View allAll Photos Tagged macron
Mech heads will get the reference. But damn dude. My all time favorite Giant 80's robot gets modernized in all the right ways!
Look at this beast! Admittedly i never saw the uncut japaneese show. But i did faithfully watch the Saban dub as a kid.
It was meshed together with another totally unrelated show called Srungle, to form one cohesive american syndicated package. But the MacStar was the definite star of this adaptation. I'm just pleased to see that this awesome design wasn't forgotten.
But you know, i never met anyone that remembered this show! Anyone reading this ever see this show too?
At a long run and ultimately citizens awaken and realize the wealth being shifted to others by globalist regimes in their own pocket. Taxation without public account will not be accepted anymore.
- Report
Macron, elected in May 2017, is facing mounting criticism for not speaking in public in more than a week as violence worsened.
By Geert De Clercq and Elena Gyldenkerne Massa
Reuters December 9, 2018
ca.news.yahoo.com/frances-macron-important-announcements-...
Macron et sa triste bande Massacre le PEUPLE Français
Lorsque tout sera terminé : ils seront jugés par le PEUPLE et paieront pour leurs CRIMES........
Allez voir cette Vidéo :
desarmons.net/index.php/2019/01/04/recensement-provisoire...
Mouvement "Les Gilets-Jaunes"
Mass street protest against french president Emmanuel Macron’s overhaul of labour laws – Civil servant's strike & demo in Paris - 10th october
Tens of thousands of protesters in Paris danced, picnicked and railed against President Emmanuel Macron at a “party” marking his first year in office. Protesters are angry at reforms led by Macron, a centrist former investment banker, such as cutting some worker protections and increasing police powers.
Last night President Emmanuel Macron spoke to the nation about extending the lockdown “lite” due to Covid-19. I heard: "Blah blah blah schools will close for at least 3 weeks blah blah blah the lockdown imposed on a third of the population will now be all of France blah blah blah people 60 and older will be able to get the vaccine from April 16 blah blah blah CAFÉ TERRACES AND SOME CULTURAL VENUES "COULD" RE-OPEN “UNDER STRICT RULES" FROM MID-MAY!" Six more weeks of no café Le Sélect!!!!!!!!! Sigh……..
“To all scientists, engineers, engineers, entrepreneurs, responsible citizens who were disappointed by the decision of the United States, I want to say that they will find in France a second homeland,” Macron said in his response to Trump. “I call on them: Come and work here with us — to work together on concrete solutions for our climate, our environment. I can assure you, France will not give up the fight.”French President Emmanuel Macron was disappointed with President Donald Trump’s announcement on Thursday that the United States would withdraw from the Paris climate agreement— but he had some fun too.In a speech and on Twitter, Macron adopted Trump’s signature slogan — “Make America Great Again” — but changed it slightly to invert the U.S. president’s agenda. “Make Our Planet Great Again,” Macron said.Like many other world leaders, Macron reiterated his commitment to the international climate agreement and to finding new ways to protect the planet from global warming.'Make our planet great again': Macron rebukes Trump over Paris withdrawal In a televised address, French president Emmanuel Macron rules out any renegotiation after Donald Trump pulled out of the Paris agreement on Thursday, calling the move a mistake. Macron, speaking in French and English, urged scientists, engineers, entrepreneurs and anyone disappointed by the decision to see France as a ‘second homeland’, adding: ‘I call on them come and work here with us.’ The French president said: ‘The Paris agreement remain irreversible and will be implemented not just by France but by all the other nations. We will succeed because we are fully committed, because wherever we live, whoever we are, we all share the same responsibility: make our planet great again.’While America’s exit from the 2015 accord is not expected to doom the deal, it will weaken the agreement and could hurt U.S. businesses, the very thing Trump says his decision will help. The decision also isolates the U.S. on an important issue as the international community aims to continue efforts to curb climate change. Only two other countries — Syria and Nicaragua — did not sign the agreement in 2015. Nicaragua didn't sign on because the nation felt the agreement would not go far enough to fight climate change.Macron, for his part, was not deterred by America’s withdrawal. He called on all people to continue working to help the planet, and broadcast his remarks in English, helping promote his joke on Trump’s slogan.“I call on you to remain confident. We will succeed,” the French leader said. “Because we are fully committed, because wherever we live, whoever we are, we all share the same responsibility: Make our planet great again.”
time.com/4802549/emmanuel-macron-trolls-donald-trump-pari...
President Donald Trump fulfilled a campaign promise on the Paris climate accord, announcing that “pulling out” was getting his final rose in a ceremony appropriately held at the White House Rose Garden.“In order to fulfill my solemn duty to protect America and its citizens, the United States will withdraw from the Paris Climate Accord,” Trump announced today. The Paris deal was just “the latest example of Washington entering into an agreement that disadvantages the United States to the advantage of other countries” and “a massive redistribution of United States wealth to other countries,” and “less about the climate and more about other countries gaining financial advantage over the United States.”“Thank you, thank you,” Trump beamed as the invited Rose Garden gathering applauded in approval. He said he will “re-negotiate” the Paris pact, or an “entirely new transaction, on terms fair to the United States, its businesses, its workers, its people, its taxpayers.”“So, we’re getting out, but will start to negotiate and see if we can make a deal that’s fair and if we can that’s great – and if we can’t, that’s fine,” Trump said.“As president, I can put no other consideration before the well-being of American citizens,” the president said.“I was elected to represent the citizens of Pittsburgh, not Paris. I promised to exit or renegotiate any deal which fails to serve America’s interest.”The mayor of Pittsburgh tweeted in response while Trump was still speaking: “I can assure you that we will follow the guidelines of the Paris agreement for our people, our economy and our future.” Pittsburgh voted for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election.Trump somewhat facetiously called upon the “obstructionists” of the Democratic Party to “get together with me” to either “renegotiate our way back into Paris on terms that are fair to the United States and its workers, or negotiate a new deal that protects our country and its taxpayers.”Trump had done a great job of creating much will-he-won’t-he suspense for Thursday’s big reveal, in the finest reality-TV tradition:I will be announcing my decision on Paris Accord, Thursday at 3:00 P.M. The White House Rose Garden. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!
deadline.com/2017/06/donald-trump-pulls-out-paris-climate...
Trump Announces Withdrawal From Paris Agreement.President Trump announced plans to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris Agreement on climate change Thursday, a move that will weaken a key international measure aimed at fighting global warming and isolate the U.S. on an issue of importance to allies across the globe.In a ceremony at the White House Rose Garden, Trump argued that dumping the deal as a win for his Administration's promise to create jobs and a rare success following through on a campaign promise."In order to fulfill my solemn duty to protect America and its citizens, the United States will withdraw from the Paris climate accord but begin negotiations to reenter either the Paris accords or really an entire new transaction on terms that are fair to the United States," he said."So we are getting out, but we will start to negotiate and we will see if we can make a deal that’s fair," he added.But energy and environmental policy experts say withdrawing will do little to bolster job growth and may actually hinder investment in the rapidly expanding clean energy sector, which has drawn $300 billion in annual investment in recent years. Executives from leading companies, including oil and gas giants like ExxonMobil and Shell, spent months lobbying the Trump White House to stay in the deal arguing that the pact provided a clear and effective structure for addressing climate change on an international scale. Even some in the coal industry pushed Trump to stay arguing the U.S. could use its seat at the table to promote fossil fuels, including the research and development of technology to decrease emissions from coal-fired power plants.California, New York and Washington Have United to Back the Paris Climate Accord
Trump also faced pressure to stay in the deal from the international community. Nearly every country across the globe supports the Agreement, with the exception of Nicaragua and Syria, and Trump has faced lobbying efforts through diplomatic channels since the early days of his presidency. That effort intensified in Italy during the G-7 summit last week where heads of government told Trump in stark terms that leaving the deal would be a mistake. The meeting ended with the U.S. declining to participate in a joint statement supporting the deal endorsed by the other countries.The move, which will take several years to implement according to a White House source, joins a long list of maneuvers from the Trump White House aimed at dismantling President Obama's legacy on climate change, from initiating a reevaluation of Obama's rules on power plant emissions to pushing the development of oil and gas pipelines. But how to approach the Paris Agreement divided senior members of the Trump administration unlike the other rollbacks of environmental protections. For months, advisers debated how the agreement would affect Trump's domestic policy agenda as well as the political implications of the decision.Ultimately, Trump sided with the hardliners within his Administration, including chief strategist Steve Bannon and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt, who insisted that withdraw would further his domestic agenda and rally his base. He also received calls to leave from several conservative groups and 22 Republican senators. Still, the withdraw push faced considerable setbacks including disagreement from Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, chief economic advisor Gary Cohn as well as his daughter, Ivanka, and son-in-law, Jared Kushner.More than any other environmental policy change, the Paris Agreement represents a dramatic change in direction from the past decade of international discussions on climate change. Under Obama, the U.S. forged key partnerships with countries including China and India and helped structure the text of the deal to address concerns from developing countries. In many ways, the result was a symbolic commitment calling for every country to work to address climate change, setting their own targets and working to meet them with their own policies. Countries set only voluntary greenhouse gas emissions reductions targets and the most significant binding portion of the Agreement was only that countries report their progress transparently.
Ditching the agreement signals to the world that the U.S. has no interest in the issue, even symbolically without any cost or penalty, and is willing to toss aside years of grinding work from the global community. Negotiations have been ongoing since the early 1990s under a United Nations body charged with addressing climate change, and the Paris Agreement is widely considered the culmination of that effort.Still, a U.S. exit will not kill the Paris Agreement, and world leaders have only reaffirmed their commitments in response to Trump. China and the European Union have both tried to position themselves as the natural heirs to the mantel of leadership assumed by the U.S. during the Obama years. They announced last month a joint summit to bring together global leaders on the issue, a group that does not include the U.S. Both have said they will continue to help fund renewable energy projects in the developing world. "If the U.S. is not seen as one of the leading nations, it’s quite clear that other counties will turn more to us, more to Chinese," Maroš Šefčovič, vice president of the European Commission and the chief energy policymaker for the European Union, told TIME earlier this year.Indeed, the most significant consequence of withdraw for the U.S. may be the diplomatic fallout and the loss of respect for U.S. leadership. Former State Department Climate Envoy Todd Stern, who negotiated the Paris Agreement on behalf of the U.S., described this as "collateral damage" in an interview with TIME earlier this year.
"Countries all over the world are quite invested in the Paris Agreement," he said. "It was a long time coming and widely regarded as a historic step forward ... you’re going to have a lot of anger."Zeke Miller contributed to this report
time.com/4801134/paris-agreement-withdrawal-donald-trump-...
Dear Donald: Don't Make Your Anti-Climate-Change Announcement in a Garden.This afternoon President Donald Trump stood in the White House Rose Garden and announced that the country is withdrawing from the Paris Agreement. You could practically hear the bushes withering in despair.According to United Nations climate change experts, if humans do nothing to halt the rise in global temperatures, by 2100 we'll face mass extinctions, flooding, drought, and starvation. Theoretical physicist and all-around genius Stephen Hawking gave our species 100 years to escape the planet or perish, and that was before Trump pulled out of the global commitment to prevent Earth from warming by more than 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, the tipping point at which these catastrophic events will ensue.TRUMP MADE HIS SPEECH WHILE STANDING IN THE 83-DEGREE SUNSHINE SURROUNDED BY TREES AND FLOWERS AND CLEAN AIR AND ALL THE THINGS THIS ANNOUNCEMENT PROMISES TO DESTROY.The Paris treaty has been ratified by 146 other countries besides the U.S., so it's not as though the planet will spontaneously combust without our participation. But all is kind of lost: The success of the agreement hinges on developed countries like the United States—whose coal burning and car driving have gotten the world into this mess—helping to finance developing nations' move toward cleaner energy. Plus (and I'm a journalist, not a scientist, but I'd venture to guess) if you're not working to reduce global warming, there's a damn good chance you're increasing it.Donald Trump said "In the French version, he added: “The Unites States has turned its back on the world but we haven’t turned our backs on the Americans.”Emmanuel Macron said: “I want to say that they will find in France a second homeland. I call on them: ’Come, work and here with us, to work together on concrete solutions for our climate.’”It's not surprising that Trump pulled out. He's long claimed climate change is a hoax perpetrated by the Chinese and campaigned on the promise of doing just what he did today. In his speech he said that, "the Paris Climate Agreement is simply the latest example of Washington entering into an agreement that disadvantages the U.S. to the exclusive benefit of other countries, leaving American workers—who I love—and taxpayers to absorb the cost."But the move was still shocking. And not just because this man has grandchildren who will likely live through the disaster scenarios described above. (Or that he'll probably have to replace his golf habit with, say, billiards.) But because he did it standing in the 83-degree sunshine on the first day of June (a slightly higher-than-average temperature, by the way) surrounded by trees and flowers and clean air and all the things this announcement promises to destroy..So next time you want to put on a press conference about how you're ruining the only planet the American people have, Donald, think about the irony and make that speech from the safety of one of your gilded ballrooms instead.
www.marieclaire.com/politics/news/a27478/donald-trump-par...
A4 - macron pen on paper - 2019
more about it on my blockchain: peakd.com/artzone/@thermoplastic/bogomil-s-ossuary
Prints available:
otto-rapp.pixels.com/featured/bogomils-ossuary-otto-rapp....
Depuis samedi 22 juin à 4h40 du matin, Steve Maia Caniço est porté disparu suite à une attaque policière extrêmement violente lors de la fin de la Fête de la Musique, ici même au bord de la Loire, Quai Wilson.
Désormais, et devant le déni méprisant des responsables, la question se pose, partout : OU EST STEVE ?
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Infos, revue de presse et affiches : frama.link/oueststeve
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📷 #photo (cc-nc-sa) ValK.
Nantes, le 18 juillet 2019.
👀 + de photos: frama.link/valk
ℹ infos, liens et soutien: liberapay.com/ValK
Mass street protest against french president Emmanuel Macron’s overhaul of labour laws – Civil servant's strike & demo in Paris - 10th october
Mass street protest against french president Emmanuel Macron’s overhaul of labour laws – Civil servant's strike & demo in Paris - 10th october
Nantes, manifestation interprofessionnelle, intersyndicale et intergénérationnelle, contre Macron et son monde, le 19 avril 2018.
Emmanuel Macron,
A la remise des prix des meilleurs apprentis de France,
Pour E-Press.
Paris, le 20 avril 2016.
_________________
L'accueil reçu par celui qui lançait "En Marche" 15 jours auparavant, il y a tout juste 1 an, dans cette assemblée de PME et d'entrepreneurs artisans était bluffant. Je me souviens de ma surprise devant cet enthousiasme un peu folklorique.
Ben voila, comment passer du folklore à la Présidence de la République Française...?
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2016-04-20 13-48-06 _DSC3875-Modifié
German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrive in Toulouse for a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron
Callsign "German Air Force 16+01"
Aircraft Name "Konrad Adenauer"
F-WWJI / MSN 274 - Ex Lufthansa / D-AIGR
The Macron Stadium, Bolton prior to the Sky Bet Championship match between Bolton Wanderers and Sunderland on Tuesday 20th February 2018. (Credit: Mark Fletcher | MI News & Sport Ltd)
©MI News & Sport Ltd
Tel: +44 7752 571576
e-mail: markf@mediaimage.co.uk
Address: 1 Victoria Grove, Stockton on Tees, TS19 7EL
Mass street protest against french president Emmanuel Macron’s overhaul of labour laws – Civil servant's strike & demo in Paris - 10th october
Mass street protest against french president Emmanuel Macron’s overhaul of labour laws – Civil servant's strike & demo in Paris - 10th october
Mass street protest against french president Emmanuel Macron’s overhaul of labour laws – Civil servant's strike & demo in Paris - 10th october
On the skyphos the painter Macron has painted the abduction of Briseis by Agamemnon Eurybates from Achilles’ tent, Iliad’s Canto 1, lines 330−48. The bearded king, wearing his breastplate embellished with lambrequins, is armed with his spear and sword, which is slipped into a scabbard whose end is adorned with a lion's head. He is seizing young Briseis by the arm; her chiton and himation cover her head. The two figures are followed by the heralds Talthybios and Diomedes, who are named in the inscriptions. They are each wearing a petasus, a chlamys and endromides (boots). The inscriptions reading, from left, Αγ[α]μεσμο[ν] - Θαλ(θ)υβιος{3} – Διομεδες identify the male characters.
This skyphos, signed by the potter Hieron and attributed to Macron by J.D. Beazley, is an example of the collaboration between the potter and the painter during the early part of the fifth century BC. Macron, one of the most prolific artists in Attic red-figure pottery (around 350 vases are attributed to him), signed very few vases as a painter but worked constantly with the potter Hieron, whose signature appears on around 30 cups.
Source: Notice Louvre WEB site
CARC / CAVI @ www.beazley.ox.ac.uk
Attic red figure skyphos
Heigh 31 cm.; diameter 28 cm.; width 40 cm.
Attributed to Macron as painter by Beazley & Hieron as potter by signature “hιερον επο”
Late Archaic Period
Ca. 480 BC
Paris, Musée du Louvre – Inv G 146
created for: Surrealart challenge " Time Travel "
The astronomer Galileo observes the sky when someone from the 21st century arrives to take part in the observation.
picture: "Galileo Galilei by:" Edmond van Hove
Macron, ce salaud d' aristo. et ses amis/escrocs du Kapital disent des français qu'ils sont fainéants (!?!).
Regardez bien les mains de cet artisan.
Her last day at work
Grosse manifestation contre la réforme Macron des retraites le 31 janvier 2023 à Caen à l'appel de tous les syndicats et de toutes les gauches
Protesting against President Emmanuel Macron’s unpopular labour reforms in central Paris. This reform aims to make workers more precarious and easy to fire.
Marche du 23 septembre 2017 à l'appel des Insoumis et de Mélenchon
Tens of thousands of protesters in Paris danced, picnicked and railed against President Emmanuel Macron at a “party” marking his first year in office. Protesters are angry at reforms led by Macron, a centrist former investment banker, such as cutting some worker protections and increasing police powers.