You're right, we have speed limits, but when someone breaks those laws we punish the person, not the car or the car company. We don't try to take all cars away from everyone else. If it's something small, we fine them. If it's something big, like that woman who hit three school girls in a crosswalk, we give them jail time. We talk about how that person was a horrible driver and they should be punished. We don't talk about the cars. Maybe if cars were smaller or slower they would kill less people? Maybe if we only allowed people to drive golf carts there wouldn't be any vehicle deaths? Maybe if people only rode bicycles we won't have situations like that?? We realize that the fault lies with the user, not the instrument.
I am not knowledgeable about too much foreign shit. Why are they picking on France? What's the motives?
Because they're there. Paris is a major city, which makes it a great target for terrorism. It's the same reason why NY is always a target. I imagine Germany will get hit too though, and soon.
France has a huge Muslim population. I think I read somewhere that it's like 10% of their population or something like that, and it's still growing.
Maybe: Charlie Hebdo France's military actions in Africa France's laws against wearing headscarves in public schools
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/leland-ware/muslim-immigrants-and-the_b_6482936.html France now has the largest Muslim population in Europe. However, ethnic minority immigrants and their descendants do not fare well in French society. A large proportion of them reside in public housing complexes in suburban communities (banlieues) that surround French cities. Public housing complexes in these areas are neglected and physically deteriorating. The neighborhoods are largely segregated and isolated the neighborhoods in Paris. They contain high concentrations of low-income immigrants. Crime is high and the schools are often substandard. Young men in these neighborhoods are the targets of police harassment. They are stereotyped as gang members and criminals. They are referred to as "immigrants" even though most of them are citizens who were born in France. The conditions in banlieues surrounding the "City of Light" are so stark that observers refer to those communities as the "Other France."