FPM: Last week, Emmanuel Micron, I mean Macron, visited Washington, had dinner at the White House, and gave a speech on Capitol Hill in which he referred to Hemingway’s memoir A Moveable Feast as a novel, identified the French architect of Washington, D.C., whom Americans know as Pierre L’Enfant, by his middle name, Charles, and attributed a famous line by Ronald Reagan to Teddy Roosevelt. The line in question was the one about how freedom is never more than one generation from extinction.
There was, in fact, a good deal of rhetoric in his speech about freedom – and the threats thereto. Given what’s going on in France these days, that would only make sense. But his approach to his country’s – and the West’s – current travails was, to say the least, curious. On 9/11, asserted Macron, “many Americans had an unexpected rendezvous with death.” How poetic! How French! And how inappropriate a way to refer to thousands of people being evaporated one fine Tuesday morning. He made it sound as if death by jihad had been their divinely ordained destiny – as if the hijackers of those planes had been instruments of some cosmic will.
Macron went on to mention the “terrible terrorist attacks” that have struck his own country in recent years. “It is a horrific price,” he pronounced, “to pay for freedom, for democracy.” Meaning what? In what sense are such attacks the “price” we “pay for freedom”? MORE
I’m starting to think that Santayana was wrong – that History is on a short video loop and soon will repeat whether one pays attention/learns or never does.
What passes for brains, could be shaped and baked into a baguette.
It’s the horrific price people pay having leaders like this asshat.
“freedom is never more than one generation from extinction.”
most of our country doesn’t even know what freedom is anymore thanks to all the PC fascists we have running around setting policy and squelching free speech.
@ Bill: 1000 TUs!
The guy is all kinds of messed up. His shriveled old crone of a wife molested him when he was a boy and she was his teacher.