Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller

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  1. ikneadthedough

    ikneadthedough said, 5 months ago

    Most of the time, over the last 8 years or so, I’d much rather have been in France than in the United States.

  2. ejcapulet

    ejcapuletGenius_badge said, 5 months ago

    That’s a good reason to stop pursuing anything.

  3. baslim_the_begger

    baslim_the_beggerGenius_badge said, 5 months ago

    Corsica is nice. They don’t really believe they are French. Lovely people, and practical, too: they stop bombing the French during the tourist season!

  4. ElRabbit

    ElRabbit said, 5 months ago

    France is nice as long as you don’t have to deal with French Administration.

  5. grapfhics

    grapfhics said, 5 months ago

    Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres

  6. grazer

    grazer said, 5 months ago

    Say what you want about the French, but it was them who invented toast, fries, dips and kissing.

  7. prasrinivara

    prasrinivara said, 5 months ago

    You forgot dressing grazer!

  8. shades_is_here

    shades_is_here said, 5 months ago

    just don’t get sick over in France for u may never get well or live on there waiting list.

  9. Pprey

    Pprey said, 5 months ago

    You also forgot, snails, frogs legs and the worst toilets in the western world.

  10. Ji2m

    Ji2m said, 5 months ago

    ikneadthedough, don’t let the door hit you on the way out… :)

  11. SQUIDBREAKER

    SQUIDBREAKER said, 5 months ago

    The momentum increases to finding the Holy grail in the mountainous areas of France…..
    Ask Tom Hanks.

    Juene dieux le suiss deux il y a sois. (French spell check needed!)

    (Young of I am, two places to be)

    “No time Toulouse.”
    —- Monty Python

  12. Nairebis

    Nairebis said, 5 months ago

    This is just bizarre. Since when is France the beacon of freedom in the world? The freedom to strike over the government not handing out enough goodies? I have no idea what Wiley’s point is in this one.

  13. halavana

    halavana said, 5 months ago

    ElRabbit said,
    France is nice as long as you don’t have to deal with French Administration…

    …or Parisians.

  14. SQUIDBREAKER

    SQUIDBREAKER said, 5 months ago

    @Prasrinivara -
    Nice Hockey logo. Are you Russian? Your name sound Russian. And how did you know that Grazer forgot to get dressed today?

  15. pschearer

    pschearerGenius_badge said, 5 months ago

    Don’t worry, we’ll soon have the French economy right here. Woo-hoo! August off!

    EMET: If you’d worked with as many Indians as I have, you’d see Prasrinivara as Pra-srini-vara, each part a common component of many Indian names. But I don’t know if the whole is a real name or simply a made-up or constructed tag. And it still doesn’t mean Pra— is Indian at all. How about it, Pra—, enlighten us!

  16. TheDoctortheoneonlyandbest

    TheDoctortheoneonlya... said, 5 months ago

    No need to move, “The MESS-iah” is bringing France, and Canada, and all the other liberal ideas that suck here to the good ol’ U.S.of A. Didya hear PITA’s pissed @Barry for killing that FLY on T.V.? –NO JOKE……

  17. pschearer

    pschearerGenius_badge said, 5 months ago

    Pocket bread is pissed with Obama? Oh, you mean PETA!

  18. fogey

    fogeyGenius_badge said, 5 months ago

    The people of France are just like Americans, ranging from very nice to awful; possibly some of the latter enjoy insulting Americans without having any first-hand knowledge of us. It helps if you try to learn a little of their language before you visit there. And French tourists don’t have the eqivalent of “The way we would do that back in Texas is —”. But if you want gourmet ‘French Fries’, go to Belgium or McDonalds.

  19. cleokaya

    cleokayaGenius_badge said, 5 months ago

    prasrinivara says: You forgot dressing grazer!

    What, grazer’s naked?

  20. prasrinivara

    prasrinivara said, 5 months ago

    No EMET, I’m originally from India (specifically the state of Tamil Nadu). My handle comes from a combo of my wife’s (first) name, mine, and my last name (some letters chopped off, as the result would get too long).

    I had lived in Canada for over two decades (emigrated there in 1971, left 1994), specifically in Calgary (hence the Flames logo).

    On the “dressing”, I meant as in the tomato-based kind put on salad.

  21. jamadison4

    jamadison4 said, 5 months ago

    .
    France is full of frikin frogs…….it’s the chamber pot of Europe !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    ,

  22. Dracip

    Dracip said, 5 months ago

    The French helped us win the revolution, be nice.

  23. yyyguy

    yyyguyGenius_badge said, 5 months ago

    yeah, and you guys helped them back in The Great War. (the Lafayette Escadrille, if I remember my History class correctly, was a volunteer American outfit that went to France in WWI to help out even before the USA officially entered the war.)
    But Dracip is right, we SHOULD be nice!

  24. treered

    treered said, 5 months ago

    viva La Fayette!

  25. elbeck

    elbeck said, 5 months ago

    Apparently shades_is_here didn’t see Sicko, where a table full of Americans said they would miss the French health care system when they move back.

  26. herorobot

    herorobot said, 5 months ago

    I like both! Sweden is very nice to. Great places to visit, wouldn’t want to live there. I’d rather live in the US. Still land of the free, despite what everyone else says….

  27. FRANEE

    FRANEE said, 5 months ago

    i want to see more lucy and danae!!!!!!!

  28. SQUIDBREAKER

    SQUIDBREAKER said, 5 months ago

    To my new Indian friend prasnivara:

    I will call you Calgary Pras. Its easier to type.

    Thanks for clearing up the name thing - glad you like hockey. Someone else tried to help me with the Indian name thing and I thought American Indians. Oops. That could have meant you were talking about turkey and dressing, which did not come from France.

    (I knew you were talking about dressing - I just goof off a lot with what people write. )

    And I don’t think the French want to take credit for French Dressing. There its olive oil with balsamic vinagar and Herb de Province! OUI?

  29. theIrishman

    theIrishman said, 5 months ago

    Interesting, either the American Dream and French socialism have always been the same or the dream has changed…

  30. baslim_the_begger

    baslim_the_beggerGenius_badge said, 5 months ago

    I don’t think Wiley intends the remark to be taken literally. It’s kind of like a New Yorker saying that he’d have to move to Boston.

    When I visited Paris, I did not find the French to be rude. I simply spoke bad French at them until they surrendered and spoke English. If you ever want to go to France for a visit, read Polly Platt’s “French or Foe”. They are different and they are proud of the difference, but a few simple words appear to disarm them.

    I would not make too much of the Lafayette Escadrille, nor even of our help in World War I. The French took massive casualties in that war. Yes, truly the Allies would not have won the war without us, but it took more than a year for significant numbers of US troops to be involved. Pershing (wisely) fought against incorporating US troops into French and British units. He also (very wisely) said that the Allies should reject the Armistice and actually defeat the German Army, driving into Germany. He said that without that, the Germans would feel that they really had not lost, and that war would come again soon. Smart man!

  31. BC13

    BC13Genius_badge said, 5 months ago

    I grew up in Montreal, QC. I’ll never go back again.

  32. Ushindi

    UshindiGenius_badge said, 5 months ago

    @Pprey: Snails and frog legs are actually very good - try them some time. The public restrooms I used in Paris were much, much cleaner than the ones over here in the U.S. Walk down the steps into one and there would be a little old lady sitting in the corner. She cleaned up all day long - you did your business, washed, and tipped her on the way out. What I COULDN”T get used to was the public urinals for men along the sidewalks. You step into this small enclosure, visible from the chest up (covered from the waist down), and with swarms of people walking by you, attempt to do what you stopped for, trying to forget that this is something you don’t ordinarily do in front of hundreds of men, women and children. Of course, all this was some years ago - could have changed.

  33. eatteaphonenome

    eatteaphonenome said, 5 months ago

    ikneadthedough – You were free to emigrate from the United States over to France at anytime during the past 8 years, and are still free to do so.

  34. Bill Wa

    Bill Wa said, 5 months ago

    Nairebis, I think what he is saying is that we, the USA, are moving towards a more Socialist/Fascist system, they are closely related differing only in degree of Gov’t involvement in business, and France, thanks to Sarcozy is moving back to a more Capitalistic system

  35. Robert Peters

    Robert PetersGenius_badge said, 5 months ago

    @Ushindi: Although those French urinals you describe do sound a little bit too open for those with shy bladder issues, it still sounds like a welcome convenience compared to having to hold it if you can when out walking in most any American city. As my experience has been.

  36. pbarnrob

    pbarnrob said, 5 months ago

    Or in many American cities, like LA, any section where there are homeless, good luck finding a usable public restroom. Or get scowled at a lot for being semi-retired and comfortably dressed (but not in French Dressing!).

  37. Grenouilledeparis

    Grenouilledeparis said, 5 months ago

    Question: What’s so free about the land of the free?!?

    BTW not French, even though my user name might make you think that… ;o)

  38. SQUIDBREAKER

    SQUIDBREAKER said, 5 months ago

    I guess we feel free to sin a lot here.

    Makes me sad.

  39. Agathe_de_Paris

    Agathe_de_Paris said, 5 months ago

    I can’t believe all the clichés you have over my country. Who eat snails and frogs? The tourists who think that clichés are the truth. The French don’t eat them. Sorry to disappoint you.

    As for Socialism compared to Fascism this is the most dangerous and disrespectful comparison I have ever heard. These two notions have absolutely nothing in common unless you think that six months of maternity leave and a decent education for everyone represent a danger for a country. Obviously the ones who still think that way have never travelled and have no idea of what’s going on in the world. Don’t you think it’s weird that socialist countries are going better through the recession and we’re not facing the same misery as in capitalist countries? Check the reality of the facts before speaking.

    As well as healthcare… If you go to the ER, you will wait for an hour max. If you want to see a doctor, you can have an appointment the exact same day. In Paris.

    The public urinals along the sidewalk don’t exist anymore. Are we better than the Americans? Nope, it’s not a contest. Do we know better about them than they do about ut? Maybe since we study History of America from the very beginning to nowadays.

    Try to think by yourself, people. Get your own opinions of the world you’re living in. In a word, travel and observe the countries. Then you will understand how stupid if not irrelevant (Socialism/Fascism… Mussolini was a fascist… He was from the far-right wing party… Not that socialist to me) clichés are and how we shouldn’t live upon settled down legends. Unless you’re a monkey and prefer to follow without even thinking.

    Bill Wa… Sarkozy is not going into a capitalist system. Why? Because he can’t. The nation doesn’t want to and that’s why he’s working now with socialist politicians. You should get a serious politics update. Especially since Fascism was a movement of the far-right and Socialism is center-left. People who lived under a repressive government always tried to fight against it. Don’t you think it’s weird that several countries are fighting FOR Socialism if it’s so repressive?

    We don’t hate Americans here. We just think that they are manipulated by the medias and believe what they’re been told a bit too easily. All those clichés about France prove it.