![]() ![]() We are working these days on very, very serious issues of war and peace, life or death. When reached for a statement by the Times, a French Embassy spokeswoman said, ''I wonder if it's worth a comment. Jones, who was inspired by Cubbie's, a restaurant in his home state that had earned a little bit of press after deciding to rename their fries. ![]() The idea for the change came from North Carolina Representative Walter B. "This action today is a small, but symbolic effort to show the strong displeasure of many on Capitol Hill with the actions of our so-called ally, France," Rep. forces (along with troops from the U.K., Australia, and Poland) officially invaded Iraq, a sign was placed in the Longworth House Office Building food court that read, ''Update: Now serving in all House office buildings. French fries would become "freedom fries," French toast "freedom toast." According to the New York Times, "The action was unilateral."īarely a week before U.S. Bob Ney, an Ohio Republican who was chairman of the House Administration Committee and therefore in charge of operations for the Capitol complex, ordered that the word "French" be removed from all affiliated menus. War fever grew, and "with us or against us" found its way to the U.S. The UN couldn't find evidence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, but the United States made it clear that invasion was inevitable. We believe that military intervention would be the worst solution."īy March, the course had been set. "As we’ve said from the outset," French Foreign affairs Minister Dominique de Villepin said in January 2003, "we will not join in military intervention that did not have international support. said, "Nope." One notable dissenter was France, whose officials had been vocally opposed to the imminent conflict. While cobbling together a "coalition of the willing," many historical allies of the U.S. In early 2003, the United States was in the midst of a (rather unsuccessful) attempt to drum up worldwide support for a potential war with Iraq. Yes, there was a time when some Americans decided to call French fries "freedom fries"-embarrassingly, a number of those people happened to be elected officials in the U.S. ![]() Taylor writes: I'm a high school student and my history teacher just told us about how the United States once called French fries "freedom fries" to spite France. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |