• minibyte@sh.itjust.works
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    22 days ago

    The French deserve some respect. If you want to know what a true strike or protest looks like, look to the French.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      22 days ago

      The important thing is to burn lots of people’s cars. Probably locals who are also protesting.

      That’s how you really get the attention of the authorities.

      • Pringles@lemm.ee
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        22 days ago

        In France, but also Belgium and the Netherlands, you have a very malcontent population of 2nd or 3rd generation offspring (mostly male) of migrants who feel left out by the system and take any opportunity to cause chaos. It are these kids who set cars alight, not the protestors.

        Often when there is a truly large protest, they are there to “fight against the system” by getting into fights with the police and burning cars and just causing overall mayhem.

    • CTDummy@aussie.zone
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      22 days ago

      More and more these days French disrespect feels like boomer shit. Look what the French did when the government came for their pensions. The industrial action within the transport sector alone.

      I was visiting Paris during some of the aforementioned protest. They’re out and about (in numbers) and will gladly get out to protest when they feel it necessary. Plenty of other western countries could learn, a lot, from the French people.

    • EnderMB@lemmy.world
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      22 days ago

      Even today, they just don’t give a fuck about rules.

      In Southern France there are speed cameras being set up everywhere, and they’ll catch you for being even a few km’s over. The locals (mostly rural) have responded by either torching them, encasing them in hay bales, painting over them, or chopping them down. The police keep putting them up, alongside cameras to watch the cameras, and the locals keep destroying them overnight.

  • cmder@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    So yeah why does the american/english don’t do more research about origins and call everything french ?

    • Pips@lemmy.sdf.org
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      22 days ago

      It’s because deep frying was not very common in the U.S. Immersion in hot fat was considered a French style of cooking, so they’re French style fried potatoes. I think “fries” instead of “frieds” is dialect that caught on nationally in the U.S. in the 70s.

  • jaybone@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    Yeah, it never occurred to anyone ever to stick their tongues in each others mouths until it was documented in ancient India.

    • 0ops@lemm.ee
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      22 days ago

      Anon didn’t say that it started in ancient India, just that the fact that it happened in ancient India proves that it didn’t start in France

    • shawn1122@lemm.ee
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      22 days ago

      We generally attribute discoveries to whoever documented it first. It’s almost laughable to attribute it to the French based on a kissing style that was widespread there in 1923. Surely people were doing it before then. Yet, the Americans and British found it so unique they referred to it as French kissing.

      Perhaps it was common before ancient India, but then the question is, why didn’t the ancient Babylonians, Egyptians, Chinese, Romans, and Greek document on it then?

      • Tlaloc_Temporal@lemmy.ca
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        21 days ago

        Arabic numerals came to Europe from India via Arabia. The Sine function does too, but it’s name is garbled and doesn’t mean anything.

        Venetian blinds came from Persia via Venice.

        Spanish Flu was everywhere, but everyone at the time was lying about it due to being at war, except for Spain.

        Many First Nations peoples are known by what other peoples called them (often pejorative names) rather than their name for themselves.

        Words usually aren’t authoritative declarations of truth, but rather snapshots of what was a useful distinction to someone somewhere a some time. Did the French think their style of kissing was a unique cultural phenomenon? Will Skibidi be known about in 500 years? No one documents graffiti, was it “discovered” by Pompeii?

        We live in a truely unique age, where nearly any question can have a relavent answer of some kind in moments. We can see people streaming everyday things from around the globe, or find the best research about what we know about ancient people’s daily lives. Is any of this worth carving into a monument though? How many copies of an archeological journal are going to survive the ages vs copies of Game of Thrones? I’d say there are countless things about our lives we think are special to today that even prehistoric people did, it just isn’t notable enought to build monuments to or copy manuscripts of.

  • NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone
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    21 days ago

    The French invented sex. Before then people would just sort of split into two small people who’d then have to grow back to full size, and it was very boring and not very je ne c’est sais quoi.

  • oce 🐆@jlai.lu
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    22 days ago

    Nobody in France calls French fries or French toast “French”. We’re definitely happy to attribute the fries to our Belgian friends and nobody thinks something as ubiquitous as toasts could have a single inventor. I think those are Anglo-Saxon cultural elements.