11-05-2005, 11:54 PM | #1 (permalink) |
Pickles
Location: Shirt and Pants (NJ)
|
France riots?
I wasn't exactly sure what section to put this in, and since the answer to this question would probably end up being political, i picked this one.
So here's my question: What is all this rioting about? I can make out 2 possible reasons so far, but they don't seem sufficient to explain this reaction. Reason 1: Two kids, running from cops (why?), went into a power station to hide. They end up getting electricuted. Reason 2: Those who seem to b rioting are the poor immigrants of France. Africans who immigrated and ended up with high levels of unemployment and face lots of racism. Ok well. reason #1 is what suppsoedly set off the riots. While the deaths of young adults may be tragic, it's hardly worth a riot? I doubt the vast majority of the rioting people have any idea who these people are, or why they would be running from the cops.If they were running from the cops, they must have done somethnig wrong, correct? Isn't it hte job of the police to catch "criminals"? Hardly a reason to riot. And as for reason #2, riots are not what fixes this type of problem. If it's racism you're worried about, rioting will only confirm the feelings of the racists, wouldn't it? Smashing and burning shops and businesses that could possibly hire you if you applied doesn't seem to be a good way to counter unemployment..? Thre HAS to be another, REAL, reason for all of this. But i just can't see it. Granted, I'm no expert on the social aspects of France by any measure of the word, but events like these usually have some kind of real cause behind them. This just seems to be a swarm of overly juvenile and ignorant morons. If anyone can hellp shed some light on this situation for me, it would be much appreciated.
__________________
We Must Dissent. Last edited by ObieX; 11-05-2005 at 11:57 PM.. |
11-06-2005, 02:00 AM | #2 (permalink) | ||
Banned
|
Quote:
They have challenges assimilating, they live in a concentrated ghetto population and they reach a mindset where they feel that they have little to lose by resorting to violent protest. In the case of the French, IMO, they overvalue their "gift" of citizenship to their immigrant population. The religious divide and the contemporary, worldwide movement towards Islamic fundamentalist influenced militancy, and tensions rise.... Quote:
|
||
11-06-2005, 03:00 AM | #3 (permalink) |
Psycho
|
A similar thing happened in Australia recently when an aboriginal child died while cycling from police (IIRC he wasn't involved in any crime, just fled the police). The subsequent riots took place in both cases because of the feeling in the community of not having the oppurtunities the rest of the country has. In that are also feelings of being the victims of racism and wider intolerance especially as I think many such people are exposed to racist comments in the streets. I think there is a feeling of the deaths occuring due to the unfair targeting of ethnic minorities by the police force.
High unemployment and a feeling of having no oppurtunity to better their situation, causes disdain for the authorities. Such an event triggers the anger and disdain felt to be expressed in a violent form. The French interior minister has not handled the situation well by making comments that exasperate the "us vs them" mentality which fuels even more anger. Last edited by aKula; 11-06-2005 at 03:03 AM.. |
11-06-2005, 05:30 AM | #4 (permalink) |
Likes Hats
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
|
There were a number of arsons in the immigrant quarters of Paris during late summer/autumn that put everyone there on the edge I think. So it had been brewing for a while, and the death of the two boys kind of set off the spark (Bad choice of words, I know.) Not even the Paris correspondant of my morning paper can explain excatly what's going on. He was trying to interview a group of young boys in the rioting quarters when they set fire to him -- twice! When he finally ran away from them, he dropped his wallet. One of the boys ran after him and gave it back, untouched. It's just too weird.
|
11-06-2005, 06:45 AM | #5 (permalink) |
Junkie
|
actually these riots piss me off a tun. A muslim friend of mine and I were discussing them and I was saying how I think these riots have no merrit at all. The 2 boys got themselves killed. It is no ones fault but their own. If the police were not chasing them it is their fault for running into the power station. If the police were chasing them it is their fault for running (especially into a power station).
Typically riots occur after some sort of injustice. There was no injustice in this situation and it pisses me off beyond belief. I think people are rioting for reasons other than 1). 1). is just an excuses. Unfortunatly i don't know enough about the french culture or politics to figure out why this is. I think the french should just call in the military to restore peace. Come in forcefully with rubber bullets or something, arrest everyone who is rioting and throw them in jail for 20 years. |
11-06-2005, 09:05 AM | #6 (permalink) |
Lennonite Priest
Location: Mansfield, Ohio USA
|
Riots happen when the people feel they have no voice anymore and are pissed off at society for reasons they feel are real (even if they aren't). Or because of society's overreaction to a protest.
Like prison riots are usually because the inmates feel they aren't being heard and are grossly mistreated. The Rodney King riots were because blacks in LA felt they weren't being heard and there was a gross injustice done. A small group then may protest and the police come and overreact, then more people support the protest and violence erupts and wham you have a full scale riot. And in some cases, you see someone creating a riot by ignititing fears and hatred in order to advance their own agendas.
__________________
I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?" |
11-06-2005, 10:27 AM | #7 (permalink) |
Crazy
Location: UK
|
I'm living in one of the northern towns hit by rioting and I can honestly say that there's a lot of tension here. There's quite literally a "wrong side of the tracks" aspect to this place, even though there have only been two incidents here so far (both arson) on top of the demonstrations.
The French African community here isn't that well integrated, and that's what people around here are toting as the cause for all over this - over and above anything else. There's a demographic difference between the land over the metro line and the quarters close to the centre of town. You just don't see people of Morrocan/Algerian extraction in the town centre, unless they're rich. In my 2 months (so far) here I've noticed that beggars are mostly from that community. I pass by a high-density housing block close to the invisible demarcation line and there are a lot of bored teenagers around this neighborhood who play truant. Things seem to have quietened down around here since then but I can't help but notice that the majority opinion that French Africans are badly viewed here because of the integration "problem" is generally true. As to whose fault it is - let's just say that I'm not willing to venture an opinion just yet. As always the truth will lie between two opposite poles.
__________________
Furry is the leader of his own cult, the "Furballs of Doom". They sit about chanting "Doom, Doom, Doom". (From a random shot in the dark by SirLance) |
11-06-2005, 11:44 AM | #8 (permalink) |
Pickles
Location: Shirt and Pants (NJ)
|
mm.. yea integration is a job for BOTH sides. If one side wont give the other side jobs that needs to change. If the other side feels the need to live in large groups and isolate themselves, they shouldn't complain about non-integration. *shrugs*
Anyway, thanks for clearing this up. The length of the riot is what got my attention.
__________________
We Must Dissent. |
11-06-2005, 12:11 PM | #9 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
i have not been able to follow this as closely as i would like--too busy---but i have been getting asked about it anyway---to situate these actions/riots, i put together some contexts that might help think about this stuff:
1. the situation created by the french policies designed to address labour shortages, particularly unskilled labour, from the 1920s through the mid 1970s. the situation of many, largely north african "suburban" areas since the 1970s, that s since the collapse of the labour market that initially drew folk there--the lack of infrastructure, the lack of opportunities, the sense of non-integration, of being stranded, isolated, thrown away. i think that one aspect of these policies was streamlined citizenship processes. so in a kind o ideal typical way, the kids or grandkids of the generation that came to france to work, and who became sitizens, are now french citizens but they are not given any rational sense of being french. but they are not really north african at this point either--in that they would in all probability be completely lost if they went to algeria or morocco. in general, what explains this? 2. politically: the debates around the nature of frenchness--this is a very long term matter, but since the 1980s it appears that the political organization that has really trafficked in this matter--and which has tried to define frenchness/france in basically racist ways--is the front national. from the phase of debate about the law passed last summer banning the wearing of "religious garb" in public schools, it has appeared that a signficant aspect of chirac's politics have been influenced, directly or indirectly, by the fn. it is the fn that has articulated and advanced a concpeiton of france as white and catholic, in danger of invasion by islam....you get parallel racist nonsense in the states, but it is generally most virulent along other lines....but since 9/11/2001, the present context has shifted closer to that shaped by the fn. i have thought bush similar to le pen from the outset, but that is another matter. 3. hisory of repression: the history of the crs as a reactionary organization--often arbitrary and brutal--the electrocutions that triggered these actions initially was but another element in the grotesque saga of the crs as agent of repression in the poorer banlieuex in particular. this is not the first series of riots set off by the brutality of the crs. it will not be the last. 4. economic factors: the diminishing employment prospects for the kids of these north african families in the suburbs. the obvious lack of prospects for anything different (lack of adequate schools and other civic infrastructure in some of the poorer suburbs) 5. the idiotic discourse of the "war on terror" as it cuts across all the above. you can find outlines of these contexts, and much more detailed information about them/their mode of interacting, in the work on "fundamentalism" done by gilles kepel, for example. but any longer-term history of the north african population in france, or of french immigration policies, will give you the same material. if you hold these various contexts in your head and set them in motion around these actions, i think you can start to situate them. sarkozy's statements of last week, in which he referred to the kids who are involved in these actions as "scum" probably explains the persistence and generalization of these clashes more than any other single thing. you could see in this an expression of alienation and so cuold read them as the inverse--some kind of cry for recognition as the washington post phrased it today--but i think that is a bit pollyanna, given that the mechanisms of exclusion in some of these areas would seem to preclude this. all this from a distance and so could be off in its detail--other comments welcome.
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
11-06-2005, 01:15 PM | #10 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
|
The French Intifada, in full bloom.
It appears Paris is on course to become the third most holiest site in the Islamic World. I wonder if any of the hundreds of cars set on fire, or the razed police stations, or the molotov cocktail factories created by the rioting African Muslims were ignited by the very gasoline procured through those shady UN petroleum deals between France & Saddam Hussein? Oh, the irony. Quote:
|
|
11-06-2005, 01:34 PM | #11 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
gee powerclown, thanks for proving the point i made above concerning the parallels between american conservative and european neofascist viewpoints on this kind of situation. belien is a far right columnist based in belgium--a range of his work is easy enough to find, and a look should put the above column in perspective--though i would have a harder time putting powerclowns bizarre exultation over having worked out an interpretation of what is going on in france that only even begins to make sense from a front national-style viewpoint.
birds of a feather i suppose.
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
11-06-2005, 01:41 PM | #12 (permalink) |
can't help but laugh
Location: dar al-harb
|
Ahh... the Sarkozy/Chirac gap widens. What a shame, they used to be so cute together.
Sarkozy will play this smart... he's already tried to take a hard-line, but not so hard to commit himself completely. Villepin will hang himself with half-measures and Chirac will go down w/him while Sarkozy will come away smelling like roses. My, how the tables have turned. The apprentice has become the master. Anyway, enough of French politics and my attempts to suppress schadenfreude. Like many of you, I feel like I'm not getting the whole story from the AP dispatches. Check out the AP's pool of photographs... not a single snapshot of the riots and/or rioters in progress. The press's aversion to the word "muslim" in any negative context is showing.
__________________
If you will not fight when your victory will be sure and not too costly, you may come to the moment when you will have to fight with all the odds against you and only a precarious chance for survival. There may even be a worse case. You may have to fight when there is no hope of victory, because it is better to perish than to live as slaves. ~ Winston Churchill |
11-06-2005, 01:57 PM | #13 (permalink) |
Junkie
|
For a religion of peace, those muslims seem awful willing to resort to violence, don't they?
Also, from what I can see (riots, bombings, etc.) this situation is starting to seem like a quagmire. I think it's time for France to pull out. Chiracco should take their imperialistic policies and shove them! |
11-06-2005, 04:15 PM | #15 (permalink) |
whosoever
Location: New England
|
replace "france" with "LA" and "immigration issues" with "rodney king verdict" and it's deja vu all over again.
it's civil unrest...not the end of western civilization. hopefully, this turns in to a real wakeup call for france to improve conditions in the suburbs....they have a history of unrest similar to some of the poorer urban centers in America. Bad housing, lack of jobs...it's a powderkeg...just like ours.
__________________
For God so loved creation, that God sent God's only Son that whosoever believed should not perish, but have everlasting life. -John 3:16 |
11-06-2005, 05:17 PM | #16 (permalink) | |
Cunning Runt
Location: Taking a mulligan
|
Quote:
__________________
"The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money." Margaret Thatcher |
|
11-06-2005, 07:04 PM | #17 (permalink) | ||
Psycho
|
Quote:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3491299.stm Quote:
|
||
11-06-2005, 07:56 PM | #18 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
|
This is going to be a quagmire for France and Europe for generations to come. The population demographics are going to shift even further to Muslims/Arabic as time goes on, that will pose anymore problems as far as I can see.
Also this whole incident and drives home further to me that France is a nation of pussies, at least so far as this is the 10th day of the rioting and it has only gotten worse.
__________________
To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
11-06-2005, 08:01 PM | #19 (permalink) | |
whosoever
Location: New England
|
Quote:
Waiting the last decade brought them this. What do you think waiting some more is going to do?
__________________
For God so loved creation, that God sent God's only Son that whosoever believed should not perish, but have everlasting life. -John 3:16 |
|
11-07-2005, 10:41 AM | #20 (permalink) | |
Rail Baron
Location: Tallyfla
|
So how long until france surrenders? The french police still have orders not to shoot. Violence has spread to 300 towns, is inside the city limits of paris, yet the french are too scared to do anything drastic to stop it. I say france will be overthrown in one week.
Quote:
__________________
"If I am such a genius why am I drunk, lost in the desert, with a bullet in my ass?" -Otto Mannkusser Last edited by stevo; 11-07-2005 at 11:05 AM.. |
|
11-07-2005, 11:36 AM | #21 (permalink) |
whosoever
Location: New England
|
france isn't some socialist paradise. Maybe if you're native born it's pretty good, but there are serious problems with racism. Why i drew the LA riots connection...it isn't even so much that there are no jobs in France, but that that there aren't many in that community.
Any prediction that the nation falls to shit is quite premature. They do have an army you know, and whatever trash you want to talk...if it gets *that* bad, i have to think they will get authorized to use force.
__________________
For God so loved creation, that God sent God's only Son that whosoever believed should not perish, but have everlasting life. -John 3:16 |
11-07-2005, 11:54 AM | #22 (permalink) | |
Rail Baron
Location: Tallyfla
|
Quote:
France gives more money to non-working citizens than any county except for the nordic states. Perhaps if france hadn't made such promises to immigrants they wouldn't be in this predicament. I just find it interesting that the same policies that are promoted on this board to end poverty and promote equality are the same policies the french have implemented, but its done nothing but give them a 10% unemployment rate and a pissed off African/Arab immigrant population. There is obviously a big racist problem in france. but if the french didn't want these immigrants there, they shouldn't vote in politicians who are so willing to be a welfare state. Its funny, because it sounds good and makes you feel good to talk about giving to the immigrants, but when they come to your country you don't want them there. The problem lies somewhere between the french citizens' racism fighting the immigrants attempt to assimilate and the immigrants not wanting to assimilate all that much.
__________________
"If I am such a genius why am I drunk, lost in the desert, with a bullet in my ass?" -Otto Mannkusser |
|
11-07-2005, 11:54 AM | #23 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: The Danforth
|
Quote:
why? why not take them both, mix, shake and stir, and come to your own conclusions. Rather than kowtowing to an '-ist' of some sort.
__________________
You said you didn't give a fuck about hockey And I never saw someone say that before You held my hand and we walked home the long way You were loosening my grip on Bobby Orr http://dune.wikia.com/wiki/Leto_Atreides_I |
|
11-07-2005, 01:02 PM | #25 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
|
BREAKING:
Quote:
|
|
11-07-2005, 02:10 PM | #26 (permalink) | |
whosoever
Location: New England
|
Quote:
__________________
For God so loved creation, that God sent God's only Son that whosoever believed should not perish, but have everlasting life. -John 3:16 |
|
11-07-2005, 02:50 PM | #27 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
Quote:
the spatial arrangment functions as a kind of natural horizon for kids born within it. in terms of segregation, these cites are on a par with the worst types of american spatial discrimination---in terms of infrastructure collapse, many of tehse places are kind of like east palo alto ca. was a few years ago. they get almost no support from the french state in terms of infrastructure---i dont know what the policy logic was that shaped this set of decisions, nor do i understand what the folk who implemented them imagined would happen to those who lived there in the longer run--maybe it was kinda lilke the bushwar in iraq in that there was no long term thinking at all, and the results are, here and there, disaster. i dont see what sense it makes to pretend that these space arrangements do not exist, nor do i see what sense it makes to skip over it as a factor and move straight to speculating about motive--seems to me that you will not understand anything by doing that.
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
|
11-07-2005, 03:28 PM | #28 (permalink) |
Easy Rider
Location: Moscow on the Ohio
|
It seems like these riots may be the result of economic conditions and/or a sense of hopelessness but I fear it could turn into much more if it spreads to other European countries. There are probably religious leaders who will take advantage of the situation. Maybe the cold weather will shut the whole thing down before it gets too bad this year.
|
11-07-2005, 03:34 PM | #29 (permalink) | ||
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
here are a few of the many articles out there that link the riots to the longer-term problems created by french urban policy, which i was talking about in the previous post. i dont see how you can even start to get a coherent view of these riots without taking this into account:
Quote:
Quote:
unlike the above, which tries to outline a complex analysis, it seem that far right coverage prefers the reinforcement of racism amongst its readership to anything even beginning to approach a coherent description. if such "coverage" is your thing, then fine, but dont pretend that there is anything going on in it beyond the reinforcement of a racist disposition.
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
||
11-07-2005, 07:18 PM | #30 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
|
Quote:
|
|
11-07-2005, 07:47 PM | #31 (permalink) |
can't help but laugh
Location: dar al-harb
|
for me, the most unsettling thing to come of this are the activities of mosques and various muslim clerics within france. their role in trying to quell the violence must have good-intentions at their immediate roots but their success (the only ones who appear to have had any degree of success) belies a disturbing part of the Franco-Muslim psyche... Islam has replaced French law as the highest legal authority. No amount of pleading from the French government could do what the Bilal mosque did.
This mirrors the activity in Muslim enclaves within Australia, the Netherlands, and Great Britain... pockets of immigrants where the Ummah are asserting dominance within the kafir homeland, where dhimmitude as a worldview is gaining ground.
__________________
If you will not fight when your victory will be sure and not too costly, you may come to the moment when you will have to fight with all the odds against you and only a precarious chance for survival. There may even be a worse case. You may have to fight when there is no hope of victory, because it is better to perish than to live as slaves. ~ Winston Churchill |
11-07-2005, 08:07 PM | #32 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
|
Quote:
|
|
11-07-2005, 08:31 PM | #33 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
i assume that you are referring to the incident a few days ago that centered on the charge that the crs had lobbed a teargas grenade in to the mosquee bilal in clichy-sous-bois?
kind of a strange way to make the reference--almost seems as though you are talking about something else. let's assume that you actually were referring to clichy-sous-bois this article, which sadly is in french, talks about the incident: http://www.liberation.fr/page.php?Article=335197 if you read it, not only will you get the story but also the same kind of language that has come to be dominant over the last week of so about sarkozy--and about the crs---and about the routine violence directed against the people in the banlieux who find themselves in areas like clichy-sous-bois--in fact you would find a whole series of tidbits, much like those i pointed to above, that render your intepretation kind of irrelevant--but it is interesting, your take on things, particularly in that it is rooted in some bizarre notion of a "franco-muslim psyche" which presumably lets you not think about, say, that most of the rioters are kids and that they themselves say that this is about the routine violence directed against them: http://www.lemonde.fr/web/article/0,...-704172,0.html and if you did any research into this population, you would find out quickly that the main muslim organizations in france are quite conservative, quite close to the french government and so would obviously have no real interest in or influence over these communities--in fact everyone who has actually looked at these riots agrees that there is no religious dimension to the action. including the kids themselves. everyone except of course for the extreme right, which is inclined to frame its xenophobia and racism behind this kind of argument. spinning their interpretations in this way makes these lovely features seem acceptable. reasonable. you know, like when you talk about some collective "franco-muslim psyche" that you imagine not only exists, but which is something you know about---that kind of thing enables folk to patronize others by assuming that theirs is not a complex experience, but rather is a simple, kind of mechanical thing that can be comprehended as the working-out of a few simple mechanisms like the "franco-muslim psyche"--with simple folk like that, you dont need research or context or information, nor need you worry about accuracy or anything else really-----anything goes. and since anything goes, it follows that powerclown would post an article from some rightwing satirical blog, without attribution, presumably to pass it off as meaningful information. it doesnt matter, all this, it involves brown people far away. and we dont like the french anyway. piss on em, all of em. what's to understand? all this and an avowed preference for neofascism. wow.
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 11-07-2005 at 08:34 PM.. |
11-07-2005, 09:12 PM | #34 (permalink) | ||
can't help but laugh
Location: dar al-harb
|
Quote:
Quote:
though not many of us have had the opportunity to be embedded w/french marxists, i think you'd be surprised at how much personal experience i've had with french muslims.
__________________
If you will not fight when your victory will be sure and not too costly, you may come to the moment when you will have to fight with all the odds against you and only a precarious chance for survival. There may even be a worse case. You may have to fight when there is no hope of victory, because it is better to perish than to live as slaves. ~ Winston Churchill |
||
11-07-2005, 09:20 PM | #35 (permalink) | ||
Psycho
|
Quote:
Quote:
Transcript: http://www.abc.net.au/lateline/conte...5/s1499821.htm Then again as he said they are not all under the influence of such organizations and that it's not a religious dispute that has lead to the violence rather that these people have not been integrated into french society. Last edited by aKula; 11-07-2005 at 09:34 PM.. |
||
11-08-2005, 05:43 AM | #36 (permalink) | ||
Rail Baron
Location: Tallyfla
|
Quote:
Quote:
__________________
"If I am such a genius why am I drunk, lost in the desert, with a bullet in my ass?" -Otto Mannkusser |
||
11-08-2005, 07:29 AM | #37 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
irate:
the point of my comment remarks was the assumption that i saw in your post of a simple collective consciousness of some type that you used--a kind of primitivism--the goal seemed to be to assmilate what is going on in france now to the tired, cliche "clash of civilizations" model----which doesn't work--it doesn't do anyting to help interpret the situation in france---it doesnt help interpret anything, really--it is more like a tired data mill--put complex information in, grind out one-dimensional readings that seem only useful if you are interested in maximizing your paranoia about some fantasy religious war. there is a racist dimension to this move, but it emerges through the application of the model you use and may not necessarily involve fully articulated attitudes on the part of the folk who use the model. i would be neither surprised or not surprised by how much experience you might have with french muslim folk--though if you do know many such people, i would think that you'd not use such simplistic modes of thinking about the scenario that is unfolding in france. but whatever--maybe its an aesthetic preference for simple models. nice allusion to my academic work: so have you read any of it? i thought that one of the rules of the game here was that we would keep debate between personae. no matter: the long-term causes for situations like what you are watching happen now is an aspect of what i work on--not the main thing, but important nonetheless. that does not mean that i have what i would consider an adequate reading of the riots--too pressed for time the past days to really devote attention to it---and the coverage is too strange to give the impression a definite reading is possible. so this is a matter of modelling--i tried to outline factors i think you would need to take into account--you outline samuel huntington. i find that model to be absurd. akula: it appears that the french govt is going the route state of emergency/curfew. which usually is but a pretext for an escalation of state violence (17 october 1961)... what do you mean when you say that some of the major muslim organizations in france are fundamentalist? so far as i know, that is not right. unless we do not mean the same thing when we use the term. stevo Quote:
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
|
11-08-2005, 07:32 AM | #38 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
another context for this situation: the move away from community-based police to a more crs/los angeles model:
Quote:
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
|
11-08-2005, 09:33 AM | #39 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
|
Can someone just clarify this for me. The riots are still going on correct? The police have pulled out in some areas hoping for the problem to correct itself? THe mobs have become more violent now using weapons? Most importantly, the RIOTS ARE STILL GOING ON?!?!
Jesus-tapdancing-christ, this is just confounding, grow a spine and knock some fucking heads, it is way beyond me how they can even tolerate this. I get that some empathy should be used, after all it's not the pseudo-frogs fault they are rioting, they were pushed to it right? Get order and control before you start being all fluffy bunny with your people.
__________________
To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
11-08-2005, 09:53 AM | #40 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
|
Quote:
What? Have they been authorized to use handcuffs now? It's bizarre, to say the least. Imagine the Outrage if Katrina wasn't addressed for close to 2 weeks. |
|
Tags |
france, riots |
|
|