Introduction - Le siècle

By Ragne · Oct 10, 2019 · ·
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  1. When it’s question of geopolitical or international relation, everybody is lost. There is too many factors, too many concept which collide. Between the history, the economy, the religious interrogation, the power issues and the strategic debates, understanding the century is a tough question.


    The world is changing was singing Bob Dylan before my birth. It’s still does today (but I’m not sure about Bob Dylan singing). And to be aware of the modification of the map. We need to keep an eyes on this change.


    So, there is my manifesto for this blog: Giving some keys to watch the path of the world. Obviously, this questions are, by far, very political. So, the entry you will find here cannot be unbiased –as for all other information you can find on this subject. I’m the product of my country (France), the coagulation of my education and my political view and I’m a white man who expect a huge career. In other words: my analysis cannot be trusted as true truth. However, I’ve a master degree about this subject, I’d worked at NATO and I’m really beautiful (this last argument should change your mind to side with me)


    Thus, about what will be this blog? I want to have a regard on the century, take some hindsight to examine the time and its questions.

    I guess it’s needed to clarify a few point: there will not be question here of conspiracy, great replacement thesis or other racist garbage. This blog isn’t a place of ideology. Only the interrogation of the century. How can we understand the Kurd question? Why there is more and more of PMC (Private military company) and what should be deduced of that? What are the stakes of the Barents Sea in a close future? Why and how the French should be again the world language (first of all, you would not have to suffer reading me in the language of Shakespeare)


    If I have the courage I’ll post an entry each day and edit this one to make a summary with link. (And with time, I promise, my english will became better)


    See you later alligator.
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Comments

  1. GrahamLewis
    Welcome. And your English is far better than my French (two years in middle school almost 50 years ago). So if French became the world language I'd be out of luck. Though I don't see French making that return. Sorry.

    I agree things are in flux and I sense a lot peril, much of it coming from my country (US) and its president. To quote William Butler Yeats, the great Irish poet, in his poem "The Second Coming":

    Turning and turning in the widening gyre
    The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
    Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
    Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
    The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
    The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
    The best lack all conviction, while the worst
    Are full of passionate intensity.


    I look forward to more of your posts, and hope that I can have an occasional relevant and readable response.

    GL
      Ragne likes this.
  2. Ragne
    Hey @GrahamLewis thanks for you feedback.

    Fisrt of all, the sentence about the french was a joke, but, some demographs thinks that in view of the growth of Africa, in the next fifty years, French would be the most common language with almost 800 millions speacker in 2050 say Natixis.
    On this link you can see the growth suspected of all the language speacker.
    [​IMG]
    There is a lot to say about this projection, because the number isn't the power of a language, but that's a fun topic and quite mandatory for the France future.

    I like your poem and hope read you soon :)
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