Frustrated, a French police union has taken to advertising for a celebrity to help them get a meeting with their own president, after he repeatedly ignored requests for a meeting with them, choosing handshakes with celebrities on camera instead.
Both celebrities will ask Macron to fund their globalist charities to the tune of millions, to which he has already more or less agreed by meeting with them in public. In 2005, at the G8 summit in Scotland, Bono heaped praise on Tony Blair and George Bush, despite the butchery they had initiated in Iraq.
The VIGI police union are now advertising for a celebrity on their Facebook page:
“Vigi is looking for someone from showbiz to make sure our President is interested in the security of the people and the working conditions of the police.
“Vigi wrote an open letter dated 13 July 2017 to request an audience with the president of the republic concerning the working conditions of the staff of the ministry of the interior and the national police, as well as to alert him to the consequences of the budget cuts of more than €370 million, endangering the safety of the population…
“…We did not know that in order to discuss a subject with Mr President, we had to have as a spokesman who is a person in show business.
“Education has Rihanna, preventable diseases and poverty have Bono…
“…So we’re looking for a showbiz star, so we can make Emmanuel Macron aware of people’s safety.
Please contact us at 01 55 82 36”
The French police overwhelmingly backed Le Pen, so it is perhaps no surprise Macron is trying to avoid them.
Unsurprisingly, the most important issue facing the police is security and the fight against terrorism, which France has struggled to come to grips to with an unusually high number of ISIS attacks in the country including the Bataclan massacre and the attack on the offices of Charlie Hebdo.
Bono’s charity ONE has been working with the biotech company Monsanto and the grain trading giant Cargill, which has a large Monsanto shareholding. In his book The Frontman: Bono (in the Name of Power), the Irish author Harry Browne writes that “for nearly three decades as a public figure, Bono has been … amplifying elite discourses, advocating ineffective solutions, patronising the poor and kissing the arses of the rich and powerful”.