Maher: Hillary Equals France
'I don't want to be French, I just want
to steal what's best from the French.'
By Bill Maher
Newsweek International
June 4, 2007 issue - New rule: conservatives have to
stop rolling their eyes every time they hear the word France. Like
just calling something French is the ultimate argument winner. "Aw, you
want a health-care system that covers everybody and costs half as much? You
mean like they have in France?
What's there to say about a country that was too stupid to get on board with
our wonderfully conceived and brilliantly executed war in Iraq?"
Earlier this year, the Boston Globe got hold of an
internal campaign document from GOP contender Mitt Romney, and a recurring
strategy was to tie Democrats to the hated French. It said, in the
Machiavellian code of the election huckster, "Hillary equals France," and it envisioned bumper stickers
that read FIRST, NOT FRANCE.
Except for one thing: We're not first.
America
isn't ranked anywhere near first in anything except military might and snotty
billionaires. The country that is ranked No. 1 in health care, for example, is France. The
World Health Organization ranks America at 37 in the world—not two, or five—37,
in between Costa Rica and Slovenia, which are both years away from discovering
dentistry. Yet an American politician could not survive if he or she uttered
the simple, true statement, "France has a better health-care
system than us, and we should steal it." Because here,
simply dismissing an idea as French passes for an argument.
John Kerry? Can't vote for him—he looks French. Yeah, as
opposed to the other guy, who just looked stupid. I
know, if God had wanted us to learn from the
Enlightenment, he wouldn't have given us Sean Hannity.
And I'm not saying France is
better than America.
Because I assume you've already figured that out by now. I don't want to be French, I just want to take what's best from the French. Stealing, for your own self-interest.
Republicans should love this idea. Taking what's best
from the French: You know who else did that? The Founding
Fathers. Hate to sink your toy boat, Fox News, but the Founding Fathers,
the ones you say you revere, were children of the French Enlightenment, and
fans of it, and they turned it into a musical called the Constitution of the
United States. And they did a helluva job, so good it
has been said that it was written by geniuses so it could be run by idiots.
But the current administration is putting that to the
test. The Founding Fathers were erudite, well-read, European-thinking
aristocrats—they would have had nothing in common with,
and no use for, an ill-read xenophobic bumpkin like George W. Bush. The
American ideas of individuality, religious tolerance and freedom of speech came
directly out of the French Enlightenment—but, shhh,
don't tell Alabama.
Voltaire wrote "men are born equal" before Jefferson was wise enough to steal it. Countries are like
people—they tend to get smarter as they get older. Noted military genius Donald
Rumsfeld famously dismissed France as part of Old Europe,
but the French are ... what's the word I'm looking for? Oh yeah, "mature."
We think they're rude and snobby, but maybe that's because they're talking to
us. For example, France
just had an election, and people over there approach an election differently.
They vote. Eighty-five percent turned out. The only thing 85 percent of
Americans ever voted on was Sanjaya.
Maybe the high turnout has something to do with the fact
that the French candidates are never asked where they stand on evolution,
prayer in school, abortion, stem-cell research or gay marriage. And if the
candidate knows about a character in a book other than Jesus, it's not a
drawback. There is no Pierre Six-pack who can be fooled by childish wedge
issues. And the electorate doesn't vote for the guy they want to have a
croissant with. Nor do they care about the candidate's private lives: In the
recent race, Ségolène Royal had four kids but never
bothered to get married. And she's a socialist.
In America,
if a Democrat even thinks you're calling him a liberal he immediately grabs an
orange vest and a rifle and heads into the woods to kill something. As for the
French conservative candidate, he's married but he and his wife live apart and
lead separate lives. They aren't asked about it in the media, and the people
are OK with it, for the same reason the people are OK with nude beaches:
because they're not a nation of 6-year-olds who scream and giggle if they see
pee-pee parts. They have weird ideas about privacy. They think it should be
private. In France,
everyone has a mistress. Even mistresses have mistresses. To not have a lady on
the side says to the voters, "I'm no good at multitasking."
France
has its faults—the country has high unemployment, a nasty immigrant problem and
all that ridiculous accordion music. But its health care is the best, it's not
dependent on Mideast oil, it has the lowest
poverty rate and the lowest income-inequality rate among industrialized
nations, and it's the greenest, with the lowest carbon dumping and the lowest
electricity bill. France
has 20,000 miles of railroads that work. We have the trolley at the mall that
takes you from Pottery Barn to the Gap. It has bullet trains. We have bullets. France has
public intellectuals. We have Dr. Phil. And France invented sex during the day,
the ménage à trois, lingerie and the tongue. And the
French are not fat. Can't we just admit we could learn something from them?
Maher is the host
of HBO's "Real Time With Bill Maher."
© 2007 Newsweek, Inc.
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