Bastille Day

Standing Up for the French Revolution

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I've always found it interesting that the United States and France both celebrate their independence days, at least in a sense, in July, just nine days apart from each other. Of course, the American and French Revolutions were somewhat different in character. For America it was more a war of national liberation against what had become an imperial master, determined to keep its colonies subservient (the crux of Tom Paine's argument in Common Sense), though there were elements of civil war and social revolution as well. France's revolution, on the contrary, began as a strictly internal affair, an upheaval against a badly outmoded form of government and social system.

Bastille Day--a French Reality--an impending American reality

July 14, 1789, France--a day immortalized by the Francophone civilization--and which should be seriously considered here in the Corporatist States of America. Funny thing, C.S.A. were the initials of the Confederate States of America. The CSA was racist and exploited human slavery to the maximum allowed by sound financial considerations, while completely ignoring the human suffering which it engendered in it's 4 short years of existence.