On the front page: it’s mild, but for Le Figaro it’s winter

On the front page its mild but for Le Figaro

“They took out the down jacket, put on a turtleneck” hangs the conservative newspaper. And yet, Release reminds us in One that it is 30 degrees in autumn. So they took out the down jacket, but they’re going ” especially to tighten the belt » for Le Figaro which goes back and forth on a survey on the “end of abundance”. ” Nearly three-quarters of French people have reduced their everyday consumer spending. A ” voluntary sobriety which spares no one. Understand even the richest are affected. ” The more affluent classes fear that tomorrow will be harder […] This concern even affects people who voted for Macron or Pécresse in the presidential election. worries the director of the polling institute, whose latest study serves as the backbone of this article. Finally, fortunately there are the testimonials. Aude, stay-at-home mother of 5 children. Who, at Christmas, will make voluntary sobriety as requested by the president”. Macron not Rene Coty. There is Jeanne also summoned to choose between ” her hair dryer and her toaster”. There is also Camille, mother in her forties of seven children, with her smart and her Louboutin pumps” who won’t be going to the countryside for months “well not for a simple weekend”. Hard working life. And I’m not talking to you about Marie-Thérèse who will deprive her cat of ” salmon croquettes, nor of Charles, a Parisian executive who ” plague “ according to Le Figaro. He won’t go more than once in his Norman manor »

We are tightening our belts on all floors in France

Release went to meet villagers who live under water restrictions due to the drought that is hitting the South-East. In the Var, in 9 communes of the Pays de Fayence, the inhabitants have to live with less than 100 liters of water per person per day. So Françoise only takes a shower” every two days “ ; flush the toilet after two or three pees”. Faced with a source that is drying up and a population that ” has doubled in thirty years”the ” drought crisis ” is ” at its highest level of gravity”. Even the mayor is upset. He whose commune Saint-Paul-en-Forêt received his ” first floral village award ». Well this year they had to “letting the flowering die”. Illustration of this France marked by climate change which threatens “access to water and biodiversity” remember Freed.

So we let the flowers die, and the dead in France, we don’t really know what to do with them…Mehdi

“It’s an immutable ritual: the dead is placed in a coffin and we meet at the cemetery. We cry and say goodbye. It’s been like that since the dawn of time.”. Well that was before we tell The world in a hilarious cremation article that is gaining traction. ” 40% of deceased people are cremated “. It was ” 1% thirty years ago ». So what to do with this handful of inert matter ? asks the evening paper. Bury them, scatter them, seal the urn on a grave ? ». Brain teaser. ” There is only one death but almost too many possibilities” affirms The world. ” People lack information. laments the president of the French cremation federation. A test, scattering the ashes on a coastal path, allowed or not allowed?

Not allowed. Not allowed indeed because in France, it must be “ apart from any facilities provided for the public”. “If you wanted to incorporate the ashes into a piece of jewelry, no », says The world. Or ” mix them with the leftovers of a dog, ditto » it’s no ! Tales of ashes often “funny”urns that travel or put back in the closet at the entrance of the house, so many stories of goodbye with our dear deceased to read of course by the fireside.

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