September 23, 2006

cafe de la merde francaise

cafedumerde446.jpg
Appa­rently Loic Le Meur’s blog traf­fic has gone crazy since he announ­ced that he voting for Nico­las Sar­kozy in the next French pre­si­den­tial elec­tions:

The rea­son I did that is that Nico­las Sar­kozy, currently #2 in Govern­ment and future can­di­date is the only poli­ti­cian in France to my know­ledge to say he wants to trans­form France into a “nation of entre­pre­neurs” when entre­pre­neurs are often seen as “ene­mies of the State” these days, so I can only sup­port him. Of course, many peo­ple disagree… 

I cer­tainly don’t disa­gree. If anyone is going to save that lovely but stub­born country from need­less obli­vion, it’s going to be its entre­pre­neurs, and not the L’Ecole de La Mort man­da­rins currently run­ning the place like their own pri­vate country club.
Rock on, Loic! Gods­peed, Sar­kozy! Vivent les entrepreneurs!

8 Responses to “cafe de la merde francaise”

  1. Loic says:

    Hey Hugh, good to hear from you, thanks ! See you soon, are you going to picnic ?

  2. ptinfrance says:

    doesn’t loic rea­lize sarko is just SAYING that he wants to trans­form france? that doesn’t mean it’s the truth! geez, he IS a poli­ti­cian, afte­rall. he wants votes. sarko’s a vote ‘ho’ trying to get naive ppl like loic lemeur to believe him then vote for him. he’s also trying to get le pen’s sup­por­ters to vote for him too by expul­sing immi­grants and tea­ring fami­lies apart.
    god only knows if busi­ness as usual in france can change, it’ll be for the bet­ter but change doesn’t exist in the french dic­tio­nary. (i loo­ked)
    besi­des, france loves living in need­less obli­vion. (remem­ber the cpe demonstrations?)

  3. Jean-Louis Seguineau says:

    You’re telling us popu­lism is a power­ful mar­ke­ting tool?
    A French Entre­pre­neur ;)

  4. Sheamus says:

    LOVED this crea­tive piece of art and pithy prose… Thanks Hugh! I tend toward a fond­ness bias regar­ding entre­pre­neurs. even if it’s dif­fi­cult to spell. Regar­ding that French poli­ti­cian and his sta­te­ment„, I won­der (who could ever doubt) just won­der if poli­ti­cans in France speak “merde” in any way simi­liar to our poli­ti­cans in Canada. Maybe “non”? Quel jolie!

  5. julien says:

    i love entre­pre­neurship, but sar­kozy does not impress me. he may create incen­tive for entre­pre­neurs, but the real work for blog­gers and the like is done by us, not by politicians.

  6. Graham says:

    It’s not easy being self-employed in France… What puzz­les me about the French civil ser­vice is if they put as much effort into their jobs as they did into com­plai­ning and ski­ving France might actually func­tion bet­ter. Balance — that’s what the French need.

  7. Tobi Z. says:

    LOOOOOL

  8. David says:

    Oh, we´re all going to hell in a hand­bas­ket if ad-people go poli­ti­cal. They know so little, yet argue it so well.