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Conservative Sarkozy Wins Presidency of France

Reader reporter tips us to a story just up at the NYTimes reporting that the tough-talking conservative candidate Nicolas Sarkozy has won election as the president of France. His opponent, Socialist Party candidate Ségolène Royal, the first woman to get as far as the runoff in a presidential contest in France, has conceded defeat. The vote went 53% to Sarkozy and the turnout was a remarkable (by American standards) 85% of registered voters. Sarkozy is seen as a divisive figure for his demand that immigrants learn Western values (and the French language).

68 of 962 comments (clear)

  1. Obl. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Not everyone lives in the USA, you insensitive-- Oh! Nevermind...

    1. Re:Obl. by AchiIIe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, speaking of the USA, how does "conservative french" relate to "conservative american". Is 'their right' our left? It appears conservatives there are pro-american, whereas conservatives here are anti-french (freedom fries?)

      --
      Nature journal lied in Britannica vs Wikipedia Ask to retrac
    2. Re:Obl. by WarwickRyan · · Score: 4, Informative

      European conservatives generally cut taxes and also government spending compared to the left-sided parties. They also tend to look after business over their own citizens (though I fear that's a cross party issue).

    3. Re:Obl. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      In terms of current political leaders, Sarkozy is most often compared to Tony Blair. Blair in turn modelled himself on Bill Clinton, so I think it's fair to say that the French right is roughly equivalent to the American left. This ignores the complication of Blair's cosying up to Bush, but that is really restricted to foreign policy.

      Sarkozy is also undoubtedly the most pro-American French president ever. One of the opposition's favourite nicknames for him is "Sarkozy the American" (a deadly insult, of course!)

    4. Re:Obl. by vidarh · · Score: 5, Informative

      In large parts of Europe, the Democrats are considered right wing, and the Republicans are considered far right wing comic relief, though the political parties on the left wing in Europe generally support the Democrats as the lesser of two evils, and the conservative parties tend to support the more moderate parts of the Republican party.

    5. Re:Obl. by FlopEJoe · · Score: 4, Funny

      Naw... it's metric in'it? Something like 30 centi-taxcuts is an American foot stem cell or something.

    6. Re:Obl. by mehgul · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually, he's really more like Bush, but tries to cater to workers at the same time. And "Sarkozy l'Americain" wasn't such a deadly insult, it appears, since more than 53% of the French voted for him.

    7. Re:Obl. by notamisfit · · Score: 5, Funny

      Come on, they're complete and total opposites! One supports the welfare state of Marx, and the other supports the welfare state of Jesus.

      --
      Jesus is coming -- look busy!
    8. Re:Obl. by Shihar · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It should be pointed out that Europe's far right and America's 'normal' right really only vaguely relate. European far right parties would generally be considered extremely xenophobic by the American right. European far right parties almost always revolve around anti-immigration positions. The American right does hold sometimes hold some limited anti-immigration views, but they are rarely front and center, and they are absolutely nowhere near the extreme of their European counterparts. Comparing the American right to any European political parties is generally a mistake. While the American left has some fairly close European counterparts, the American right is fairly unique in the world.

    9. Re:Obl. by boule75 · · Score: 5, Informative

      In France, we have conservative politicians who somewhat favor business and increase the public debt.

      The aim of Sarkozy is different :
      - increasing debt a lot (both public and private)!
      - by favoring the rich people and the big corp.

      I had hoped that Slashdot would have definitely forgotten France. Instead of that, this -probably real bad- news is on the first page, one of so few first-page news about France in a year. (sigh).

      What is he talking about:
      - suppressing inheritance taxes
      - easing private borowing of money (i.e. increasing bank profits for short time benefits and lifetime interests for poor people)
      - "an ownership society"
      - he is glorifying the "France of the Crusades". (discourse in besançon, March 13th 2007)
      - "le travail rend libre" (one of the offical videos, first sentence)
      - he thought some months ago that "France had been arrogant in 2003" while attempting to stop the Iraq war.
      - if he survives two more weeks, he will realise his public lifelong dream: becoming president in place of The President.
      - he is a lawyer with a speciality: fiscality. I have not written tax evasion even if you read that.

      I love him! I am sure you won't.

      --
      I am not Remy Mouton, unfortunately: http://remy.mouton.free.fr/art/
    10. Re:Obl. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      I don't know about France, but here in Germany the equivalent to the Republicans is also called Republicans.

      For the benefit of Americans unfamiliar with German politics, this is a dig at the US Republicans, since Die Republikaner are generally considered a crypto-neo-nazi party and enjoy very little electoral support. The major conservative party in Germany are the Christian Democrats (CDU).

    11. Re:Obl. by ChameleonDave · · Score: 5, Informative

      - "le travail rend libre" (one of the offical videos, first sentence)
      For those who don't know French, le travail rend libre means the same as Arbeit macht frei, the motto of the Auschwitz concentration camp — i.e. "Work makes one free". It seems that Sarkozy is practising dog-whistle politics.
    12. Re:Obl. by aled · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In Spain, the left parties think of democrats as a rigth party. Republicans are considered ultra-right.


      In almost any country other than the USA, almost everyone think of democrats as a right party. Republicans are considered ultra-right.
      --

      "I think this line is mostly filler"
    13. Re:Obl. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You forgot to mention that he is also pro-software-patents. That should tell you something about his personality traits.

      This guy is dangerous not because of his ideas in but that he can actually make those ideas real. He is efficient. He is smart. I'm scared for France future after last night.

    14. Re:Obl. by jcr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Your question is fully biased and I am pleased to blow it.

      Yep, you sure blew it all right. Your answer shows that you have no respect for human rights.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    15. Re:Obl. by yog · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ... - considering that most people who currently pay this tax can afford it very well, - considering that most heirs do not deserve their good fate, and that many of them have already received a very significant heritage under the guise of privileged conditions at the beginning of their life (address book, healthy food and home, education, free housing, cars, etc... during 50 years...) - considering that I just paid some inheritance fees, mind you, and that Mr. Sarkozy will waste them in gifts to his really wealthy pals who escape most taxes thanks to numerous and cunningly designed-for-them fiscal holes, - I am all _against_ any suppression of the inheritance tax. The sole question as for me relates to enterprises being sold for cheap because the owner has died and the heirs cannot afford to pay the related taxes. Most of the time, it has not been properly prepared, but this should be addressed... This doesn't really address the pros and cons of inheritance tax. You're against suppressing this tax (which I guess in American means "reducing" the tax), and you gladly pay it because you feel it is for the betterment of society.

      This is an idealistic attitude, but the unfortunate side effect is that a business owner cannot pass his or her business on to designated heirs without their paying a crippling penalty. This affects small family run businesses like retail stores, and is a major reason why so few survive after the owner's death. It's hard enough to make a living in a small retail business without all the confiscatory taxes and fees sucking every available penny out of the budget, but then to have to have it all taken away on one's deathbed is the final blow.

      On a philosophical note, one is also presupposing that the State has the right to confiscate someone's wealth at time of death, a right which is highly debatable. If you believe, as many on the Left would, that wealth is an evil thing that is usually obtained through dishonest means, then inheritance tax is merely justice. If you believe, as most on the Right would, that wealth is the fruits of one's labor (or one's ancestors' labor) and one's heirs have a duty to maintain and grow that wealth, then inheritance tax is merely another form of confiscation.

      --
      it's = "it is"; its = possessive. E.g., it's flapping its wings.
    16. Re:Obl. by MaxInBxl · · Score: 3, Informative

      The sole question as for me relates to enterprises being sold for cheap because the owner has died and the heirs cannot afford to pay the related taxes. Most of the time, it has not been properly prepared, but this should be addressed...


      Interesting example, one that I fully agree with. I'm guessing by your username and post that you're French (and living in Paris). Here's another example that you may have heard of and that you might agree with. What happens when you inherit the house that's been in the familiy for generations.. But that house is, say, on the Ile de Ré where property prices has sky-rocketed? The state will no doubt attribute to the house a market price well over what the inheritant could pay (again, htis is an example), and the inheritant could find themselves in the situation where they must sell the house to be able to pay the inheritance fee induced by the house. Does that sounds sane to you?

      If you read the French papers you must know that this type of situation is not unheard-of at all.
    17. Re:Obl. by kdemetter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      you mean it has been abused as a motto . That doesn't make a statement about joy for working a nazi statement . True , his opponents will probably use it against him . but that's just the ill nature of politics .

  2. Are you sure ... by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ... that Royal didn't just surrender the election?

    In all seriousness, Royal deserved to lose after she tried her "if you vote for Sarkozy there will be violence in the streets" rhetoric. That kind of crap just won't ever work ... will it?

    1. Re:Are you sure ... by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yeah, that would be as silly as "if you vote for the Democrats, the terrorists win!" rhetoric. It would never convince the savvy masses.

    2. Re:Are you sure ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And it didn't. All the Democrat's other failings in 2000/04 did that just fine.

    3. Re:Are you sure ... by rachit · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "savvy masses"?

    4. Re:Are you sure ... by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So if we leave Iraq, do the terrorists win or lose?

      There are no ties in warfare.


      Of course the terrorists win. That's what you get for agreeing to play a game whose conditions for victory are so horribly skewed in the other guy's favor. We've got to wipe out every single one of them. They just have to wait and shoot into the air every once in a while so everyone knows they didn't forfeit. So of course we're not going to win. We should have tried a lot harder to get them to play a different game.

    5. Re:Are you sure ... by Eivind · · Score: 5, Informative
      Because, in France it's not allowed to publish voter-polls on election day before all polling-places are closed. Which happens at 8 pm.

      In reality, everyone knew since these polls where in, early in the morning, that she'd lose, it's just, they all sorta pretend not to know until it's "official". You see, french law has little influence abroad, so anyone with an internet-connection has been able to read these polls all day. Only in French media are they disallowed.

      So, each and every journalist covering the election, and every politician aswell, knew the result (aproximately, but good enough since it wasn't a close race anyway) hours earlier.

      In this setting it makes perfect sense to admit defeat at 20:01. It'd have been disrespectful of the law and the voters to do so any earlier, and pointless to wait much longer when the numbers where as obvious as they where.

    6. Re:Are you sure ... by furball · · Score: 4, Insightful

      By plunder you mean let the first oil contracts go to China and Vietnam right?

      http://money.cnn.com/2007/04/05/news/international /iraq_oil/index.htm

    7. Re:Are you sure ... by Original+Replica · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Actually, the conditions aren't so skewed in the terrorist's favor, we are just fighting the wrong war. We can't handily win a war of bullets and lives against them, because they are willing to lose far more than we are. The war we should be fighting is in changing the values and culture of Iraq and Afganistan. Feed them the line about "the pen is mightier than the sword" and hope they buy it. I'll take angry letters and protest signs over bombings and kidnappings any day. They won't blow up LA if they are too busy watching American Idol. This is where I find myself agreeing with Sarkozy and his call for immigrants to "learn the French language and Values". This war is a war of cultures, it's not about countries and borders, it's about which set of values will endure. And multiculturalism doesn't work, unless you want to surrender all other values to it. Take Germanys conflict with multiculturalism vs. Women's Rights.

      "The crux case centres on a woman called Nishal, a 26-year-old Moroccan immigrant to Germany with two kids and a psychotic husband. Since their wedding night, this husband beat the hell out of her. She crawled to the police covered in wounds, and they ordered the husband to stay away from her. He refused. He terrorised her with death threats. So Nishal went to the courts to request an early divorce, hoping that once they were no longer married he would leave her alone. A judge who believed in the rights of women would find it very easy to make a judgement: you're free from this man, case dismissed. But Judge Christa Datz-Winter followed the logic of multiculturalism instead. She said she would not grant an early divorce because - despite the police documentation of extreme violence and continued threats - there was no "unreasonable hardship" here. Why? Because the woman, as a Muslim, should have "expected" it, the judge explained. She read out passages from the Koran to show that Muslim husbands have the "right to use corporal punishment". Look at Sura 4, verse 34, she said to Nishal, where the Koran says he can hammer you. That's your culture. Goodbye, and enjoy your beatings. This is not a freakish exception. Germany's only state-level Minister for Integration, Armin Laschet, says this is only "the last link, for the time being, in a chain of horrific rulings handed down by the German courts".
      http://comment.independent.co.uk/columnists_a_l/jo hann_hari/article2496657.ece

      Trying to preserve the French culture isn't necessarily xenophobic. A significant part of what makes a country a good or bad place to live is it's culture.(yes, language is part of a culture) For example both Saudi Arabia and the USA are wealthy countries, but ask your wife or girlfriend which one she would rather live in. There is a difference between
      --
      We are all just people.
    8. Re:Are you sure ... by ghoul · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Sure your wife or girlfriend wants to live in the US but as a man where would You want to live? In a nation where if a girl gets pregnant she has the right to have an abortion even if the man wants the baby but on the other hand if the man doesnt want the baby the woman can go ahead and still have the baby and have to pay child support for the upkeep of the baby which is used by the mom to enjoy a life of leisure and boyfriend hopping while you work your butt off to pay Child Support. Even assets like Retirment saving and health insurance accounts which are protected even in a bankruptcy are not safe from Child Services. This is also a nation where even if the mother has been cheating in a divorce she still gets custody of the child. Further even if she denies the father child visitation rights the father still has to pay child support. Further when the mothers tricks make the man go crazy (after all he is also working a 9 to 5 job unlike the mother who is sitting at home all day on his money and plotting new ways to use his children against him) and he shouts into a phone it becomes a national scandal that a man shouted into a phone raher than a woman used children as a weapon against their father. You may criticize Saudi for being hard on their woman but USA is equally bad in the other direction. So to rephrase your question where would your husband/ biyfriend like to live USA or Saudi?

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    9. Re:Are you sure ... by FrenchNeal · · Score: 3, Informative

      Some violence began just after election: (Yahoo's Article). (All the links will target French content, use translators, or learn french)
      Here are the links to see major points of his program :
      First, his ideas on genetics : Suicide, pedophilia and homosexuality are genetic, if one of your parent is pedophile, you are a criminal too.
      Sources :
      http://www.liberation.fr/actualite/politiques/2467 52.FR.php/ ,
      http://www.lemonde.fr/web/article/0,1-0@2-823448,3 6-892092,0.html?xtor=RSS-3208/,
      http://fr.news.yahoo.com/09042007/202/genes-les-pr opos-de-sarkozy-pas-scientifiquement-fondes-pour-l es.html/,
      http://www.france.qrd.org/actualites/article.php3? id_article=2976/.
      On civil liberties, the Human Rights League has announced that democracy is in great danger with Sarkozy :
      http://fr.news.yahoo.com/26042007/202/la-ligue-des -droits-de-l-homme-attaque-le-bilan.html/
      Since 2 years now (Sarkozy was in the Government), since you are seven year old, the police can take your DNA if you are caught in a fight (even in the school yard) or any reprehensible act. Exemple of new criminal act : be more than 3 people in front of a building (that was to prevent suburbs criminality)!.
      Sarkozy wanted a law to drug to calm restless children, since they are 3 years old. There was too much opposition at the time and the law was temporarily abandoned, but in an interview he said his delinquency prevention laws will be activated if he becomes president (http://www.senat.fr/leg/pjl05-433.html/).
      Wish us good luck, no more civil or human rights in France.

    10. Re:Are you sure ... by Opportunist · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, are you sure it ain't that way?

      Both sides draw their power from the fight against each other. If the US stopped attacking Al Quaida, they'd have to stage another terror attack to "remind" the US that they got it in their contract to keep fighting, dammit.

      And since such an attack costs, money, resources and people, Bin Laden (or whoever happens to be the head honcho now) is actually quite a bit better off when the fight continues without too much activity from his side. The US continue to "liberate" countries, the people get angry at the US and they don't even have to do anything for it 'cause it perpetuates itself.

      Now imagine the Dems win and end that war. Do you think it's easy to steal two planes? That's some hard work, man!

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  3. Neufs pour les Nerdes! by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4, Funny

    Thank all the gods, the Frentch elected a radical instead of a radical.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  4. Sarkozy on free software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
  5. Too bad by i_should_be_working · · Score: 5, Interesting

    He was the only candidate who doesn't support, or even have a clear stance on free software.

    Not that that's the most important quality in a president, but it would have been nice.

  6. And now by El+Lobo · · Score: 4, Funny
    2 hours later, he need to deal with the first big riot.

    http://www.aftonbladet.se/vss/nyheter/story/0,2789 ,1062291,00.html(in swedish)

    --
    It's time to realise that Abble's products are the biggest abomination these days. Just say NO to the dumb iAbble way!!
  7. One word by pieterh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thatcher.

  8. Re:And one of the first statements he made: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The issue was not the popularity of their respective genders, but of policy - that's why she lost.

  9. French bashing? by i_want_you_to_throw_ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not entirely sure why the France bashing continues. Frankly it appeared that they were right regarding Iraq. France is certainly one of the greatest allies this country has had, in fact we wouldn't be this large had Napolean not sold us the Louisiana Purchase to pay for his war with England. If anything we owe them quite a bit and their only crime is that they are just as patriotic to their country as we are to ours.

    Now with that being said, do you know why there are trees on the Champs D'Elysees? So the Germans can march in the shade!

    1. Re:French bashing? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They helped finance the Revolution ... without France the United States would have been stillborn. They gave us the Statue of Liberty in recognition of the friendship and mutual respect between the two nations. Remember when Jane Fonda commented to Johnny Carson, "What did the French ever do for us?" That earned her Carson's famous wide-eyed "what the fuck?" look.

      Of course, people would have to have some awareness of history to know any of this. There's a reason why we teach history in schools. It has numerous benefits: among other things, it helps you to remember who your friends are.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:French bashing? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ... and I suppose that the Spanish obtained control of Louisiana from its original occupants fair and square.

    3. Re:French bashing? by MrSteveSD · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not entirely sure why the France bashing continues.

      Well it was encouraged from the highest levels of Government. First of all you had Rumsfeld etc al, dismissing France as "old Europe". This was effectively an ad-hominem attack. Rather than dealing with the important issues it raised, France was effectively the subject of name calling. Then you had the "Freedom Fries" escapade in the House Of Representatives where all the menus were changed. France was then routinely accused of anti-Americanism in the media. All of this kept peoples attention away from Frances actual objections to military action, amongst which were that it did not believe there was an imminent danger from WMDs, that invading Iraq had nothing to do with fighting terrorism and that a war would destabilize the Middle East.

      The whole racist tirade against France in the US was/is interesting, especially at a time when there is so much discussion about anti-Americanism. Renaming French Fries to freedom fries is definitely anti-French, but is criticising US actions in Iraq or other foreign policy issues, Anti-American? I think not. It seems to me that currently the concept of anti-Americanism is being used as propaganda. Americans are being encouraged to feel that they themselves are being targeted in some racist way, when it is in fact government policy that is being criticised. The result of this is that people are more likely to rally behind their government when confronted with such criticism. The Russian government uses the same trick when it's policies are criticised. The Russian people are deliberately made to feel that everyone is against them.

      When you are angry with a country because of specific military or political issues, you should address those specific issues and argue your case. It's all to easy to be dragged into name calling by government and the media.
    4. Re:French bashing? by bgarcia · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Do you know how many people the USSR lost? 27 million. By the time we invaded Normandy, Germany was already collapsing. Do you know why we waited as long as we did? Tit-for-tat revenge: Lenin pulled the newly formed Soviet Union out of WWI as soon as he took power in 1917, leaving us and our allies high and dry. We didn't need to wait as long as we did; Stalin was begging us for reinforcements, and we could have invaded at any time, but we stood our ground, as a kind of "fuck you" to the Russians, who were hemorrhaging soldiers.
      I think you forgot to mention one teensy-weensy little fact about WWII - that Stalin and the USSR entered WWII on the side of the Germans! The two countries signed a pact to split up Eastern Europe between the two, and the USSR went ahead and invaded several Eastern European countries. The USSR was originally allied with the Axis powers, not the Allied powers.


      So later in the war, Germany decides to double-cross the USSR and invades Russia. You've already heard rhetoric from Stalin that the USSR has its own global-domination plans, and they've already invaded several Eastern European countries. Now, would you be so quick to come to Stalin's aid, or would you rather allow the two evil countries to duke it out and weaken each other for a while first, so that the victor doesn't have the military might to come after you next?

      --
      I'm a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar.
  10. Re: Can we be next? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When Sarkozy is done with France do you think he could come over here for a few years? I like his ideas on immigrants, it would be nice if our "President" had the balls! A hard line on immigrants won't happen in the USA. The Democrats wouldn't think it's nice, and the Republicans are split between the social conservatives who want it and the monied folk who don't think it's in their best interest.

    The election year attempt to push immigration reform through the Republican Congress was one of several factors leading to that party's recent implosion.
    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  11. Good for the economy, at least by powerpants · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This will be a good thing for France's economy, which has been sluggish in recent years due to the country's labor policies. It is illegal in France to work more than 35 hours a week, which makes it difficult to successfully start a small business. Royal offered a comforting promise that France could keep their old ways in place and still be economically competitive, but France has apparently opted for a tougher kind of love.

    Furthermore, just because he's "conservative" by French standards, don't think that means he'd belong to the GOP.

    1. Re:Good for the economy, at least by mehgul · · Score: 4, Informative

      Come on, that's a fallacy. Not only is the 35h-week not implemented in small businesses, but white collars work in majority more than 50 hours, often 60 a week, due to peer and hierarchy pressure, and a stupid culture of thinking that it's the hours spent on your desk that count. And in contrast with our big neighbour Germany, or Scandinavian countries (Denmark has a 37h-week that is quite respected even for white collars), french white collars do not get paid for overtime.

  12. Sarkozy, interesting name... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 4, Insightful
    His father was a hungarian immigrant, so that's where his name comes from.

    Sarkozy is seen as a divisive figure for his demand that immigrants learn Western values (and the French language).
    I don't see anything wrong with this. If you don't like it, you should have immigrated into a different country.
    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
  13. Pro-software patent, DMCA and voting machines by guerby · · Score: 5, Informative

    Most important for slashdot readers: Nicolas Sarkozy is a lawyer and has a very strong pro-software patent stance and was behind the hardline DADVSI copyright law (our local DMCA). He was also behind the introduction of voting machines without paper trail requirements, and of the "secret" report about their validity (no citizen could get the report.

    More in the PDF with his answers to the "candidats.fr" initiative here

    Hard time for free software in France. There are still the parliament election next month, but last time french voters put the majority behind the president.

  14. Where multicultural tolerance is bad. by twitter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sarkozy is seen as a divisive figure for his demand that immigrants learn Western values (and the French language).

    Some of that is good. There has been some very bad "multiculturalism" case law in the EU recently, where women have been beaten and abused but that was OK because it was supposedly "their" culture and the host country should not interfere. This makes a mockery of the foreign culture as well as allowing injustice. It is right for France, and every other country, to demand respect and offer protection for all of their citizens. Injustice and brutality should not be tolerated anywhere. Doing so in the name of "in my country we put woman in cage" is racism in disguise.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  15. Re:And one of the first statements he made: by Eivind · · Score: 3, Insightful
    There's no indication whatsoever that sex was important, or even relevant, in this election.

    Unlike the two major parties in the US, the various parties in France actually have significantly different political ideas, like you said there's even an active communist party.

  16. How do you say... by HangingChad · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sarkozy is seen as a divisive figure for his demand that immigrants learn Western values (and the French language).

    How do you say 'Thank you, Diebold' in French?

    Seriously, though, if I'm going to move to France I'm at least going to try and learn French. And I don't think it's unreasonable to suggest that if you want to come and work in America, you might pick up a little English first.

    Perhaps making it a demand is what makes it unreasonable? I'm not sure. It doesn't seem like it should be that divisive. To me it would be reasonable to expect that those wishing to immigrate would reflect the values and language of their adopted country.

    If I moved to Canada I'd say "a-boot" instead of about. It's just polite.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:How do you say... by identity0 · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'm a linguistics student who has studied the politics of language policy so I should put my word in...

      Most immigrants do learn the language of the country they move to, if only because of the oppurtunities it opens up for them. However, they will usually keep their home language, and use it among members of their own community. Unfortunately, the natives often get offended or upset when they see immigrants using their language amongst themselves, or see businesses using another language. It mostly has to do with issues of pride and fear of otherness. When natives say "they need to speak our language", they often really mean "stop speaking the other language". It's often just an excuse to keep immigrant communities marginalized.

      From a practical perspective, if a group of immigrants are able to make a living using their own language, I see no need to make them stop.

      France has certain issues with language that the U.S. does not, such as having French as an official language and not defining themselves as an immigrant nation. Also, although they are officially racially neutral, their culture and government are really white-controlled, more so than the U.S..

  17. Free Software by Nymz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    He was the only candidate who doesn't support, or even have a clear stance on free software.
    Not that that's the most important quality in a president, but it would have been nice.

    As a fellow Slashdotter, I also care about technology issues. But at the same time realize they will have to take a back seat while there are active special intrest groups that believe the end (one world Muslim, or one world Communism) justifies the means (violence).
  18. It's called a democracy by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just because the person you disagree with wins doesn't mean that the system is broken. I don't recall hearing a single complaint about the French electoral system. Maybe the conservative's ideas actually appealed to more voters.

    Cheers,
    Dave

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
    Ben
  19. Re:Tant mieux pour la France! by anti-pop-frustration · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Think of Royal as George W. Bush being a socialist woman. Damn scary.
    Actually, if someone has to be compared to George W. Bush it really is Nicolas Sarkozy. France is now as polarized as the US was after the Bush 2004 victory.

    Many liberals in France were not conviced by Segolene Royal at all, just like many liberals in the US weren't conviced by John Kerry. They did not vote for a candidate but against someone else. The "lesser of two evil" syndrome that is so familiar in US politics.

    Sarkozy won, but just like George W. Bush in 2004, the people that did not vote for him (half of the population) really hate him and what he stands for (pro big corporation, anti-immigration etc.).

    He now is president of a deeply divided country... we all saw how well that worked out for the US.
  20. M$/Corporate Lapdog. by twitter · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the link you gave, he's the worst of the lot:

    Except for Sarkozy, the candidates also agreed that consumers should have the right to buy a computer without any preloaded software, ... Sarkozy was also the only candidate who responded with obvious hostility, remarking when talking about DADVSI that "I am opposed to the orientations implied by your questions."

    He expresses his support for patent law on the grounds that it "encourages enterprises to innovate, it attracts investments, [and] encourages individuals to ... develop new inventions." In addition, Sarkozy supported the concept of intellectual property, and suggested that it was premature to talk about revising DADVSI before the end of 2007, when a review is scheduled. In answer to the question about open standards and free software, he replied that "it is not the purpose of the State, in my concept of freedom, to impose a model on anyone." Other replies were so general as to suggest that he either had not considered the matter or was avoiding stating his position. As Frédéric Couchet, a director of APRIL commented, Sarkozy's "was the worst response received."

    You can read his response yourself, but the above is bad news.

    Not that that's the most important quality in a president, but it would have been nice.

    If standing up for French companies and citizens by supporting their software freedom is not important, I'm not sure what is. Your computer is your press, your store of important information and your telcom all rolled into one. No modern state can live without them and their security and ownership are tantamount to independence. Does he want CIA planted backdoors in his office?

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  21. Re:Tant mieux pour la France! by Jerf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You speak as if the politicians are creating the divisions, rather than being the manifestation of them.

    Countries are divided. That's how it is. If voting one way creates a relatively peaceful union where differences are worked out politely and within the system, and voting the other way creates a fractured country full of acrimony and bad feelings, then one side is clearly a bad loser (and that's more dangerous to democracy than you might think, as the essense of democracy is to have the losers accept their loss, not crown the winners).

    And if that is the case, the side that is being the poor losers and choosing to tear apart the democracy rather than accept loss is the side that, when they win, produces the relatively peaceful government. The side that, when they win, produces "polarization" is the more democratic side. (Being in a Democracy means your side loses sometimes. That's life.)

    Take that as you will. I've deliberately not name names. For one thing, it's never a choice between total chaos or total harmony, but I'd be confident that taken as trends, this point stands.

  22. Why divisive? by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sarkozy is seen as a divisive figure for his demand that immigrants learn Western values (and the French language).
    Why is learning the language and culture of the country you move to viewed as divisive? All of my grandparents came to the U.S. at around 1900 from eastern Europe. None of them expected to be able to continue speaking German or Lithuanian once they got here so they learned English. My parents, aunts and uncles all spoke English and succeeded in taking part in the "American dream" (house, education, kids went to college if they wanted to, etc.). That wouldn't have happened if they were still acting like they were still in the "old country."

    Insisting that immigrants learn the language and culture isn't divisive. It's the best way for them to fit into their new society and succeed. How far would Sarkozy have goten if he only spoke Hungarian?

    Cheers,
    Dave

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
    Ben
  23. Re: Can we be next? by enharmonix · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A hard line on immigrants won't happen in the USA. The Democrats wouldn't think it's nice, and the Republicans are split between the social conservatives who want it and the monied folk who don't think it's in their best interest. Put a bit more cynically: Republicans want cheap labor, Democrats want cheap votes.

    Now I'm depressed...
  24. Sarkozy is a right-winger... by BlackCobra43 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...but not an idiot. Of course he won't help you in Iraq, that's YOUR mess everyone told you to stay out of and now YOU will clean it up or leave with your tail between your legs.

    --
    I never spellcheck and I freely admit it. Save your karma for more worthwhile "lol erorrs" replies
  25. Re:And one of the first statements he made: by Mutatis+Mutandis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    France will always come to the aid of the U.S. when it seeks it from us." Why he's called America's New Poodle.

    Sarkozy has made a point of highlighting the French love for Coca-Cola, jeans and American movies; concluding from this that he would be inclined to support Dubyah's policies is a stone's throw too far. Sarkozy is neither stupid nor inclined to political suicide. He has promised the USA friendship, but immediately made clear that the Americans would have to accept "that friends can think differently". I think Sarkozy knows very well that the Bush administration is allergic to constructive criticism, but that doesn't matter any more. Sarkozy's real problem is finding common ground with the next American president, and he may well opt for backing the future winner early, instead of associating himself with the loser in office. For example, Sarkozy's position on Iraq is not that far distant from the position the next US president is likely to have, i.e. phased withdrawal.

    Something to think about though. You have a country with a female Minister of Defense and an active Communist Party and they won't elect a female? So Hillary's chances rank somewhere below slim and none?

    The French communist party is now a mere shadow of what it used to be.

    Royal's problem is not that she is female, but that she is a poor campaigner. Her starting position was not that bad, her selection as the socialist candidate generated some genuine enthusiasm. But then she blew it. She was gaffe-prone throughout the campaign, her political platform was a collection of crowd-pleasers, her statements on policy consisted mostly of baked air, and in the decisive last phase she resorted to blatant scare tactics.

    On the other hand, Americans could do worse than adopt the French election system. A genuine, fair two-round election, an 85% voter turn-out, a clear majority for the winner, and the election over at election night --- not bad, isn't it?

  26. Re:Can we be next? by be-fan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The immigration problem in France is a world away from the "problems" we have in the US. By and large, our immigrants either end up working hard in the lower runs of society, and many end up leading productive lives in the professional class (doctors, engineers, etc). Many groups in our immigrant population assimilate (most everyone outside of some hispanics) and even the ones that don't do not go out of their way to resist American culture.

    In comparison, the French have to deal with huge waves of lower-class immigrants who clog up their social welfare system. Moreover, not only do they not assimilate, but they actively resist and antagonize the native culture.

    We have our problems with immigrants sure (like most poor classes, they commit more crimes, etc), but there is no way to compare our problems to those faced by the French. When we have Hispanics rioting en masse in the streets, like Muslims in France are doing, then maybe your sentiments will be valid.

    --
    A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  27. Was there ever any doubt? by Anonymous+Meoward · · Score: 4, Funny

    I've heard Mme. Royal speak, and to be honest, I'm amazed she got as far as she did.

    I'm no fan of Sarko or Bush, but come on people, was this really the best the opposition could do? The Socialists would have been better off kidnapping John Kerry.

    He may be a stuffed shirt, but at least the guy knows how to comport himself in public, ferchrissakes. (Besides, I hear he speaks French.) Sego came across as a reactive banshee who would promise anything to get elected -- think of the evil spawn of Newt Gingrich and Hillary Clinton.

    Ew. On second thought, don't. I need to take a shower after that one..

    --
    --- The American Way of Life is not a birthright. Hell, it's not even sustainable.
  28. Re: Can we be next? by AoT · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Lets be honest here, both parties want cheap labor and cheap votes.

    They just have to tailor their rhetoric to the right parts of society.

  29. Re:Tant mieux pour la France! by be-fan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you're a second-generation Muslim with a foreign accent, something is seriously wrong. If you immigrate to a country, you should raise your children to natively speak the language of that country, end of story.

    I am myself a first-generation Muslim immigrant to the US. I absolutely cannot stand Muslims who don't realize that in immigrating to a foreign country, they must put the culture of their new country above the culture of the country which they left. Countries should not change to accommodate the culture of immigrants. That is not to say that countries should not evolve their culture, but rather that the culture of a country should be grown at home, through the established processes of cultural change within that country, not imported wholesale from abroad.

    I can understand that the liberal tendencies of some Europeans make them hesitant about promoting their own culture above those of others. However, there is nothing wrong with the idea that France should be the home of French culture. Certainly, Algerians believe that Algerian should be the home of Algerian culture, not culture imported from elsewhere!

    Moreover, and this is my personal opinionated view, it is vital that European countries maintain their western culture, for the sake of their future prosperity. I don't have any delusions that western culture is perfect, but as someone with a bit of experience with both, western culture is far preferable to modern Islamic culture. It is honestly distressing to me that many liberal-minded individuals that look down upon the worst elements of American culture (religiosity, contempt for science, narrow-mindedness, philosophical absolutism) have no problem modern Islamic culture, which displays many of the same deleterious elements!

    --
    A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  30. Nicolas Sarkozy is not a neoconservative. by reporter · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The election in France will almost prove to be the single most important event in this decade, for this election signals a tidal shift back to asserting that Western values are superior. This tidal shift will be resolutely proved if the French citizens give control of the French National Assembly to pro-Sarkozy politicians in June.

    Note that Sarkozy is not a neoconservative in the American sense. In European culture, he may seem very conservative, but in American culture, he is mostly a moderate populist. He wants to maximize the wealth for the middle class, not the upper class.

    Allow me to elaborate. First, he opposes an open-border policy. Most American neoconservatives favor an open-border policy because they like to use illegal and legal immigration to suppress wages. American agribusiness, not just Hispanic groups like La Raza, are the strongest advocates for allowing the importation of desperate foreign labor.

    Sarkozy supports strong restrictions on immigration but favors treating immigrants kindly. The concept of immigrants working 14+ hours per day is considered to be cruel. He does not favor such brutal working conditions. Note that both parents of Seung Hui Cho, the mass murderer at Virginia Tech, worked 14+ hours per day. Neoconservatives applaud this situation: with glee, they self-servingly "praise" the hardworking nature of the Korean parents are. The consequence is that his parents were just too busy at work to give Seung Hui Cho the proper care that he needed. They never even noticed his rapid mental degeneration.

    Second, Sarkozy supports globalization with only other free markets. So, he supports the European Union. However, he opposes fake free trade with non-free markets like India. He realizes that this kind of trade drives down the quality of life in France. He realizes that combining a free market and a non-free market damages the operation of the free market.

    By contrast, American neoconservatives favor fake free trade with non-free markets like India.

    Nonetheless, Sarkozy will (if the legislative election in June is favorable) will vastly transform France. It will not be the brutal kind (i.e., 14+ hours of work by illegal aliens) of capitalism in America. Rather, France will be a kinder, gentler economic superpower. If he succeeds (and I think that he will), I would likely prefer to live in France instead of America.

  31. Re:Nicolas Sarkozy is not a neoconservative. by pi_rules · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Note that both parents of Seung Hui Cho, the mass murderer at Virginia Tech, worked 14+ hours per day. Neoconservatives applaud this situation: with glee, they self-servingly "praise" the hardworking nature of the Korean parents are. The consequence is that his parents were just too busy at work to give Seung Hui Cho the proper care that he needed. They never even noticed his rapid mental degeneration.

    I'm pretty solidly in the conservative camp and voted for Bush in 2004 but I have issues with working long hours dumping somebody into the neocon camp. I detest the neocon thinking as it is not conservative. I regret my vote for Dubya.

    In my junior year of high school I pulled 60+ hour work weeks while still attending high school. My senior year I pulled 40+ hour work weeks while still attending school and competing in Track. I left the family busines but I'm the only one that has.

    My father has clocked up to 106 hours a week at the family business. My brother considers it a day off when he only works 7.5 hours there this time of year. Still works 7 days a week though.

    We're not immigrants. My great grandfather floated over here from the Old Country on a boat when he was 4, and at 18 set out as a share cropper. He tilled his first field with a borrowed shovel as he didn't have enough money to buy a damned shovel. He died in 2002 at the age of 86 and I went back to work after his funeral that day because that was how I was raised: You do your job.

  32. Re:Nicolas Sarkozy is not a neoconservative. by jcr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    they'll never even come close to an economic superpower.

    Japan did it, and so can the French. They just have to give up on socialism.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  33. Neoconservatives, Walls, and 6 Years in Power by Infonaut · · Score: 4, Informative

    First off, liberals don't know anymore what "neoconservative" actually means. It referred to Jews in the 1980s who supported Reagan. They use it today in short form, "neocon," because it sounds evil and war-like. Second, conservatives in America are opposed to illegal immigration and want to build a big wall, while liberals want open borders and no screening.

    It's interesting that you say "liberals" don't know what "neoconservative" actually means, then you say it is a term referring to "Jews in the 1980s." Although several top neocons are Jewish, not all of them are. They didn't just spring up in the 80s, and their story is far more complicated than your reductionist analysis makes it seem. That makes it difficult for anyone (liberal, conservative, or otherwise) to figure out exactly what the term means. Here's what Irving Kristol, one of the leading lights of the movement, says about neoconservatism. Note that he uses the term "neocon" a few times in the article. Maybe he does that because he thinks it makes him sound evil and war-like.

    As for the bit about conservatives wanting to build a wall and liberals wanting no border at all, you may want to check in on that more thoroughly. The Republican Party had control of the House, the Senate, and the White House for almost six years and didn't change American immigration policy. One of the iron laws of politics is that when you have that degree of power, you use it. Look at the sweeping range of laws the Republican Party enacted over those same six years, covering every aspect of American life. If the party was truly unified in wanting to thwart illegal immigration, it would have done something.

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    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  34. Re:Unfortunately I see Reagan when I look at Sarko by Stickerboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    >10% unemployment in a country that held out until 5/6/2007 is quite a feat, and should not be discounted.

    ROTFL... that's rich. Considering the unofficial unemployment rate among young adults is widely considered around twice the official 10%. And that any American President would be out of a job if US unemployment reached anywhere near 10% officially. Face it, the French economy is tied down with the ropes of its "social net". Look at all the trouble GM and Ford are in with overpaying their noncompetitive UAW labor in salaries and benefits, and spread that across a national workforce.

    --
    Light a fire for a man and he'll be warm for a day. Light a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
  35. Re:Apples and oranges by Shihar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Of course I am comparing apples to oranges. European governments and the American government are two fairly different systems that result in different parties. Now, I am not saying that Americans don't have their whack-jobs that would look at a European right winger and applaud. That said, they get almost no voice in the US. The US system shoves everyone to the center. A pure anti-immigration platform (like Le Penn's party in France) will get you seats in parliament and potentially a spot in a coalition government. In the US, it is nearly impossible for such people to get elected on a federal level. The lack of a coalition system for government means that even if such a person does get elected, they get little influence over the workings of the government.

    So, I agree the lack of a strong extremist ultra-nationalist politicians (that get elected) in the US is not a unique feature of the culture, it is a unique feature of the political system. Even when such people do get elected, they are deeply marginalized. I don't have any doubt that if the US had a parliamentary style of government you would find the US having just as many (if not more) xenophobic right wing nationalist party.

    My larger point is that Europeans some times assume that because the US left is like their right, the US right must be like there extreme right. This isn't the case. The things that define the European right really don't define the American right. The American right is far more concerned with economics and the occasional pet social issues, and give only passing thought to immigration. Right leaning European governments almost always are deeply concerned with immigration nationalist identity. The two are very different from each other and would likely kill each other if left in the same room for too long.