To All Americans Everywhere!

    Ban French and German products!  Don't buy or use any products that come from France or Germany!  Also, don't visit France or Germany!  Don't give them anymore of our money!  Fuck them!  They wanna make the UN even more ineffective and irrelevant?  Fine!  Let them go to hell!  Purchase products from anywhere else you want though...just not France or Germany!

French products to boycott

Bic (razors, pens and lighters) 
Club Med (vacations) 
Yoplait yogurt 
Vivendi and its subsidiary Universal Studios (music, movies and amusement parks) 
Christian Dior 
Michelin (tires and auto parts) 
Marie Claire 
Air Liquide 
Veritas Group 
Méphisto (shoes and clothes) 
Moet (champagne) 
Perrier (water; and who can forget that benzene scandal?) 
Evian (which I found out is owned by huge food company Danone, which boasts of being No. 1 in water, No. 1 in fresh dairy products and No. 2 in cereal biscuits and snack crackers; brands include Aqua, Wahaha and Volvic waters, Dannon yogurt and LU biscuits and crackers) 
Biotherm (cosmetics) 
DKNY - LVMH acquired 100 percent of Gabrielle Studio Inc., the privately owned licenser of Donna Karan trademarks. 
Jacobs Creek 
Givenchy 
Allegra (allergy medication, produced by the Strasbourg company Aventis Pharmaceuticals)
Pierre Cardin 
International Herald Tribune 
Air France 
Peugeot (tiny automobiles) 
Alcatel 
Renault (automobiles) 
Bollinger (champagne) 
Louis Vuitton 
Hennessy 
L'Oreal (health and beauty products) 
Lancome 
Motel 6 and Red Roof Inns are owned by Accor Hotels. 



Down with the French!
    William W.Fleming

Source:  http://www.itv.com
British war cemetery vandalised
1.35AM BST, 2 Apr 2003

A British Military cemetery in France has been vandalised and slogans sprayed supporting Saddam Hussein.

"Saddam will win and he will make you bleed," said one of the slogans sprayed across the base of a large cross marking the entrance of the cemetery in Etaples.

"Dig up your rubbish, it is contaminating our soil," another said.

Of the 11,000 graves at Etaples, most are British but there are other nationalities including Canadian and Australian.

France's relations with Britain have been soured by its opposition to coalition war in Iraq, but French officials said this was no excuse for venting hatred.

"Our disagreement with the coalition governments in no way authorises the undermining of the memory of men who sacrificed themselves for our country," the member of parliament for the region, Socialist Jack Lang, said in a statement.

The slogans were cleaned off by the French branch of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, which manages the site, but not before they were seen by two coach-loads of British tourists.

*Will's Comments*
Wow...see just how brave the French are?  First children now the graves of people who DIED to save their backwards little country from the Nazis.


WPBF TheWPBFChannel.com
Students Harrassed On Trip To France
Fri Mar 28, 1:06 PM ET

Thirty students from Bach Middle School of the Arts and their chaperones are home from a spring-break trip to France, where they say they were sometimes treated poorly because they are Americans.

"Sarah Blanc (pictured, right), 13, went on the trip to France with dozens of her classmates who wanted to see and experience culture in another country.

They say anti-American sentiments grew in France each day the United States got closer to war in Iraq.
Well, I didn't feel any hostility until the war broke out," Blanc said. "Then we saw antiwar demonstrations and kind of some unfriendly people."

When the bombs started dropping in Baghdad, hostility grew at an intimidating pace toward Blanc and her friends, she said.

"Somebody threw a glass bottle from their balcony because they heard us and knew we were American," Blanc said. "At that point, I felt bad that I couldn't call my parents to let them know how I was."

Blanc said at a marketplace, someone threw an apple at a sixth-grader on the trip with her, and a bakery clerk refused to serve the youngsters because they are Americans.

The girl's father, Peter Blanc, a Palm Beach County judge, was unaware of the incidents until his daughter returned home.

"I thought, like this country, there's good and bad in people, and I was glad to hear that her overwhelming experience is that people were happy and glad she was there," Peter Blanc said.

"It felt good to be home and back where I can be who I am -- an American," Sarah Blanc said.

*Will's comments*
     Oh great, just wonderful...  The French are such cowards they can only take on children!  Long live the mighty French who like to pick on little kids!!!  Cowards...such pathetic cowardly bullies...


Wednesday, March 26, 2003

BORDEAUX, France — Vandals in southwest Bordeaux torched a replica of the Statue of Liberty and cracked the pedestal of a plaque honoring victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.

The crowned head of the 8-foot-tall statue was blackened by fire and its eyes were marked with red paint, apparently to symbolize tears of blood, an official at the mayor's office said.

The statue and the Sept. 11 plaque are beside each other in a square near the city center.

The mayor of the southwestern city, Alain Juppe, condemned Wednesday's pre-dawn attack, saying the statue's message is especially pertinent in wartime.

"At a time when the world is living a major conflict, it is more important than ever to remain watchful of the values of peace and liberty," said Juppe, a former prime minister.

The Lady Liberty standing in New York Harbor was a gift from France to the United States commemorating freedom and friendship between the nations. It was made by Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi and dedicated in 1886.

Today, tensions between France and the United States have flared over the war in Iraq. French people overwhelmingly oppose the U.S.-led conflict and President Jacques Chirac angered many Americans by trying to slow the U.S. drive to war.

In France, vandals have ransacked McDonald's restaurants in Paris and Strasbourg, targeting the fast food chain as a symbol of American influence.

Cafeterias in the U.S. House of Representatives subsequently changed their menus to read "freedom fries" instead of French fries and "freedom toast" instead of French toast.

Lawmakers also introduced bills preventing France from participating in any postwar reconstruction projects.


Top Stories - Reuters

Boycott of American Goods Over Iraq War Gains
Tue Mar 25, 2:13 PM ET
by Erik Kirschbaum

BERLIN (Reuters) - No more Coca-Cola or Budweiser, no Marlboro, no American whiskey or even American Express cards -- a growing number of restaurants in Germany are taking everything American off their menus to protest the war in Iraq.

Although the protests are mainly symbolic, waiters in dozens of bars and restaurants in Hamburg, Berlin, Munich, Bonn and other German cities are telling patrons, "Sorry, Coca-Cola is not available any more due to the current political situation."

The boycotts appear to be part of a nascent worldwide movement. One Web site, www.consumers-against-war.de, calls for boycotts of 27 top American firms from Microsoft to Kodak while another, www.adbusters.org, urges the "millions of people against the war" to "Boycott Brand America."

Consumer fury seems to be on the rise. Demonstrators in Paris smashed the windows of a McDonald's restaurant last week, forcing police in riot gear to move in to protect staff and customers of the American fast-food outlet. The attackers sprayed obscenities and "boycott" on the windows.

In Indonesia, Iraq war opponents have pasted signs on McDonald's and other American food outlets, trying to force them shut by "sealing them" and urging Indonesians to avoid them.

In the Swiss city of Basel, 50 students recently staged a sit-down strike in front of a McDonald's to block customers' entry, waved peace signs and urged people to eat pretzels instead of hamburgers.

Anti-American sentiment has even reached provinces in Russia, where some rural eateries put up signs telling Americans they were unwelcome, according to an Izvestia newspaper report.

A German bicycle manufacturer, Riese und Mueller GmbH, canceled all business deals with its American suppliers.

"Americans only pay attention when money is on the line," director Heiko Mueller told Reuters, whose firm buys $300,000 worth of supplies from half a dozen American firms each year.

"We wanted to make a statement against this war and told our American partners that unless they renounce what their government is doing we won't do any business with them anymore."

SMALL BUT SYMBOLIC ACTS

The German restaurant boycotts of American products started small but spread rapidly after the Iraq war began on Thursday. The conflict has struck a raw nerve in a country that became decidedly anti-war after the devastation of World War II, which it initiated.

"If people all around the world boycott American products it might influence their policies," said Jean-Yves Mabileau, owner of "L'Auberge Francaise" which joined 10 Hamburg restaurants in banning Coca Cola, Philip Morris' Marlboro cigarettes, whiskey and other American goods.

"This started as a light-hearted reaction to Americans dumping French wine in the gutter and renaming 'French Fries' as 'Freedom Fries'," he said. "But it feels good to take a stand against this war. It is just a small gesture, but a good one."

Diners at the Osteria restaurant in Berlin are finding that "things go better without Coke" and are ordering Germany's long overshadowed imitation of "the real thing" -- the slightly sweeter "Afri-Cola" -- to express their outrage.

"We wanted to do something to express our annoyance," Osteria owner Fabio Angile told Reuters. "We want to hit America where it hurts -- in their wallets. None of the customers have complained. On the contrary, most thought it was a great idea."

Herve Keroureda, owner of a French restaurant in Hamburg known as "Ti Breizh," said he was astonished by the massive media coverage of their small-scale anti-American protest.

"It was only intended as a small gesture but has turned into a gigantic issue," he said. "And the reaction from the patrons has been tremendous. Most have called it a brilliant idea."

In Bonn, bartender Bruno Kessler said he was refusing to sell American whiskey or American beer such as Anheuser-Busch's Budweiser at his "Eifeler Stuben."

"I asked myself 'What can I possibly do to show my anger over this barbary?'," he told Germany's N-24 television network.

STARBUCKS, BIG MACS AVOIDED

Sarah Stolz, a 22-year-old German student of American studies, was headed for a Starbucks, coffee shop in central Berlin when her anti-war conscience got the best of her.

"I was thinking about going into Starbucks which I love, when I realized it was wrong," she said. "I'm backing the boycott because the war is totally unjustified."

Rita Marschall was avoiding McDonald's and Burger King.

"I'm boycotting American products because their policy on Iraq is totally wrong," said Marschall, 26, in front of a Berlin McDonald's. "It's just one of many ways we can take a stand."

Some German bakeries have renamed a local cake known as "Amerikaner" -- a disk-shaped pastry with icing on top -- as "Peace-ies," bearing a peace sign piped in chocolate sauce.

The boycotts are having only a negligible business impact. Establishments often associated with the American way of life such as Starbucks, Dunkin' Donuts, McDonald's and Coca-Cola reported no major business impact from the protests. Dunkin Donuts is owned by Britain's Allied Domecq

"We're really a local business in Germany, the product is made in Germany and they're boycotting German products," said Jonathan Chandler, communications director for Coca-Cola Europe, Eurasia and the Middle East in London.

Chandler declined comment on whether it was hurting sales, but an industry source said any impact would not be serious.

A spokeswoman for McDonald's in Europe said there had been no discernible impact on sales from the actions, and described the attack on the Paris restaurant as "an unfortunate incident during a protest."

"As a global entity, McDonald's is just a brand," she said. "Most of the restaurants are local franchises and support their local community. So why do they attack McDonald's? If you get a good answer please let me know."

In the London suburb of Milton Keynes, the Greens party have called on consumers to boycott 330 American products ranging from Mars bars to Gap jeans and American films on DVD and video.

In Zurich, travel agents said some clients who usually take holidays in the United States are changing their destinations.

"Some of the most loyal customers who have been traveling to the United States for years have changed their plans because they don't like what Bush is doing," Lucia Zeller, director of the Travac travel agency, told the Tages Anzeiger newspaper.


Please visit this site entitled, "Fuck France"!!!  You will LOVE it!!




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