Who would you vote for in French election?

Who would you vote for in French election?

Debates

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11 Dec 04
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07 May 17

Originally posted by Ashiitaka
Seems Macron has pulled it off. He wasn't my first choice, but I guess he beat Le Pen so oh well...

I hope you do a good job, Mr Macron, otherwise I don't think we have seen the last of the Le Pen dynasty.
Well done France.

Guppy poo

Sewers of Holland

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07 May 17

It seems like European nationalism has taken another kick to the teeth.

Must be making our American Europeans (the English) feel very isolated...

ka
The Axe man

Brisbane,QLD

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08 May 17
1 edit

Originally posted by shavixmir
Obviously he supports the least rational choice possible.

A real hero.
Proving that even heroes can have small hands and no brains.
You're funny dude. Next time your in Australia come and look me up... I'm in serious need of some well humoured company. Cheers, Charlie

ka
The Axe man

Brisbane,QLD

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08 May 17

The post that was quoted here has been removed
Macron won. 65%. Le Penn 35%. 74% voter turn out.
Pretty conclusive.

To me France stands for more than just another country in the world.
The French have shaped much of the world in all areas. Viva la France

Guppy poo

Sewers of Holland

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08 May 17

Originally posted by karoly aczel
You're funny dude. Next time your in Australia come and look me up... I'm in serious need of some well humoured company. Cheers, Charlie
Will do Charlie!
Got family down there (or over there if you're Freaky and his flat-Earth gang of 1), they've been nagging me to "pop by" for years.

3 main things refrain me though, truth be told:

- I'm scared it's a lie to lure me to fall of the edge of the world.
- no Alps (and I love the Alps).
- everything down under is poisonous or has teeth and claws... even the cuddly koala is supposed to be vicious...

Damn...

Blade Runner

Republicants

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08 May 17

Originally posted by shavixmir
Will do Charlie!
Got family down there (or over there if you're Freaky and his flat-Earth gang of 1), they've been nagging me to "pop by" for years.

3 main things refrain me though, truth be told:

- I'm scared it's a lie to lure me to fall of the edge of the world.
- no Alps (and I love the Alps).
- everything down under is poisonous or has teeth and claws... even the cuddly koala is supposed to be vicious...

Damn...
You are absolutely correct about point number 3, but the antidote for all that danger is dispensed in any of the many pubs the land over...

A

RSA

Joined
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08 May 17

Originally posted by shavixmir
It seems like European nationalism has taken another kick to the teeth.

Must be making our American Europeans (the English) feel very isolated...
Hardly. We don't want the endorsement of someone who denied the French role in the holocaust, vowed to repeal gay marriage and wants to remove already ghettoed immigrants. Her support was an embarrassment to brexit. That's why Theresa May refused to meet her.

Kind of like Trump, who commented that "Belgium is a beautiful city". If the man doesn't even know that the EU capital is Brussels, he obviously doesn't understand enough about how the EU works to justify his support for brexit. He is only trying to destroy something he sees as competition for America rather than actually thinking it will be beneficial for the UK. His support undermines those of us who know perfectly well what we want.

A

RSA

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08 May 17

Originally posted by karoly aczel
Macron won. 65%. Le Penn 35%. 74% voter turn out.
Pretty conclusive.

To me France stands for more than just another country in the world.
The French have shaped much of the world in all areas. Viva la France
Yes, the land of cultural refinement before cultural refinement was a thing.

Plus, Napoléon was just awesome.

A

RSA

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08 May 17
1 edit

Originally posted by kmax87
You are absolutely correct about point number 3, but the antidote for all that danger is dispensed in any of the many pubs the land over...
There are too many weird and not so wonderful creatures in Australia for me to go there.

Blade Runner

Republicants

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08 May 17

Originally posted by Ashiitaka
There are too many weird and not so wonderful creatures in Australia for me to go there.
It's a bit exaggerated like 'Oh you're from South Africa, don't you like have lions and tigers roaming the place?' I've lived here for 39 years and I've yet to see a red back or a funnel web spider or a brown snake. I've seen plenty of huntsmen spiders, one even lived in a car of mine and used to get my heart going every time I dropped the sun visor, but it was pretty harmless.

Blade Runner

Republicants

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08 May 17

Originally posted by Ashiitaka
There are too many weird and not so wonderful creatures in Australia for me to go there.
Well I suppose their is one critter you can never be to sure about. Dropbears!

This from Australian Geographic

DROP BEARS TARGET PEOPLE with foreign accents more often than those who are Australian-born, according to new research.

The study, conducted in a drop-bear hot-spot in New South Wales, aimed to gather data around the behaviour and ecology of the elusive species.

There has been relatively little scientific research into the drop bear (Thylarctos plummetus), which the Australian Museum describes as a "large, arboreal, predatory marsupial related to the koala." Populations are thought mainly to exist in forested coastal regions of eastern and southern Australia, stretching from the Cape York Peninsula to Tasmania.

Tracking drop bear behaviour

Dr Volker Janssen, a research associate at the University of Tasmania, led a research team into Morton National Park, 120km south-west of Sydney, in search of drop bears.

Given that ordinary GPS tracking is difficult to apply to tree-dwelling animals, Volker came up with a new approach to study the animal’s behaviour. “It involves tracking the prey, rather than the predator. The location and timing of attacks is then used to map the animal population,” he says.

Members of the research team were tracked using GPS devices, and dispersed in the study area. The findings, published in the journal Australian Geographer, have revealed that six drop bears inhabit the study area.

"Drop bears are known to be very territorial," says Volker. "They do not stray far from a relatively small number of trees in close proximity that are used as hunting ground."

http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/news/2013/04/drop-bears-target-tourists,-study-says/

A

RSA

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08 May 17

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-39842424

Article summarizing why this has no effect on brexit.

Blade Runner

Republicants

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08 May 17

Originally posted by Ashiitaka
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-39842424

Article summarizing why this has no effect on brexit.
From the article ...."They may feel a little less fearful that Brexit could presage the breakup of the EU. And a less vulnerable EU may feel less determined to make an example of Britain in the negotiations. And that can only be good for Brexit, however hard or soft you want it."

There's a lot of ifs and maybe's in that statement and presumes there will be no rancor, bitterness or score settling as the UK cuts itself free of its Euroshackles. And if Macron follows through on his promise that the UK will not reap an improved, optimized relationship with the EU post Brexit, then the going will get tougher for the poms in the long run.

And before all your British lovelies think to start crawling back up the arse of your Commonwealth bum chums, think again, because over the past 20 years Australia for one has learned to diversify its trade and throw its lot in with China and the emerging South East Asian markets.

So if the boring bunch of old farts who dreamed up Brexit think their olde Empire will drop everything and ride in to their rescue, they should think again.

D

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09 May 17

Guppy poo

Sewers of Holland

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09 May 17

Originally posted by Ashiitaka
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-39842424

Article summarizing why this has no effect on brexit.
From that article:

Some Conservative ministers had been quite open in their preference for Francois Fillon, the former centre-right candidate with whom they had more natural, partisan commonalities. But they know they can live with Macron.

The new president is not going to be as Brexit obsessed as some imagine. He has other fish to fry.
He has to build support and coalitions in the National Assembly where polls suggest his new party may struggle to form a majority in next month's elections.
He has huge economic problems to deal with at home. And his efforts in Brussels will be focused on gaining support for his own proposals to reform the EU and the eurozone.

Brexit is just one issue on his to-do list. His priority is dealing with France's difficulties and stopping Marine Le Pen winning in 2022.

Now, of course, when President Macron does focus on Brexit, he will naturally be tough on Britain. But that is already the position of the French government. Whitehall has long ruled out any favours from Paris. In many ways, Macron represents continuity.

So the election of President Macron will of course send shivers of relief through the corridors of Brussels. But it won't make the challenge of Brexit any more enormous than it already is.
And just perhaps, it might make the task a little easier.


Yeah... so.... it doesn't actually summarize anything but one reporter's strung out hope that the new French president might not make matters worse than they already are.

Ending with a typical BBC evening news bit of optimisism.

One sentence a whole article does not make.