The French are arguably the easiest Western nation to be brainwashed
The bottom line, indeed, is that almost everybody in France is convinced that Obama is good and Romney is bad
concludes
Michel Gurfinkiel.
According to a GlobeScan/PIPA poll conducted in 21 countries and released
on October 22, 72% of the French support Obama in the November 6
election, the highest figure in a largely pro-Obama survey. … it is true that Obama
is popular in most countries, and immensely popular in France.
Sympathy for Obama is rooted in the deepest layers of the French
collective psyche, right and left. He is supposed to stand for a tame,
less dominant, less assertive America; and France, like many other
former great powers — from Russia to China, from the Hispanic realms to
the Islamic Umma — is driven by resentment against Anglo-Saxon dominance
at large, and American great power in particular. That was, after all,
Charles de Gaulle’s core political legacy (much more than the need to
tame Germany) and the not-so-secret rationale for his Faustian alliance
with both communism (Russian, Chinese, Vietnamese) and Islam. …
But collective psychology may not be enough by itself. Sympathy for
Obama as the symbol of a declining America has to be constantly
reactivated, even in France. And here we come to another point. The
French are arguably the easiest Western nation to be brainwashed. Not
that France is exactly a police state or one-party regime. It is just a
statist state, where most media (including those which are supposed to
be private or privatized) are under either the direct or indirect
supervision of the state meritocracy (or “state nobility,” as the
ultra-left philosopher Pierre Bourdieu used to call it), i.e., the
nation’s ruling class, a Janus-like Leviathan with both a
conservative-Gaullist face and a left-wing-Gaullist face.
Most journalists learn that in order to survive and succeed within
such an environment, they must abide by the following unwritten cultural
and political codes: political correctness, of course, at least up to a
point; corporative loyalty; and, above all, quiet acquiescence to the
state nobility’s dominance, agenda, and geopolitics. When, in addition,
you have only state-run universities and research institutes, run by
coteries, and almost no independent foundations, you are coming close to
an Orwellian, all-pervasive control system.
Citizens, however, do no get the point. They think their media are in
fact free and that their journalists are usually honest and courageous.
Again, it has to do with age-old traditions and delusions.
… “France is an absolute monarchy limited by satirical songs.”
Lessons from the Old Regime were not lost to the really authoritarian
rulers that dominated France later on, from Napoleon, the military
dictator turned emperor, to the Gaullist-elected dynasty of “republican
monarchs.” They understood that a measure of “song,” of apparent
freedom, would make their rule palatable. Real freedom has to do with
habeas corpus, property, and the Bill of Rights. Freedom, French style,
is essentially sticking to 18th century novelists’ standards, from
Marquis de Sade to Les Liaisons Dangereuses: the freedom not to
go to church on Sunday and the freedom to cheat on one’s wife or
husband. Enforce “French freedom” — church not being relevant anyore,
only sex is at stake — and nobody will bother you about real freedom.
Now the French media and indeed the French political class know how
to feed the naive French citizenry with unending love, romance, and hard
sex stories. What really mattered in France when François Hollande, the
socialist leader, was elected president last June was the ongoing
fighting between his ex-companion and mother of his four children,
Ségolène Royal, herself a presidential candidate in 2007, and his
current companion, Valerie Trierweiler: a tale of jealousy, hatred, and
near hysteria. That “Ladies’ War” (“Guerre des Dames”) sold better than
anything narrowly political.