Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Acton Institute’s transatlantic website publishes its first article in French
The Acton Institute’s transatlantic website publishes its first article in French
Jul 3, 2026 2:02 PM

The Acton Institute’s Religion & Liberty Transatlantic website marked a milestone today: It released its first article in French.

While the transatlantic website has diligently followed events in France and published an array of mentators since its launch in January 2017, until today all its articles had been published in English. This denied us access to the 275 million people worldwide who speak French.

The Acton Institute takes seriously our mission to take our message of liberty, human dignity, and a vibrant society informed by religious principles to the whole world. This is attested by Acton’s transatlantic and international websites, the ever-increasing number of international students who attend Acton University, the work of our Instituto Acton offices in Rome and Buenos Aires, the indefatigable work of Alejandro Chafuen as Managing Director, International, and so much more.

We see obstacles as challenges that force us to grow. We took the first steps to ing this language barrier by collaborating with our friends Pierre-Antoine Antonini of the blog “Le Catholique Libertarien” and Etienne Chaumeton. And those efforts have begun to bear fruit.

The first Acton Institute article translated into French, by Etienne Chaumeton, chronicles the gilets jaunes movement: “French protesters demand: ‘Death to taxes.’” The translation – Les manifestants français demandent : « la mort des taxes » – has been posted online today:

Cette révolte sans leader a poussé des centaines de milliers de personnes dans les rue – à pieds, naturellement – et a fait de la France, peut être l’endroit du monde où l’on s’y attendait le moins, l’endroit où des citoyens demandent « la mort des taxes ».

C’était l’une des demandes écrites sur les pancartes brandies par le mouvement «gilets jaunes» (du nom des gilets jaunes que les conducteurs français doivent porter en cas de panne). …

Lorsque quelques délinquants ont rendu les manifestations violentes, la police a répondu avec des gaz lacrymogènes. Pendant ce temps, des politiciens de tous les partis d’opposition se sont empressés de revendiquer la paternité du mouvement populaire qui crée un consensus national: les taxes excessives imposées par le gouvernement sur l’essence et le diesel nuisent aux familles.

The translation has also been posted on Antonini’s influential blog.

English-speaking readers may be quick to say that France, which has seen rail workers strike for the right to retire at age 52, needs to hear Acton’s message of how economy liberte and religious principles lead to human flourishing.

But so does every nation, everywhere. Our principles are tested, proven, and universal. They see that children are nourished, individuals are empowered, the heavy hand of government is held in check, and the irrepressibe force of human creativity is unleashed. Today, we have taken another step to fulfill our promise to open prosperity to whole world with the keys to human progress.

French-speakers can read the full translation here.

Buaillon. This photo has been cropped. CC BY 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The foundations of American independence vs. despotism
The Great Awakening (1730 – 1760) was central to America’s revolution and independence. It united the colonies and gave them a new spiritual vitality. It made churches more American and less European. These changes wedded with enlightenment thought allowed Americans to see the world with new eyes. Ties to Europe, and England especially, began to unravel. “The Revolution could not have taken place without this religious background,” says historian Paul Johnson. “The essential difference between the American Revolution and the...
Final Ruling On HHS Mandate: ‘Same Old, Same Old’
On Friday, June 28, the Department of Health and Human Services offered up its final ruling on the mandate for all employers to offer insurance plans covering abortion services and abortificients. The ruling itself is over 100 pages, and will take some time to dissect. However, the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty made this statement: ‘Unfortunately the final rule announced today is the same old, same old. As we said when the proposed rule was issued, this doesn’t solve the...
Making ‘Good Intentions’ Good
I recently wrote on the implications of “pathological altruism,” a term coined by Oakland University’s Barbara Oakleyto categorize altruism in which “attempts to promote the welfare of others instead result in unanticipated harm.” In a segment from the PovertyCureseries,HOPE International’s Peter Greer offers a good example of how this can play out, particularly in and through various outreaches of the church: Oakley’s paradigm depends on whether such harm can be “reasonably anticipated,” and as Greer’s story indicates, far too often...
Only The Federal Government Can Keep Republicans Honest, Says Dyson
Over at we have the opportunity to see one of America’s famed black public intellectuals provide another example of mentary. Michael Eric Dyson, University Professor of Sociology at Georgetown University, in response to the recent Supreme Decision striking down one section of the 1965 Voting-Rights Act said that Clarence Thomas joining the majority opinion is like “A symbolic Jew [who] has invited a metaphoric Hitler mit holocaust and genocide upon his own people.” Dyson also believes it is asinine that,...
The Source of Future Wealth: Babies
Would your life be better off if only half as many people had lived before you? That’s the intriguing question Ramez Naam asks in his new book, The Infinite Resource: The Power of Ideas on a Finite Planet. As Ronald Bailey says in a review of the book, In this thought experiment, you don’t get to pick which people are never born. Perhaps there would have been no Newton, Edison, or Pasteur, no Socrates, Shakespeare, or Jefferson. “Each additional idea...
Faith In The Free Market
Wes Selke thought he might be called to seminary. Instead, he wound up in business school. That doesn’t mean he’s any less filled with a sense of mission and purpose. An article in Christianity Today has Selke discussing his desire as a Christian to invest in social entrepreneurship and how his faith and his work life intertwine. As co-founder of Hub Ventures, Selke seeks to help entrepreneurs get off to a solid start through a 12-week, intensive training course. He...
5 Basic Principles of Christian Stewardship
In Faithful in All God’s House: Stewardship and the Christian Life, Lester DeKoster and Gerard Berghoef explore the range and reach of Christian stewardship, emphasizing that the practice of stewardship extends far beyond the handling of our money, stretching into life and time and destiny. The practice of stewardship is “the supreme challenge of the Christian life,” they argue, and thus, we must strive to properly orient our thinking and behavior accordingly. The forms of stewardship are submitted to all...
Hobby Lobby Gets 11th Hour Victory Against the Mandate
Hobby Lobby, the privately owned popular craft store chain that filed suit opposing the HHS mandate which forces employers to provide “preventive care” measures such as birth-control and “morning after” pills, won a significant — albeit temporary victory last week when the trial court granted a temporary restraining order against enforcement: Today, for the first time, a federal court has ordered the government not to enforce the HHS abortion-drug mandate against Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. The es just one day...
The Declaration of Independence as American Creed
The Declaration of Independence contains the clearest, most concise, and most eloquent articulation of the American creed, says David Azerrad, a political definition of man in two axioms, and three corollary propositions on government. In the course of making this argument and building their case, the founders also laid down the timeless and universal principles that were to define the new country. In that second paragraph, we find the clearest, most concise, and most eloquent articulation of the American creed....
Samuel Gregg: Charles Carroll, A Tea Party Thomist
Acton’s Director of Research, Samuel Gregg, discusses Founding Father Charles Carroll at Intercollegiate Review. “A Tea Party Thomist: Charles Carroll” is excerpted from Gregg’s ing book,Tea Party Catholic: The Catholic Case For Limited Government, A Free Economy And Human Flourishing. In the article, Gregg tells of Carroll’s reaction to thePeggy Stewart sailing into Annapolis’ harbor, sparking the controversy regarding the British right to tax the American Colonies. The political point of this exercise was to elicit the American colonists’ implicit...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved