As the French nation prepares for a massive rally in support of liberty and free speech in the wake of the January 7th murders, certain ironies cannot escape attention. The entire political establishment will be out for this rally, yet they were all targets in the past of Charlie Hebdo's pointed satire. Some of them voiced disgust and disdain when they were the targets, or they showed no interest in fixing the problems exposed in the journal. Good for them, I suppose, if they are now ready take criticism more seriously and pay free speech and democracy more regard.
Just in case anyone gets the impression that Charlie Hebdo did only crude satirical cartoons about religion, let's remember that these jokers had the courage to take on all sacred cows, even the ones with Iodine 131 and Strontium 90 in their milk.
Below is the cover page of Charlie Hebdo's special nuclear issue from 2012. The French original of the cover page and accompanying text is here.
The full issue does not appear to be available in digital format.
The full issue does not appear to be available in digital format.
The Nuclear Swindle: 70 Years of French
Atomic Radiation
Charlie
Hebdo Responds to
Montebourg*
DOWNLOAD IT HERE: Special Edition of Charlie Hebdo, September 2012
(This link goes to a pdf file of the complete issue, still in French only. The journal appears to have no interest in reissuing it, and the back cover advises people to steal it if necessary, so go ahead. Download it, share it, translate it into your language).
Contents:
Great Follies of the Past
The Anti-Nuclear Movement
The Gifts Were Almost
Perfect
The Future of an
Illusion
Next
September 15, all government-sanctioned ecological issues will be examined at
the Environmental Conference. It’s a safe bet that the topic of nuclear energy
will not be broached, as it was carefully swept under the carpet at the
Environmental Roundtable held by Nicolas Sarkozy in 2007. Montebourg and Valls,
representatives of a largely pro-nuclear Parti Socialist, set the limits of
debate by declaring that “nuclear is an industry of the future.” It has been
like this for fifty years whenever the question of nuclear energy is addressed.
In
these sixty-four pages, Fabrice Nicolino retraces the history of atomic
radiation in France. Light is finally shone on figures unknown by society, such
as Pierre Guillaumat, and on discreet institutions such as the Peon Commission.
In 1974, Prime Minister Pierre Messmer announced on television a massive plan
to construct nuclear power plants. The result: today France has the highest per
capita ratio of nuclear power plants in the world, and the nation is directed
by the interests of EDF (electricity provider, Electricité de France), AREVA (nuclear power plant construction,
uranium mining) and the CGT (labor, Conféderation
Générale du Travail). No one lifts a finger against this scam.
Nuclear
is a hold-up. A robbery in which democracy is the booty. Charlie Hebdo has been opposed to the all-nuclear policy since the
1970s. In this special issue Fournier, Reiser and Cavanna collaborate with
Fabrice Nicolino, journalist and militant ecologist (author of Bidoche, The
Meat Industry Menaces the World and Who Killed Ecology?).
*Minister of Industrial
Renewal, May 2012-August 2014.
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