The European Tribune is a forum for thoughtful dialogue of European and international issues. You are invited to post comments and your own articles.
Please REGISTER to post.
Their efforts were interrupted when France erupted into chaos in May 1968. Student uprisings and a general strike -- fueled in part by anger over the Vietnam War -- shut down the telephones, trains and mail. Trash piled up in the streets, while store shelves and gas stations sat empty. Mr. Romney, then a leader for the region around Bordeaux, carried empty soap containers of borrowed fuel on his moped, then drove to an American bank in Paris for food money. He saw student demonstrators turning over cars, setting fires, hurling cobblestones and battling the police. Mr. Romney described it as "a very interesting firsthand view of a very volatile setting." But his friends say the strikes were terrifying and reinforced their respect for authority. "The social system failed. The country came to a stop," said Byron Hansen, another missionary and now a car dealer in Brigham City, Utah. "It affected me and I am sure it affected Mitt."
Mr. Romney described it as "a very interesting firsthand view of a very volatile setting." But his friends say the strikes were terrifying and reinforced their respect for authority. "The social system failed. The country came to a stop," said Byron Hansen, another missionary and now a car dealer in Brigham City, Utah. "It affected me and I am sure it affected Mitt."
But his friends say the strikes were terrifying and reinforced their respect for authority.
Now how does that work? Any idiot can face a crisis - it's day to day living that wears you out.
He deplored the anti-war protests of the "dirty hippie" students, but was perfectly able to change his views on Vietnam when his father told him to... Dialog International
But the use of Vietnam in Romney's story is above all self-serving, since it shows him being rejected as an American (European anti-Americanism, anyone?), not just because he was a drooling missionary idiot who was pissing people off.
When society breaks down and chaos ensues, the logical result is that those went through the experience will get have a greater respect and understanding of the anti-chaos forces of the State. They'll see what's needed to make sure those things don't happen again. Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
A number of Parisians who explained their experiences of '68 to me were fairly indifferent. It wasn't such a big deal, they thought. You just worked your way round it while it was happening.
"Chaos" is a big and overworked word, imho.
Especially when used about France and even more about French strikes. In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes
Karen in Austin 'tis strange I should be old and neither wise nor valiant. From "The Maid's Tragedy" by Beaumont & Fletcher
by Oui - Dec 5
by gmoke - Nov 28
by Oui - Dec 612 comments
by Oui - Dec 62 comments
by Oui - Dec 41 comment
by Oui - Dec 2
by Oui - Dec 142 comments
by Oui - Dec 16 comments
by gmoke - Nov 303 comments
by Oui - Nov 3012 comments
by Oui - Nov 2838 comments
by Oui - Nov 2713 comments
by Oui - Nov 2511 comments
by Oui - Nov 24
by Oui - Nov 221 comment
by Oui - Nov 22
by Oui - Nov 2119 comments
by Oui - Nov 1615 comments
by Oui - Nov 154 comments
by Oui - Nov 1319 comments