Gay
Paree
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
DIGG THIS
We’re back
in Paris...but in a new office. As we write we are sitting at a
sidewalk café having a cup of tea and "une tartine"
– bread and butter.
A motorcyclist,
characteristically dressed all in black leather, just stopped right
in front of us. Dismounting, the helmet came off and a swish of
bright, blond hair came out. She shook her head like a Clairol model...and
then began to take her pants off. Well, actually, she was stripping
off her riding pants, underneath of which were a pair of blue jeans...but
our pulse picked up for a moment.
...And now
she’s packed her pants into a backpack and headed off down the street.
Every neighborhood
has its charm.
This morning,
we thought we saw Audrey Hepburn re-incarnate. This time it was
a motor scooter that brought her before us. The scooter stopped
in the middle of the Rue Royale. A sprightly young woman got off
the back, she took off her helmet...and gave a kiss to the man in
front of her. Then, she set off across the street.
This is a professional
neighborhood. In the morning, men are almost all dressed in suits.
Women wear elegant work outfits. They all bustle around until about
9:30 AM; by then, they have taken up their jobs and the tourists
and shoppers take over.
It is nice,
but this "quartier" – near the Madeleine – is much more
businesslike...and more chic...than our old digs on the Rue de la
Verrerie. We miss the geriatric whores...the flamboyant poofters...and
the mentally deranged street people – we loved them all. Near the
old office, for example, an old man lived in a cardboard box. He
had been there for years...and sported a long gray beard. We used
to ask him for financial advice occasionally...but he gave us only
cryptic replies. Is the economy improving, we had asked? "Strawberry
raincakes," he replied.
And the prostitutes...what
a delight it was to sit in the Paradis Café and drink a glass
of cheap rouge with them. One always wore a black, lacquered rain
coat and carried a white lapdog with her. We never saw her with
a paying customer...and we couldn’t imagine who would pay for her
services...but it was a pleasure to be in her company. For there
was a woman who understood the financial industry. "If they don’t
pay...well, f*** ’em," we overheard her say to the bartender one
day. It was a phrase so rich in paradox...yet so sure and to the
point...we could tell immediately that she might have had a nice
career on Wall Street if fortune had taken her in that direction.
But she probably
began business long before women were admitted to financial careers.
In fact, she was so old, she probably started out before women could
even vote in France.
We’re not joking;
women only got the vote in France in 1945. Since then, the country
has been going downhill, as any Frenchman will tell you.
Of course,
it’s not women’s fault. The system degrades naturally and ineluctably.
Feminine intervention is not needed.
"As soon
as women take over a profession," said our neighbor yesterday,
"the profession is discredited. The first women to enter a
formerly male profession are seen as pioneers...they are highly
regarded. But when women dominate the profession, the profession
itself is downgraded. It is taken less seriously. People earn less.
"That’s
what happened to school teachers...and now it’s happening to medicine."
Our neighbor
is a doctor. And a woman.
"Women
are not able to invest the kind of time and energy into a profession
that men can, because women have other interests and concerns...family,
usually. So people take them less seriously in the business world.
And when they take over a profession, the profession becomes less
serious. I guess that’s just normal."
We
don’t know. But we’re ready to believe anything...or nothing at
all.
"And now
it’s even happening to the military. More and more women are being
permitted to do more and more different jobs in the military. So
the whole image of the military service is softening. I don’t know
whether that is a good thing or not.
"But
the one area that is still very much dominated by aggressive, ambitious
men is finance. Men in finance work 80 hours and week...and they
earn millions. And as far as I know, very few women can compete."
• Here’s an
interesting headline: "Labor shortage leaves fruit rotting."
So there you are, dear reader, a new career path. Isn’t this economy
amazing? It can produce an almost unlimited number of low-paying
jobs.
October
3, 2006
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis.
Copyright
© 2006 Bill Bonner
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