HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_023513.jpg
Extracted Text (OCR)
2]
Article 6.
NYT
France Flies, Germany Flops
Roger Cohen
April 16, 2011 -- I’ve always had a soft spot for Nicolas Sarkozy. He
was the guy with the wrong name and the wrong background who
took on the smug talkers with names like Dominique de Villepin and
vanquished them. He was the outsider from the wrong schools who
believed in energy and talent and had the audacity to smash the taboo
that said a French politician can’t love America and prosper.
Sarkozy was a doer. He thought Francois Mitterrand’s seductive
phrase (in French at least) — “Il faut laisser le temps au temps” (You
must let time take its course) — was baloney that left you with
disasters like the Bosnian genocide. He thought work and reward
should be linked, a Gallic heresy, and he worked hard.
He hated the dependency culture of an overdeveloped French state,
which entrenched rights and enfeebled responsibility. That he was
elected president showed that France, deep in its soul, knew it had to
escape the Mitterrand-Chirac rut with its glut of erudition and its glob
of inaction. That was heartening.
The sanctimonious attacks on him from the left oozed the paralyzing
conservatism that had blinded France to change. The attacks on
Sarkozy from a blue-blooded or petit-bourgeois right often betrayed
the same quasiracist disdain evident in rightist attacks on President
Obama.
Yes, I liked Sarkozy — and still do. Then there was his rudeness; his
taste for his rich friends’ yachts; his need for adulation that helped
reduce a good newspaper, Le Figaro, to a fawning mouthpiece; his
authoritarian itch from which gypsies most conspicuously suffered;
his petulant impatience, his petty vanities and his peevish jealousies —
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_023513
Extracted Information
Dates
Document Details
| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_023513.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 1,733 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:51:14.072271 |