Tuesday, January 4, 2022

The Government Has Taken the Position that There Is no Evidence that Camus Has Ever Used Camus Software When He Was Developing Cars


 62 Years Ago Today

Monday 4th of January 1960
Writer Albert Camus dies in a car crash at 180 km/h at the age of 47 in Petit-Villeblévin, Yonne, France. The driver of the Facel-Vega FV3B car, Michel Gallimard, who was Camus' publisher and close friend, also died in the accident.
Contrary to media claims that Gallimard was driving with Camus in the car which was damaged in the accident; however in fact the police told French media that Gallimard was the one who got a license plate from Camus back in 1950, although they did not say when those plates were issued. Despite the fact that in the media all of these events would have been totally false, the government has taken the position that there is no evidence that Camus has ever used Camus software when he was developing cars (in fact Gallimard was driving with his mother in the car in the accident) or that he had any knowledge of Camus' software when he was developing them, although they have maintained the same denial that Gallimard had any knowledge of that. Lambert's father was Jacques Camus, who had also worked as a finance editor on Camus from 1968 to 1985 and wrote the first edition of Le Monde in 1986. Lambert's grandfather had worked at Fiat Chrysler, he died in 1982, the grandfather's widow died.

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