In France, The Government Tries To Prevent The People From Getting Air Conditioning

A remarkable feature of governments in Europe is the extent to which they operate explicitly against the interest of their citizens and voters.  They give an outward appearance of being democracies, and they hold regular elections, but somehow the people in power are a self-perpetuating political clique that, from all evidence, seems to hold the ordinary working people and voters in complete contempt.  Prime examples of operating against the interests of the people include: opening the borders to millions of impoverished migrants who hate the host countries; and imposing a fantasy “energy transition” that drives up the cost of energy and destroys industrial jobs without any measurable effect on the climate.

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A new example of the hatred of the governing class for the ordinary people has emerged in the past couple of weeks.  You have probably read about the major heat wave that has swept across Europe, affecting all the major countries:  UK, France, Spain, Germany, Italy, and others.  On Wednesday June 24, France allegedly had its hottest day ever on record.  Here is a map from CNN showing high temperatures forecast early that day:

Whether or not the temperature that day actually reached 105 in Paris or 109 in Bordeaux, it was objectively very hot.  Meanwhile, American readers may be shocked to learn that the large majority of residences in France do not have air conditioning.  A source called hellowatt.fr here says that as of early 2026 only 27.4% of houses and 12.6% of apartments in France had air conditioning.  (In the U.S., the figure for all residences exceeds 90%.). So the large majority of the French people were left to swelter through the heat wave.  Thousands of schools were also forced to close.

As you might imagine, the experience of the heat wave has set off a debate in France as to whether air conditioning should be more widely adopted.  I happen to be in France at the moment (on a family vacation) and picked up a copy of the Sunday edition of one of the national newspapers, Le Figaro.  Its entire front page is devoted to the air conditioning controversy.  (It’s mostly behind paywall.  Here is a link to read the first several paragraphs (in French).). 

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