Difference between M. Antoinette and FLOTUS? Marie didn't chide people for eating cake. http://t.co/roczSXQwoj
— Tamara K. (@TamSlick) February 14, 2014
None of those grinding income inequality food deserts at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, no siree! For an appetizer, they served lark's tongues in aspic and irony.
It's not income inequality. They're using all of our income for it.
ReplyDeleteMoreover, "Let them eat cake" was a line from a play written about that time, or from Jean Jaques Rousseau' autobiography, written when Marie Antoinette was 9 years old, and her biographer (who wasn't exactly writing hagiography) didn't quote her as saying it (The seeking out of a citation is left as an exercise for the class). It's up there, then, with "I can see Russia from my Porch."
ReplyDeleteThe First Lady, however, did chide us for eating whatever is on her no-no list this week.
Another difference is that the LARGE hump on the lower back of Marie's dresses were fashion accessories.
ReplyDeleteWord has it the 'meal' served was somewhere in the vicinity of 2500 calories... But according to FLOTUS you're not supposed to consume that in a day, so did they pass on breakfast and lunch??? :-)
ReplyDeleteNot seeing a problem here. One of the reasons I eat a healthy diet most of the time is so I can enjoy special occasions without worrying about calories or chloresterol.
ReplyDeleteAnd if they served a simple meal of rice & beans for a state dinner, I'm sure there would be snide comments about it just being political theater.
And let's not forget that Darden Restaurants (Olive Garden, Red Lobster, Longhorn and Bahama Breeze) went all in with backing her nagging and is now struggling financially.
ReplyDelete"Not seeing a problem here."
ReplyDeleteOf course you aren't.
The problem isn't the state dinner; the problem is the personal "FLOTUS" Twitter account of the woman who is constantly finger-wagging about healthy eating and income inequality being used to tweet a picture of two dogs draped in bling sitting at a table pimped like a set piece from a Louis Quinze costume drama.
If that doesn't strike you as just a little tone deaf, I'm suggesting you might be a teeny bit partisan in your politics.
The saying was "Qu'ils mangent de la brioche or "Let them eat brioche" (a rich bread made from flour, butter, milk, sugar and eggs), but Marie Antoinette did not say it.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/let-them-eat-cake.html
Ed,
ReplyDelete1) I did know that, actually.
B. Have I told you my Indian name? ;)