Populiste à l'unisson! Soyons fier de nos cultures et de notre histoire. Contre les élites Globaliste qui nous oppressent avec la "bonne pensée" ou les rouges qui veulent oppresser le peuple avec leur aristocratie d'état. À LA VOLONTÉ DU PEUPLE! VIVE LA LIBERTÉ!
Victor Hugo a rencontré en 1841 le général Bugeaud qu'il a encouragé : « Notre nouvelle conquête est chose utile et grande ! » Il n'a pu ignorer les exactions commises, mais elles lui semblent nécessaires. « Ce qui manque à la France en Alger, c'est un peu de barbarie », écrit-il même !
Je ne connaissais pas cette réplique de Victor Hugo (une source ?). Par contre dans les "Choses vues" de Victor Hugo (son journal en quelque sorte), on voit clairement que le général Bugeaud considérait la conquête de l'Algérie comme une erreur et une dépense inutile (même s'il a nuancé son point de vue pour la suite). On néglige souvent ce paradoxe : Bugeaud fut l'archétype d'un militaire qui accomplit (durement) une tâche qu'il désapprouve politiquement.
Pour bien comprendre le contexte, la soit-disant "république" conservatrice et réactionnaire, dans sa peur irrationelle des classes populaires et pour affaiblir politiquement les "partageux" a mis en point une loi excluant du corps électoral, environ 30% de celui-ci parmi les plus pauvres; alors même que c'est l'aspiration au suffrage universel qui a renversé Louis-Philippe et établit la république. Il n'est pas surprenant que (presque) personne n'ai moufté quand Napoléon le petit à fait son coup d'Etat, il a attendu tranquillement que la République parlementaire se décrédibilise complètement par ce genre de mesure; et quand il a fait son coup d'Etat avec le soutien de l'armée et des élites économiques, il n'y avait plus personnes prêt à défendre la république, et certainement pas les classes populaires qu'elle avait trahie.
@@takerusaito8334 C'est une référence au livre de Victor Hugo du même nom où il dénonce violement le coup d'état. L'idée dans ce surnom c'est d'opposer la grandeur de Napoléon Ier à la petitesse de son neveu.
@@baronnuuke7821 Bonapartism was the middle road. It sought to fulfill the promises of the revolution (abolition of the monarchy & traditional hierarchies/the ancien regime), while also restoring g & retaining certain cultural institutions for both pragmatic reasons and functional necessity. Bonaparte was quite literally a Hegelian synthesis of two radically contrasting ideologies.
@@ThePoliticrat yeah but he betrayed the revolution and the Declaration of the Rights of the Man and of the Citizen. So it's kind of weird that by hearing this song it reminds you of an emperor lol
Here's the translation for the words at the end: Victor Hugo left France for nineteen years. He never ceased to fight for the Republic during those nineteen years, but did not defend himself this whole time. During his exile, he penned his magnum opus, Les Miserables, which he published in 1862. During all those years, his mistress, Juliette Drouet, remained by his side.
Please allow me to bring a correction to your translation. Your translation 'He never continued to fight....' turns out to be the opposite of the text at the end of the video. It actually translates in to 'He never ceased to fight for the Republic'.
@@jean-louisfortier2677 Victor Hugo was exiled, but not because he fought for the Republic. He was exiled for the same reason Dumas was exiled, because Napoleon III considered him an enemy of the state.
Hugo’s vision of a “United Europe” bears no resemblance to the vision of the modern EU. Being a Bonapartist, his vision was of a United Europe under the single banner of the French Republic. He was a nationalist, like many during his time. Now, I don’t mean to make it seem like I’m bashing the EU with this comment - I’m not, as it has a certain utility to it. I’m merely saying that Hugo’s vision of a United Europe is not the same as the European project.
@@ThePoliticrat I know Hugo was a Bonapartist, but Napoleon III still had him exiled, along with Alexandre Dumas. It was in exile that Hugo wrote Les Mis, but in that book, he never mentioned a united Europe under France.
Translation: Enjolras: For the will of the people, And for the health of the progress, Fill up your heart with rebel wine, And till tomorrow faithful friend! If the beating of your heart, Is as strong as the beating drums, It means that hope still does exist For the average man. Combeferre: We build the barricade, The symbol of an era which now dawns, We leave on a crusade To the heart of the land of France. Courfeyrac: We are now the first soldiers Of an army that will advance! All: For the will of the people, And for the health of the progress, Fill up your heart with rebel wine, And till tomorrow faithful friend! If the beating of your heart, Is as strong as the beating drums, It means that hope still does exist For the average man. Feuilly: For the will of the people, I am ready to give my will, If we must die for it, Then I want to be the first Whose name shall be upon the monument of hope! All: For the will of the people, And for the health of the progress, Fill up your heart with rebel wine, And till tomorrow faithful friend! If the beating of your heart, Is as strong as the beating drums, It means that hope still does exist For the average man. Reprise: For the will of the people, None can extinguish our voice, And so the song will ring out forever As it had so long before, We wish that our light Will penetrate the mask of night, To illuminate our land And to change our lives. The glorious day will come, When on our way to the ideal Mankind will progress from evil to good And from falsehoods to truth. A dream may yet die, But hope lives on forever! Will you join in our crusade, Of those with hope for humanity? For every fallen barricade, One hundred will rise up again! For the will of the people, We hear the sound of distant drums, Announcing the future that they bring When tomorrow comes! Will you join in our crusade, Of those with hope for humanity? For every fallen barricade, One hundred will rise up again! For the will of the people, We hear the sound of distant drums, Announcing the future that they bring When tomorrow comes! Ah! Tomorrow comes!
Do you hear the people sing? Singing a song of angry men? It is the music of a people Who will not be slaves again! When the beating of your heart Echoes the beating of the drums There is a life about to start When tomorrow comes! Will you join in our crusade? Who will be strong and stand with me? Beyond the barricade Is there a world you long to see? Then join in the fight That will give you the right to be free! Do you hear the people sing? Singing a song of angry men? It is the music of a people Who will not be slaves again! When the beating of your heart Echoes the beating of the drums There is a life about to start When tomorrow comes! Will you give all you can give So that our banner may advance Some will fall and some will live Will you stand up and take your chance? The blood of the martyrs Will water the meadows of France! Do you hear the people sing? Singing a song of angry men? It is the music of a people Who will not be slaves again! When the beating of your heart Echoes the beating of the drums There is a life about to start When tomorrow comes! Last U
@@ACardin007 Les Mis was originally written in French, and the lyrics are much better. We get the sense that they're fighting for the will of the people, not for them singing about tomorrow, which honestly doesn't make much sense when you compare it to the context of the Second French Revolution. The Second French Revolution changed nothing, much like the first. They started with a king and ended with a king (although for the second revolution they replaced the absolute monarchy with a constitutional one.)
C'est beau. Mais c'est aussi utile de rappeler que suffrage universel n'est pas synonyme de démocratie, et que notre constitution actuelle est un héritage bonapartiste.
Tu confond sufrage universel et plebiscite, les bonapartistes ne sont pas universalistes, ils sont césaristes, corporatistes, on pensé le nationalisme (corp national identitaire) et on rendu confus tous les symboles republicains Maintenant le sufrage universel peut s'etablir dans une democratie participative ou de type conseilliste, l'idée cest que sans assemblée ou comité sous control de la base active, le sufrage n'est rien de plus qu'un plebiscite sans caractere lié a un debat et des deliberations, sans ca, c'est truqué
j'abonde et j'adhère une république souveraine ou tous sont égaux en droit et bannissant les privilèges trop injustes une caste prolétaire qu'on désigne comme subalterne des serfs à qui on jette des miettes par charité alors qu'ils sont la force vive des pays ils ont droit à l'instruction la santé la citoyenneté ce n'est pas une lutte des classes c'est une lutte pour la reconnaissance des défaillances d'un système c'est une lutte pour avoir un partage qui n'exclut pas la libre entreprise ni la propriété aux riches mais une fiscalité juste et mieux encore une redistribution equitable des ressources du pays qui permet aux plus démunis une vie décente paix à toi Hugo En Tunisie la question se pose toujours en ces termes en 2021
I am from the UK and like Victor Hugo I am a supporter of a United Europe. As Hugo was exiled from his beloved France I too am being dragged out of the European Union against my wishes. And just as Hugo returned to France to a hero's welcome Britain's young people are determined to return their country to the heart of the largest democratic trading bloc in the world, whether it takes seven years or seventy.
I wouldn't get ahead of yourself, me and many at college are more than happy to leave. EU doesn't want a free and fair union it seeks to control. Otherwise it wouldn't be charging Ireland 15k a day for building a windarm
That’s it . you want a Europe à la carte, "I don’t want Schengen but I want the help " . you want a Europe to your advantage . He doesn’t care if you leave and it suits our business. Stay on the other side of the Channel with your little friends
@@jacktaylor8306 Aye in its fifty years of European membership the UK has always been the one with the different, favorable deals, the one throwing a tantrum to get privileges while not helping the team, but sure the EU is the one taking advantage lmao. More than glad that ya'll left, let the true Europeans stick together while the Anglo-Saxon bootlickers vanish in the US' shadow, that's where Great Britain belongs since the end of WW2 anyway.
@@maloflory careful mate, that sounds a bit to racey for my tastes. 'true' Europeans, Anglo-Saxons. Bit of the old Adolf still kicking on the continent. And if we want a more recent example, The EU ventilator scheme has been a failure for procuring ventilators. Only four countries prop up the EU, and as we are seeing now in this recession, consequences are starting to arise between each member states and refusals to foot the bill. africaexplained.com.ng/tanzania-took-27-million-euros-from-the-european-union-embezzled-it-and-then-declare-the-country-as-coronavirus-free/ 27 million Euro's to Tanzania wasted, instead of member states. EU isn't exactly a solution, it's not a terrible idea however when we stated we were leaving no attempts at reform/common ground were made, they simply insulted the ones who voted leave. *Oh, and you didn't provide an explanation for the EU charging Ireland 15k a day for building a windfarm, despite the fact we should be encouraging sustainable energy. In fact no we've left the UK has been able to undertake many conservation projects that were prohibited by the EU subsidised corporations.
@@jacktaylor8306 Lol okay mate I'm rejecting the presence of the Anglo traitors inside the EU and you're calling me a Nazi lmao. Hoping for you that you're not studying politics at college, you'd be very freaking weak in debate and rethoric if you immediately begin your answer by a good old Reductio ad hitlerum. Also concerning that Irish windfarm perhaps you should obtain a bit more knowledge on the topic before opening your mouth. The EU is specifically attacking the refusal of the Irish government to comply with EU environmental regulations. Those 15000 a day aren't against the windfarm, it's against the Irish government which refused to assess the damages caused by the 2003 disastrous landside.
Tout compte fait la police a toujours tiré sur le peuple français .. mais aujourd'hui les français veulent rester pacifiques ??? pour combien de temps encore ..Après combien de morts et de mutilés ??
C'est faux, lors de la Révolution de 1789 ce que t'appelles "la police" a rejoint le peuple et a cédé à ses pires vices. Résultat des années de guerre civile entre même peuple parce que des minorités avaient pris le pouvoir. Il a fallu que Napoléon tire à nouveau sur ceux qui alimentaient la guerre civile pour que l'ordre et la paix soit réinstaurée, et que la France soit unie de nouveau. La répression n'est pas forcément mauvaise chose.
@@irov5884 Les français aujourd'hui !!! Ceux là ce sont pas battus chez eux dans leur pays d'origine, pourquoi se batteraient-ils aujourd'hui !! C'est pour cela qu'ils les ont fait venir en France !!! Pour nous faire venir un peuple de mouton !!!
@@irov5884 "répression" a tout de même une sacrée connotation négative. Il faut des gardiens de la paix mais ils sont aussi citoyens, et soumis aux mêmes lois. Ceux qui se font choper en train de violer les lois qu'ils sont censés défendre trahissent leur cause et la confiance qu'on leur accorde et devraient recevoir des punitions exemplaires, et non pas échapper au système. Mais ceux qui sont innocent et usent de la force pour se défendre et proportionnellement à la menace devraient être en effet respectés
Ah bon ? Je les trouve plus marquantes, plus révolutionnaire, plus dans la lutte, ça me parle plus, en plus ca colle parfaitement à Victor Hugo dans le cas de ce film, Après chacun ses goût mais je trouve cette reprise de sardou très classe