Existentialism is the theme of my response to acts of killings in recent days in France.
Thus Sartre said that "Words are like loaded pistols."
Those who bear public speech should follow this philosophical thought in these times of economic crisis as well as moral.
Because "I exist because I think ..." (Nausea, Sartre, ed. Gallimard, 1938, p. 145)
And misguided public speech, a criminal mind can quickly seize it to take action to irreversible killing.
And then, there remains the impotent indignation: "So that's hell. I never thought ... Remember: sulfur, bonfire, grill ... Ah! what a joke. No need to grill: hell is other people. "(No Exit, Jean-Paul Sartre, ed. Gallimard, 2000 (ISBN 2-07-036807-6), p. 92)
And hope as punishment for the criminal: "Evil, that must hurt everyone. And first to him who does it. "(The Devil and the Good Lord, Jean-Paul Sartre, ed. Gallimard, 1971 (ISBN 2-07-036869-6 ISBN), Act I, Scene IV, p. 80)
"If you look at yourself in the mirror too long, you would see a monkey. "I had to look even longer: what I see is well below the monkey on the edge of the plant world, in polyps. "
Whoever speaks in rhyme, words of hatred sown and ultimately kills is with polyps. There is nothing human in the mirror reflection. (Nausea, Sartre, ed. Gallimard, 1938 (ISBN 2-07-036805-X), p. 34)
Hatred makes wild and bloody.
Anne-Marie Champoussin
(A French version is available online here)
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