Archive for Je suis Charlie
touche pas à mon prof!
Posted in Kids, pictures with tags #jesuisprof, caricature, Charlie Hebdo, civic education course, Conflans-Sainte-Honorine, end blasphemy laws, fanaticism, freedom of expression, freedom of press, freedom of speech, islamist attack, Je suis Charlie, religious beliefs, religious freedom, Samuel Paty on October 18, 2020 by xi'anCharlie, the jogger, the killer, and the journalist
Posted in Books, Running with tags 7 janvier 2015, Cabu, caricature, Charlie Hebdo, end blasphemy laws, freedom of speech, industrial statistics, intellectual freedom, Je suis Charlie, Paris killings, tribunal on October 3, 2020 by xi'anThe trial of the suspects of the Charlie Hebdo killings of 7 January 2015 (and of the subsequent days) has started several weeks ago, involving people accused of helping the main culprits, who died on 9 January. In the long flow of witnesses and victims, a case remains a mystery, the shooting of a random runner in Fontenay-aux-Roses, on the first evening with the same weapon used two days later by the Hyper Casher killer. The runner survived the shooting, despite all odds, but one sees no other motive in the attack than a ghastly real-scale testing of the weapon, as he has no connection with the journal, with the killers or with the accused… The trial also brings a stark reminder that the survivors of Charlie are still living under permanent police protection, having to give up part of their freedom to keep up publishing the journal. As sadly illustrated by the recent exfiltration of Marika Bret from her flat following specific death threats. To quote the late Cabu, dur d’être aimé par des cons…
cartoon satire for dummies [from Charlie]
Posted in Books, pictures with tags 7 janvier 2015, cartoon, Charlie Hebdo, France, freedom of speech, Je suis Charlie, Paris, terrorism, Voltaire on January 7, 2018 by xi'anOn the very day 12 persons were killed at the Charlie Hebdo offices in 2013, I found it worth reposting a cartoon (en anglais!) from Luz attempting to explain why political satire has to go “too far” to expose dysfunctions in societies, invasions of creeds and the irrational, hypocritical double-talk from governments, and whatever other ideas it aims at criticising.