusion, then a massive crash involving contenders like Alberto Contador spoiled a much-anticipated sprint finish.


Out of the chaos, an up-and-coming sprinter named Marcel Kittel of Germany became the surprise winner of Stage 1.


Most expected the final yards of the 132-mile to feature the first of many battles in this Tour between Peter Sagan of Cannondale, last year’s green jersey winner as the best sprinter, and Mark Cavendish of Omega Pharma-Quick Step.


But they and André Greipel of Lotto-Belisol were caught up in a crash about two and a half miles from the finish, leaving Kittel, 25, and his Argos-Shimano teammates to take control.


“It’s unbelievable,” he said. “I feel like I have gold on my shoulders.”


He might have had Teflon on them during the stage. The crash that caught his sprint rivals also took down a number of general classification contenders, including Tejay van Garderen and Contador.


Contador and his SaxoBank team were seen soft-pedaling to the finish and French television reported that he might have broken his collarbone.


“I feel O.K., but we’ll see,” Contador said. “The Tour is the Tour. You never know what’s going to happen.”


Others were not as fortunate. Tony Martin, Cavendish’s teammate, was said to have a broken shoulder and was seen being taken off his team bus by a stretcher after the stage.


The Tour’s adventure in Corsica continues Sunday with a 96.9-mile stage from Bastia to Ajaccio.




NYT > Global Home



Opening Sprint on Corsica Culminates in Chaotic Finish In Tour de France’s First Stage