And if she wants to stay there, channel-surfing on her couch all day long, that's exactly where she belongs. She's another one-percenter who can't see the real world past her mansion gates. Despite what The Telegraph suggests, Bruni-Sarkozy's comments don't prove why women still need feminism, when there are so many more intellectually thoughtful examples to support the case. French first lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, Britains Prince Charles, the Duchess of Cornwall, and French President Nicolas Sarkozy, leave the Douaumont memorial Tuesday in Verdun, France, following. On the other hand, do we really want to spend our limited free time expending energy on what Bruni-Sarkozy thinks? Admittedly, there's a certain sport in firing back a few potshots of our own, such as British novelist Fay Weldon's observation to The Telegraph: "Just because a woman stays at home to look after the children, doesn't mean she is devoid of a brain – though I suspect that Carla is." But that feels unworthy. (Much as we admire Michelle Obama for her consciousness-raising efforts.) But one would think that between Romney's 47-per-cent, and the tension of the Occupy movement, the pampered class would learn to keep their comments to their silver-spooned selves. Bruni-Sarkozy, who married then French President Nicolas Sarkozy in 2008, has hardly set a standard as someone whose opinions should be taken seriously, and being married to a political leader shouldn't require that she does. You gotta love/hate her for being so clueless. Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, former supermodel, French pop star, mother of two, wife of former President Nicolas Sarkozy, was never a typical first lady even for a country where that title is not an. Or as Bryony Gordon wrote in The Telegraph: "By doing the 'same thing every day,' does she mean shopping or gazing adoringly at herself in the mirror?' This includes, as she informed French reporters earlier this year, watching soap operas and reality TV with her baby (while presumably someone else does the laundry). I love family life, I love doing the same thing every day," she told the magazine. In the first volume of his autobiography, The Time of Storms, he revealed that on that same 2008 state visit he was so nervous he mistook a glass of gin for water and gulped it down."I'm not all an active feminist. Indeed, he is still appreciative of wine, once being served a 1961 Château Margaux at a banquet held by Queen Elizabeth II. You don’t need to practice something to be interested in it…” A flock of global entertainment notables and politicos, including Frances first lady Carla Bruni, toasted Nelson Mandelas 91st birthday with an all-star concert at Radio City Music Hall.The. If he had tasted drunkenness, I don’t know where we would be.”Īt a lunch at the Élysée Palace, Sarkozy once retorted to a guest who questioned why he wasn’t drinking: “I don’t drink wine and yet I am very interested in French wine. In the interview, Bruni disclosed: “He only likes the scent of wine, he doesn’t like the taste and I think he doesn’t like letting go either. Though you might expect the man who was President of France from 2007 to 2015 to enjoy partaking in a glass or two of something with lunch, Sarkozy is actually teetotal and claims to have “never drunk a drop of alcohol” in his life. In an interview with French celebrity gossip magazine Gala, the former First Lady shared that her husband tastes wine, but never drinks it. ‘Nude Carla Bruni’ Pics Dupe Foreign Diplomats You might think that senior diplomats, engaged in top-level international negotiations, would be too busy or too wise to be tempted into checking out unsolicited pictures of naked ladies, sent from anonymous sources, on their work emails.
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