French Lessons
By: Rachel Marsden
You know your country’s a mess when you have an election and don’t bother 
getting around to talking about gays and abortion. 
Meet France. A country so highly taxed that all the rich people move away, 
leaving so much rioting “riff-raff” that one of the presidential candidates — 
frustrated conservative turned president-elect Nicolas Sarkozy — openly 
fantasizes about clearing it out with a “pressure hose.” 
Exactly a year ago, I wrote in a column suggesting that rioting protestors could 
drive France further right. Thankfully, they were too busy trashing Paris to pay 
attention. 
Sarkozy has already upset his country’s socialists when he took a three-day, 
post-victory vacation aboard a yacht, on his own dime. 
As a political strategist, I am appalled that there isn’t a single photo of the 
trip showing Nicolas Sarkozy with his shirt off. It’s a lot more difficult to 
slap the “fascist” label on a guy when he’s shirtless and hot. 
And why is he back in town, anyway? He should have been sipping umbrella drinks 
on that ship until the morning he has to punch in at the Elysee. Because that’s 
what people do when they work hard — they get to go on vacation and rub suntan 
lotion on their bods. 
What better way to teach Paris’ socialists and immigrants about the benefits of 
capitalism and hard work? It’s not like Sarko hasn’t already tried. He 
campaigned on the idea of lifting the maximum 35-hour work week, and of having 
universities institute more vocational programs. The response? Protests and 
riots. 
As interior minister, Sarkozy sought to decrease the country’s unemployment rate 
by encouraging selective immigration of skilled workers, rather than “those that 
nobody else in the world wants.” His immigration bill, approved last year, 
requires newcomers to learn French and assimilate into the culture. 
Much debate ensued. And by debate, I mean protests ... and riots. Yawn. The man 
is trying to make you employable, you morons. 
Don’t like the idea of berets, escargot, and having to learn what those funny 
things over French vowels are for? No problem — Sarko says feel free to go back 
to Algeria. 
Sarko may be the first French president in recent history to understand that 
some Islamists can be a bit problematic. His suggestion of putting cameras in 
mosques is a notable departure from the weapons-for-oil deals made with Arab 
countries by his predecessors, Chirac and Mitterrand. 
Sarko doesn’t seem too psyched about the European Union Constitution that France 
overwhelmingly rejected in a referendum a couple of years ago — mainly because 
the EU was seeking to include Turkey, which is largely Muslim and largely 
screwed up, even by French standards. 
He said during the election campaign that he’d put together a mini-treaty and 
send it to a parliamentary vote. Whatever. I trust now that Sarkozy’s elected, 
he’ll find better things to do. Three Bible publishers in Turkey recently had 
their throats slit. Sounds to me like a good enough excuse to hold off. 
Besides, he needs to put down the roll of red tape and step away. Hey Sarko, 
remember that Christmas present you wrapped when you were a kid that took 
someone 10 minutes to open? Well, that’s your country. 
In his first post-election speech, Sarko said that that Kyoto and global warming 
are his top priorities. Hey, don’t you have some neighbourhoods to pressure 
wash? If not, go lie down on a yacht until the feeling passes. Preferably “sans 
chemise.” 
Merci.
 
PUBLISHED: TORONTO SUN (May 14/07)
COPYRIGHT 2007 RACHEL MARSDEN