The essayist and former host of "Balance your post"
Éric Naulleau
has just published
The fault of
Rousseau.
A book written in vitriol on the ecologist deputy Sandrine Rousseau, whom he accuses of seeking to "criminalize" male desire and of misleading, at the same time, feminism.
After "What time" on France 2 last Saturday, he was invited, Thursday, May 4, on the set of "Touche pas à mon poste".
During their discussion, Gilles Verdez came to wonder, no longer about this enmity towards Sandrine Rousseau, but about his friendship with Éric Zemmour.
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“When you say you are on the left, being friends with someone on the far right, who has been convicted, I don't understand (...) That you are friends with someone who generally thinks that Islam and the Muslims are too many, I don't understand,”
the former print journalist charges.
Éric Naulleau returns this argument to him, according to him equivalent:
“How can you be the support of Mr. Mélenchon who holds an anti-republican speech, which borders more and more on the call for insurrection, the call for violence
?
Gilles Verdez then assures that he is neither the support, and even less the friend, of the leader LFI.
This does not prevent his interlocutor from accusing him of being, with Sandrine Rousseau and Jean-Luc Mélenchon,
"a representative of
Géraldine Maillet speaks in the general hubbub:
“It seems to me that Cyril is friends with people who have been in prison, who have made serious mistakes.
They were convicted.
(…) But they have served their sentence”
, she says, to go in the direction of Éric Naulleau.
No doubt she was thinking of the former carbon tax scammer Marco Mouly, who has visited the C8 set several times since the broadcast of the documentary
The Kings of the Scam
on Netflix.
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Matthieu Derlormeau raises:
“Gilles, if only one of your friends was condemned for insult or something else, you release him from your friends?”
Answer of the interested party:
I do not have friend of extreme right, and I am proud of it, here is all that I say.
I have no friends who want to eliminate Muslims and Islam from France.”
Éric Naulleau, obviously not convinced, gets tougher:
“Are you going to come up with a valid argument before the end of the debate?
This is my great anguish.
For the moment, everything is in the wall, everything is off, everything is off topic.