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Catholics Beaten By Infidels In France

It is now OK to publicly promote infidelity in France. French Catholics have lost a court battle to censor the extramarital dating site Gleeden.com. A French court ruled Thursday that the extramarital affairs dating website has the right to continue advertising its services promoting adultery among married and unfaithful people. Gleeden is primarily marketed to women, specifically those who are already in a relationship. The website uses clever marketing jargon to lure women away from the righteous path. “Being faithful to two men means you are twice as faithful.“ “We do not offer loyalty cards” reads billboard in Paris subway A complaint from a federation of Catholic families that Gleeden’s business model is immoral and illegal was thrown out by a Paris judge. The judge concluded that French couples are not bound by the country’s civil code to be faithful to each other. The Local reports: “Contrary to anti-depressants a lover costs the social security system nothing,” read one of the bus stop adverts for Gleeden. “Being faithful to two men means you are twice as faithful,” read another advert placed at bus stops and Metro stations, and banned by the offended mayors of some towns in France. “Fancy adultery. [...]

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