Wednesday 25 May 2011

Savoir faire? No, I just play the numbers


Some would say that powerful politicians in France are
the inheritors of the King's "droit de cuissage"
the right for some leg, literally

They say that he's the great seducer.

and that power is an aphrodisiac

For DSK, it was just a numbers game
He's a numbers guy, economist, IMF
He just figures if you ask enough women,
you eventually get a date.

Other than the maid, in the hotel,
he directly
propositioned 2 desk clerks
to keep him "company"
and flirted with another.

they don't just fall over like that.
Not every New York hotel employee knows who he is,
and that he's got IMF cash on tap.
He could spend the GDP of a small country
in one night and not notice.
In fact, he keeps a cut of the money
that the IMF steals from small countries.
Because he likes to play the sugar daddy.

I wonder if he considered the odds of getting caught
raping a maid.
I wonder if her nationality had anything to do with
his little calculation.

banksters sexicon part 1 from WilliamBanzai7 of Zerohedge
ANALYST: John who talks too much.
ARB: One who exploits price differentials for call services at different venues
ARRANGEMENT FEE: Madam's cut.
ASSET CLASS: Quality of lady.
ATM: A regular John
BAILOUT: Session on credit.


-Costick67 ~(8^P

checkitout:
Strauss-Kahn New York Case May Curb Libertine Ways of Powerful French Men
By Helene Fouquet - May 24, 2011 4:39 PM GMT
The sexual escapades of powerful men in France have always been met with Gallic shrugs. Not anymore.
The arrest in New York of former International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn on charges of attempted rape is forcing men to watch what they say and emboldening women to challenge the modern-day version of France’s “droit de cuissage,” a feudal practice giving masters the right to have sex with female servants. It’s prompting introspection in the media over whether its laissez-faire attitude toward private lives of those in power helps them act with impunity.
“Since power is often thought of as an aphrodisiac, there was a sort of acceptance of men’s excesses toward women,” said Rachel Mulot, a member of a feminist group called “La Barbe,” or The Beard, which on May 22 joined protests in Paris against the “dominant male.” The Strauss-Kahn case may serve as a trigger to help victims of sexual assaults to break the “taboo of rape” in France, she said.
Strauss-Kahn, 62, was indicted May 19 on charges of criminal sex, attempted rape, sexual abuse, unlawful imprisonment and forcible touching of a 32-year-old maid at the Sofitel hotel in Manhattan. The former French finance minister, who had been a leading contender for next year’s presidential elections, denies the allegations and will plead not guilty, his lawyers say. DSK, as he’s known in France, is under house arrest in Manhattan.