LETTER FROM PARIS: Spiderman vs the brain behind a conspiracy
THIS country has always been reputed for its cold dismissal of commonplace, illogical ideologies. After all it was the French thinker Descartes who had proven his existence by a rational statement in Latin: cogito, ergo sum (I think, therefore I am).
But gone are those times. Today you are no longer expected to reflect but rather believe in the tweetered and facebooked brainwash. If you disagree, you are accused of being an intellectual terrorist. Such is the dilemma for a well known French journalist André Bercoff who had dared to raise a few politically incorrect questions during a debate last week on the TV network Cnews.
The discussion concerned a video aired practically by all the channels a few days earlier bringing tears to the eyes of millions of viewers, and since then repeated on the so-called ‘social networks’ thousands of times every day.
It shows a modern building in the centre of Paris. You see on the balcony of the fourth floor a child hanging outside, holding on to the edge of the gallery only with one hand. Then appears a man followed by a woman on the adjacent balcony. He puts his arm around the child’s body but doesn’t pull up.
All of a sudden the camera focuses on another figure down in the street leaping up from the ground level to the first floor like Spiderman. He continues his bounces to the second and the third floor and finally reaches the fourth floor with astonishing speed and saves the child. The video abruptly stops here.