France’s pension system is facing severe tests, influenced by population aging, low fertility rates, and challenges in immigration integration. These factors amplify the fiscal pressures of the pay-as-you-go model. From my observation, while North African immigrants provide labor supplementation, their lower productivity and generous family reunification policies may exacerbate future retirement expenditure burdens, thereby threatening … Continue reading France’s Pension Crisis and North African Immigration
Author: otto
High Cultural Spending, Low Curatorial Freedom
The Economic and Democratic Paradox of France as a “Cultural Power” Judging by aggregate figures alone, France has every reason to present itself as a “cultural power.” When national and local government spending are combined, public expenditure on culture has long hovered around 2% of GDP, well above the EU average and higher than in … Continue reading High Cultural Spending, Low Curatorial Freedom
What I Felt at CES 2026 Was Not Just Anxiety, but an Economy Being Forced to Accelerate
If I am completely honest, my reaction after listening to the conversations surrounding CES 2026 was deeply ambivalent. On the one hand, I could clearly sense that a “production function explosion” is approaching. On the other, I could not deny that this technological narrative is not merely another episode of speculative excess, it directly confronts … Continue reading What I Felt at CES 2026 Was Not Just Anxiety, but an Economy Being Forced to Accelerate
From Venezuela to France: How Democracy Destroys Itself in the Name of “Good Intentions”
I often find myself thinking about Venezuela. It is not a distant Latin American tragedy, but rather a mirror reflecting the trajectory of France, and, more broadly, of Western civilization itself: a movement from democracy to systemic infantilization, from moral virtue to self-destruction. I care less about Maduro as a dictator than about the invisible … Continue reading From Venezuela to France: How Democracy Destroys Itself in the Name of “Good Intentions”




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