Update: the wheels of French justice grind fine…
…and maybe not so slowly, after all.
Nidra Pollner’s second report, this one focusing on the trial, sounds very, very promising:
It was a beautiful trial. It was held in an atmosphere of respect for justice…
And here is part of Richard Landes’s post on the same subject:
Wow. French Republican values have scored a great first round victory today. This is the France that I fell in love with as a kid, and as a student reading Jules Michelet, and doing medieval history with intellectually vibrant people, the great souled people with wise and fair-minded institutions, and real ideals and commitment to integrity”¦ the people of the Peace of God, and the early, heady days of the French Revolution.
Not to get too excited too soon”¦
Francophiles should be happy, and those who love truth and justice should be cautiously optimistic as well. The verdict will be delivered on October 19, and a few days later the second trial against the second defendant will begin–that is, if there is a second trial.
Of course, judges are notorious for their poker faces. It ain’t over till the fat lady sings.
Perhaps if we would all read a little more history and watch a little less television, we would know more historical facts and be less critical of programs and policies that attempt to avoid repeating the mistakes of the past. As far as television, I don’t have stats, but I imagine the number of viewers watching MTV far outnumber those watching the History Channel and the like.
– who would have ever thought…..
McCullough’s biography, ‘John Adams,’ occupies some of my reading now, so that historic (bloody) French Revolution seems current in my thinking. I shudder a bit to read this:
‘the great souled people with wise and fair-minded institutions, and real ideals and commitment to integrity… the people of the Peace of God, and the early, heady days of the French Revolution.’
What people exactly did Richard Landes meant? If Danton and Lafayette, his admiration is resonable. If Marat or Robespierre, these were bloody tyrants.