French Lessons
By Finian Cunningham
December 09, 2018 "Information
Clearing House"
- French people are standing up for their rights
and speaking out for many others around the world who are sick at the injustice
of capitalism. None more so than people of Western states who have had to endure
decades of economic austerity while a tiny elite become ever more obscenely
wealthy.
In addition to the irrational malign distribution of wealth that capitalism
bestows, Western states — that is, the oligarch-serving politicians — spend and
waste inordinate financial resources on militarism and waging criminal wars.
For the fourth weekend in a row, the French public have taken to the streets of
Paris and other major cities to demand economic justice.
They also want President Emmanuel Macron to resign. Macron has so far kept his
usual aloof silence on the protests, leaving it up to his prime minister Edouard
Philippe to placate the angry nation.
Bringing the country to almost a standstill by blocking transport links and fuel
supply, the French have demonstrated "people power" and what can be achieved
when we organize for our rights.
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Macron's government has caved in to scrap
plans for tax hikes on the transport fuel. Those proposed price hikes is what
triggered ordinary people's fury, donning the now symbolic "yellow vests" that
all drivers in France are obliged to carry in vehicles for safety reasons.
The French public say the new taxes would hit their livelihoods.
Macron claimed the new fuel levies were for raising government funds in order to
pay for transition to a more ecologically sustainable society.
However, ordinary citizens point out that Macron — whom they disparage as
"president for the rich" — recently abolished taxes for the very wealthy. That
giveaway could have been used instead by the government to fund whatever green
projects it is planning.
Macron's administration is also planning major tax reductions for big business
and corporations. Again, that move shows the elitist priorities of this
president and his ministers. The Élysée Palace is intent on making the majority
of working people pay for social changes, rather the rich class who could easily
afford it.
In addition, the French state spends about $50 billion a year on military. If
that expenditure was, say, halved, then there would be no need for austerity and
arbitrary cuts in public services and welfare.
The French extravagance on military is typical of all Western states and NATO
members in particular. If they slashed their militarism, then other countries
like Russia and China would also be able to reduce their military budgets, which
are maintained out of defensive posture owing to the aggressive stance of
Western states.
The French yellow vest movement appears to be at a momentous turning point. It
could go either of two significant directions.
Already, the Macron government has capitulated over its brazen tax burdens on
ordinary citizens. There is a sense that the elitist president and his
administration are teetering to stay in office. For the French people their
protest movement has gone beyond fuel levies.
They are questioning the entire neoliberal capitalist system, and why they have
been made to endure decades of economic exploitation and oppression.
Moreover, there are signs that the yellow vest movement is inspiring the public
in other European countries to likewise take to the streets and finally hold the
oligarchic system to account. There are reports of similar solidarity protests
taking place in neighboring Belgium. We can be sure that governments across
Europe are wary of a tidal wave of people power.
There is also a more ominous, sinister direction. A foretaste of that was seen
last week when French riot police arrested dozens of high school students
rallying against education reforms, and made them kneel on the ground, hands on
head. Some of the students were forced to kneel with their faces against a wall.
That scene has horrified many people in France and further afield. It bore the
actions of a police-state dictatorship and the abrogation of legal rights. Some
commentators even remarked that the detained students cowering in front of armed
officers looked like a mock-execution scenario.
This weekend ahead of the planned protests in Paris, hundreds of people
traveling to the capital to join demonstrations were arrested "preemptively" by
police, and taken into custody. The French authorities claim they were
preventing "trouble makers" from inciting violence.
Though many other French citizens fear that what is really going on is the
beginning of repressive crackdown by the state against democratic rights to free
speech and public assembly.
Recall too how only a few weeks ago, during World War One commemorations,
President Macron sparked a hue and cry when he praised former General Philippe
Pétain for his battlefield bravery. Pétain later became the leader of Vichy
France which collaborated with the German Third Reich during World War Two.
Ignominiously, the French state functioned as a fascist regime, rounding up tens
of thousands of its citizens, and dispatching them to Nazi death camps.
Arguably, capitalism is an irrational, anti-democratic system that always has a
tendency towards oligarchy, militarism and fascism. When the economy is doing
relatively well, then the system tolerates forms of "liberal democracy". But
when the system is running on empty, then more extreme powers are exercised to
control the restless masses.
Decades of economic austerity and mass impoverishment across Western states show
that capitalism can no longer disguise itself as liberal democracy. The people
are rightly becoming restless and angry for their human rights: to have decent
jobs, salaries and public services.
The rebellious French are inspiring all people to demand what is their natural
rights and to overthrow the injustice of capitalism. That could go in an
historic progressive direction, not just in France, but across all Western
oligarchic states.
There again, the powers-that-be may, out of desperation to retain their
privileges and wealth, go full fascism. The liberal mask of Western democracies
appears to be slipping to reveal the brute force beneath.
We seem to be at a historic juncture.
Finian Cunningham has written extensively on international affairs, with articles published in several languages. He is a Master’s graduate in Agricultural Chemistry and worked as a scientific editor for the Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, England, before pursuing a career in newspaper journalism. He is also a musician and songwriter. For nearly 20 years, he worked as an editor and writer in major news media organisations, including The Mirror, Irish Times and Independent.
This article was originally published by "Sputnik" -
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