An alleged spike in the number of bedbug infections across France has unexpectedly thrown the country into a political frenzy, making it the top priority for the government and opposition alike. “Must we wait for your office to be infested before you finally react?” Mathilde Panot, a far-left lawmaker, asked Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne in Parliament, her hand squeezed around a small vial with bedbugs inside. Panot’s theatrical take – with props – should not be taken lightly: Bedbugs have, quite literally, become the talk of the town. Don’t take this as some random media outrage: It goes to the inherent sense of cleanliness of the French. Bedbugs are not just a nuisance, they are an affront. In a way, it’s history catching up with us. Bedbugs have always been around because they like what humans like: calm and dark places, such as a bedroom, where they can lay their eggs at their own pace without fear of predators. Eventually, bedbugs disappeared in the second half of the 1900s, in part due to the heavy-handed post-war use of DDT – Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane – spray to clean up homes, which nearly eradicated them all. |