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SUNDAY NOTEBOOKS. The ecologist deputy from Paris has distinguished herself this week by controversial outings. With some media complacency.
By Herve Gattegno
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Sandrine Rousseau doesn’t like people to laugh. Finally, not all the time, not at all, and above all, not at his expense. She said so recently, in one of her multi-weekly television interviews, with the same expressionless tranquility that accompanies her wildest statements, like a child ripping off the legs of a grasshopper without blinking an eye. When the host (Yann Barthès, from Daily on TMC) tried to tell her that “everyone laughs in their own way”, she answered coldly: “It’s part of the transformations that we must operate. Yes, yes, I assure you, those are his exact words. By reviewing the excerpt from the show, we say to ourselves that the worst is to be feared. When will the creation of a ministry of humor and derision which will enact the criteria of the carica…
The good life
How to learn (or relearn) to see life in pink? How to rediscover the pleasure of enjoying the moment? How not to forbid it? Often, we forbid ourselves to live today to better hope for a hypothetical tomorrow… Hence the interest of reading the authors presented in this special issue.
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