EU Le Gilets Jaune protests thread - Do you hear the people sing? Singing the songs of angry men?

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-46233560

One protester has died and dozens were injured as almost a quarter of a million people took to the streets of France, angry at rising fuel prices.

The female protester who died was struck after a driver surrounded by demonstrators panicked and accelerated.

The "yellow vests", so-called after the high-visibility jackets they are required to carry in their cars, blocked motorways and roundabouts.

They accuse President Emmanuel Macron of abandoning "the little people".

Mr Macron has not so far commented on the protests, some of which have seen demonstrators call for him to resign.

But he admitted earlier in the week that he had not "really managed to reconcile the French people with their leaders".

Nonetheless, he accused his political opponents of hijacking the movement in order to block his reform programme.

What has happened so far?
Some 244,000 people took part in protests across France, the interior ministry said in its latest update.

It said 106 people were injured during the day, five seriously, with 52 people arrested.

Most of the protests have been taking place without incident although several of the injuries came when drivers tried to force their way through protesters.

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Image copyrightREUTERS
Image captionA driver forces a car through a group of protesters in Donges, western France
Chantal Mazet, 63, was killed in the south-eastern Savoy region when a driver who was taking her daughter to hospital panicked at being blocked by about 50 demonstrators, who were striking the roof of her vehicle, and drove into them.

The driver has been taken into police custody in a state of shock.

In Paris protesters approaching the Élysée Palace, the president's official residence, were repelled with tear gas.

Why are drivers on the warpath?
The price of diesel, the most commonly used fuel in French cars, has risen by around 23% over the past 12 months to an average of €1.51 (£1.32; $1.71) per litre, its highest point since the early 2000s, AFP news agency reports.

World oil prices did rise before falling back again but the Macron government raised its hydrocarbon tax this year by 7.6 cents per litre on diesel and 3.9 cents on petrol, as part of a campaign for cleaner cars and fuel.

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Image copyrightEPA
Image captionTear gas was used to disperse protesters in Paris
The decision to impose a further increase of 6.5 cents on diesel and 2.9 cents on petrol on 1 January 2019 was seen as the final straw.

Speaking on Wednesday, the president blamed world oil prices for three-quarters of the price rise. He also said more tax on fossil fuels was needed to fund renewable energy investments.

How big is the movement?
It has broad support. Nearly three-quarters of respondents to a poll by the Elabe institute backed the Yellow Vests and 70% wanted the government to reverse the fuel tax hikes.

More than half of French people who voted for Mr Macron support the protests, Elabe's Vincent Thibault told AFP.

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Image copyrightREUTERS
Image captionPolice attend as protesters block a motorway in Antibes
"The expectations and discontent over spending power are fairly broad, it's not just something that concerns rural France or the lower classes," he said.

The BBC's Lucy Williamson in Paris says the movement has grown via social media into a broad and public criticism of Mr Macron's economic policies.

Are opposition politicians involved?
They have certainly tried to tap into it. Far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who was defeated by Mr Macron in the second round of the presidential election, has been encouraging it on Twitter.

She said: "The government shouldn't be afraid of French people who come to express their revolt and do it in a peaceful fashion."

Image Copyright @MLP_officiel@MLP_OFFICIEL
Report
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Laurent Wauquiez, leader of the centre-right Republicans, called on the Macron government to scrap the next planned increase in carbon tax on fossil fuels in January to offset rising vehicle fuel prices.

Mr Castaner has described Saturday's action as a "political protest with the Republicans behind it".

Olivier Faure, leader of the left-wing Socialist Party said the movement - which has no single leader and is not linked to any trade union - had been "born outside political parties".

"People want politicians to listen to them and respond. Their demand is to have purchasing power and financial justice," he said.

Image Copyright @faureolivier@FAUREOLIVIER
Report
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Is there any room for compromise?
On Wednesday, the government announced action to help poor families pay their energy and transport bills.

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announced that 5.6 million households would receive energy subsidies. Currently 3.6 million receive them.

A state scrappage bonus on polluting vehicles would also be doubled for France's poorest families, he said, and fuel tax credits would be brought in for people who depend on their cars for work.

Protesters have mocked the president relentlessly as "Micron" or "Macaron" (Macaroon) or simply Manu, the short form of Emmanuel, which he famously scolded a student for using.

Image Copyright @BBCWorld@BBCWORLD
Report

To be honest, I don't blame the driver at all.
 
The Prime Minister Edouard Philippe just spoke, and basically said that the government has no plans of backtracking the pension reform, and that "you'll just have to work longer". Talk about not reading the crowd.

Anyways, supposedly, the government isn't in a "confrontation" approach, but I guess the strikes will continue since they really fucked the PR up on this one.
And they'll win, that's the saddest part. They beat the Yellow Vests this time last year, they'll probably beat this current round of things.
 
Suffice to say this week is a bit bigger and rowdier than the past few weeks -- months even. Truthfully there's more non-yellow baguettes than yellow baguettes today, but it's Saturday so fuck it

https://twitter.com/Ian56789/status/1203271585383231488 (http://archive.vn/dtWV2)


I'm still not tired of seeing Firefighters and Cops getting rough with one another. Firefighters got some real vigor in them compared to normal protestors, which is to be expected from dudes who run into burning buildings.

Star Wars may've gone to complete shit thanks to Hollywood wokeness, but it does provide shitposting opportunities for les Zoomers

Antifags yeeting cafe chairs

I do so hope the cops give black bloc faggots impersonating medics a reason to visit the real medics.

Not your usual Christmas shoppers
archive.vn/gGSPy

Rangers Pompiers lead the way
 
There’s images that are making rounds in France right now, and it’s 2 cops just beating an unnamed guy on the ground.
They didn’t even apprehend him or anything. Just beat him with batons and feet until they moved on and the poor dude just ran away.

Here’s a French article about it, sums up what I just said



Here’s a video showing it. They’re beating him up, and then the cop on the left says “let’s go, let’s go”.
Funnily enough, they aren’t simple cops, but ones from the Prefecture de Police, the French like State department that doubles as Immigration ministry. They haven’t commented so far.
 
Yeah I saw that one too, but I left it out because I didn't know if it was (yet another) senseless beating or if it was some black bloc fag getting just desserts. I saw another one where the cops arrest 2 dudes in a car for taking pictures of them shooting flashballs:
 
Meyer Habib is jewish. Note the typical jewish traits in his face - the heavy-lidded bug eyes and odd anal sphincter lips. With a first name like Meyer I'm sure his parents were trying to compensate for the excess brown diluting his proud jewish ancestry. He's one of Netanyahu's cronies.

View attachment 1037584


Holy shit, that article was way too long just to tell us simple goyim that this guy is so much better than us. But in the article, this passage is the only one that really matters:

As the elected representative of French expatriates for the entire Mediterranean region, Habib fights for French Jews, as well as in defense of French Jewish doctors, dentists and lawyers—and their mothers—who try to settle in Israel, whether they are fleeing terrorism and anti-Semitism, or escaping France’s economic gloom and the heavy burden of French taxes.

He is helping a bunch of rich assholes dodge taxes. He is part of the problem.
 
Well, I guess it's time for more riots...


France Raises Pension Age to 64 in Defiance of Protests
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...h-pension-system-to-come-into-force-from-2025 (http://archive.vn/j0ejp)

French workers will begin contributing to a new public-pension system from 2025 under President Emmanuel Macron’s plan to update the country’s complex and generous existing arrangements.

After days of strikes disrupting life across the country, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe promised minimum full benefits of 1,000 euros ($1,100) a month and said that the age for receiving a full pension will rise to 64 from 62 in 2027 -- later than some commentators had predicted. He said the legislation will go to lawmakers in February and he aims to have the bill passed by the end of next year.

“I hear the concerns expressed over recent days. I understand them,” Philippe said as he set out the plan at an event in Paris. “We may disagree on some points, but the ambition is for a universal system with social justice. There is no hidden agenda.”

Labor unions have been staging protests since Thursday in an effort to force the president to dial back his plans. While the government has been making conciliatory noises in a bid to avoid a total blockade of transport, schools and other public services, pushing through a central election pledge is an important political test for 41-year-old Macron.

The reform aims to ensure pension payments don’t place a burden on the state budget and that all contributors will have the same entitlements -- ending the special regimes that let some workers retire in their early fifties. Some economists and many low-paid workers have challenged the president’s assertion that the new plan will mean equal rights for everyone while unions have planned further demonstrations for Dec. 12 and Dec. 17.

Here are the main details of the plan

  • One pension system instead of 42 currently
  • Benefits indexed to wages, not inflation
  • New regime applies to everyone born from the start of 1975
  • Legal retirement age unchanged at 62, full benefits not available until age 64
  • Retirement age rises to 64 from 2027
  • Minimum pension of 1,000 euros a month from 2022 for those who worked a full career
 
Well, I guess it's time for more riots...


France Raises Pension Age to 64 in Defiance of Protests
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...h-pension-system-to-come-into-force-from-2025 (http://archive.vn/j0ejp)

French workers will begin contributing to a new public-pension system from 2025 under President Emmanuel Macron’s plan to update the country’s complex and generous existing arrangements.

After days of strikes disrupting life across the country, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe promised minimum full benefits of 1,000 euros ($1,100) a month and said that the age for receiving a full pension will rise to 64 from 62 in 2027 -- later than some commentators had predicted. He said the legislation will go to lawmakers in February and he aims to have the bill passed by the end of next year.

“I hear the concerns expressed over recent days. I understand them,” Philippe said as he set out the plan at an event in Paris. “We may disagree on some points, but the ambition is for a universal system with social justice. There is no hidden agenda.”

Labor unions have been staging protests since Thursday in an effort to force the president to dial back his plans. While the government has been making conciliatory noises in a bid to avoid a total blockade of transport, schools and other public services, pushing through a central election pledge is an important political test for 41-year-old Macron.

The reform aims to ensure pension payments don’t place a burden on the state budget and that all contributors will have the same entitlements -- ending the special regimes that let some workers retire in their early fifties. Some economists and many low-paid workers have challenged the president’s assertion that the new plan will mean equal rights for everyone while unions have planned further demonstrations for Dec. 12 and Dec. 17.

Here are the main details of the plan

  • One pension system instead of 42 currently
  • Benefits indexed to wages, not inflation
  • New regime applies to everyone born from the start of 1975
  • Legal retirement age unchanged at 62, full benefits not available until age 64
  • Retirement age rises to 64 from 2027
  • Minimum pension of 1,000 euros a month from 2022 for those who worked a full career

About the "benefits" indexed to wages and not inflation, they're talking about the points you earn during your career, like 1 point being equal to 0.55e for instance, and their reasoning is that wages in France have increased at a higher rate than inflation for the past 20 years, with the exceptions of 2008 and 2011. They also promised that the value of these points will never drop, but you know, governments and their promises.
Anyways, the pensions themselves will still be indexed to inflation, as they have been since 1987, so no changes there.

Regarding the minimum pension of 1,000e (85% of the minimum wage in France), sure why not. But it will only be available to those with a "complete" career, so most likely women won't get it, cause children and such.

Speaking of women, in the current system, you get an increase of 10% in your future pension benefits starting with your 3rd child. Under their new reform, you'll get a 5% benefit starting with your 1st child, and 7% for your 3rd. However, these benefits are shared, as in you can opt for your husband to take that 5% increase on his pension, since men tend to earn more than women and it would make sense if you want more elderly cash. In which case, you're pretty much fucked in case of a divorce.

Additionally, they are removing the increase in the "career insurance" women currently have if they haven't worked their full semesters for a full retirement due to children. Basically, as of now, if you miss 20 semesters of less on your career to get a full package deal retirement, the "career insurance" covers you, moreso if you have children as your excuse. Under the new system, it's basically "fuck you".

Here's a little French graph from the Institute of Social Protection:

ee00c499310a96729639e35c61aad.png


In these tables, you see the loss under the future system for women with respectively one and two children based on their yearly income and the number of semesters they banked.

Also, they changed the pension you get in the case of the untimely death of your spouse. While they increase it from 60% max to 70% max of the income of the couple, it will only be available once you turn 62 instead of 55. So good luck, I guess.

Another thing is that you'll have to pay more social cotisations on your salaries, for pretty much everyone except the minimum wage. And as of now, it's already pretty damn high in my humble opinion.

Screen Shot 2019-12-11 at 23.24.55.png


To explain a bit, here's what I earn. My OG salary for that month was 3884,97e. Then, they take off 698,34e for retirement cotisations, social security, insurance in case of unemployment etc. etc. And since the current year, they take your taxes off of it automatically every month, so for me it's 382,40e (so about 4.6k/year) since I'm not married, don't have children or anyone to take care of. So in the end, I get 1.2k cut off every single month for like 38h/work plus constant work phone calls and "télétravail" on my weekends on top of uni, that they obviously don't count as "extra hours" since "you're not in the office" per se.

Now, I'm not complaining since I know I'm a privileged fuck compared to minimum wage slaves, and I have my family that can back me up if needed, but if they take even more social cotisations (amount that they haven't announced yet), it'll be, for a lack of a better term, aids. Especially with everything being so fucking expensive in Paris.

And all that so I can get fucked once old by my incomplete career should I choose to have children. Which probably won't hurt me due to social privilege, initial money etc. etc. but it will for women that don't have those advantages starting up.

Finally, that reform still doesn't do jack shit for workers with intense physical professions like labourers, steel plant employees etc. Or farmers.

Tldr: It kinda fucks up the poor, the sick, and anyone that doesn't have assets or savings for when you're old because good luck living on 1k/month. That and again, I'd like to reiterate that our insurance isn't "free". The government covers only 30 to 60% of most acts, including emergency hospitalisations.


Edit: I love France. I wouldn't trade if for Russia, the US, the UK, or any other country I've lived in. Hell, my father has worked for 44 years (full career) in Russia, and earns 400e/month as a decorated artist of the country (like basically the government recognises him as "important").

But that pension reform is kind of garbage from everything I've seen so far. At least for those that don't come from a privileged background.
 
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*Highly informative post*
Always interesting to hear firsthand accounts from the average person on this stuff. How would you go about fixing or tweaking things? Not to be a kiss ass, but you seem rather smart and your previous posts about your schooling makes me think you actually shared classrooms with the people writing up these proposals, or at least the same type of person.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: spiritofamermaid
Always interesting to hear firsthand accounts from the average person on this stuff. How would you go about fixing or tweaking things? Not to be a kiss ass, but you seem rather smart and your previous posts about your schooling makes me think you actually shared classrooms with the people writing up these proposals, or at least the same type of person.

Well, if you insist. In the following mini-essay that I will spoil for brevity's sake, I will do my best to explain why that reform is happening, and why I don't actually think there is a fix.

The main issue with the current retirement scheme, or at least the issue that the government is hammering right now, is that they are way too expensive for the state, "budget deficit", yadda yadda. And it is true that the 42 "special schemes" on top of the two regular ones for regular employees cost a lot of money, both in pensions themselves, and in bureaucracy - about 1 in 3 people works in different sectors throughout his / her life, which means that they get different pension schemes applied at the end of their career, all managed by different independent regimes that need to communicate about it.

However, a thesis that's supported by an Economy professor from Paris 8 Gilles Raveaud and that has been doing rounds in the 'left" mainstream media (Libération, Marianne, if you're familiar with French newspapers) is that the "deficit" emergency is a lie, and that there is money to finance the retirement schemes.

You see, among the relatively high social contributions we pay on every salary, there is a thing called CSG/CRDS.
Screen Shot 2019-12-12 at 08.25.55.png

Here it is from my own pay sheet, meaning out of my 3884e initial salary pre-everything, 3816e are eligible to be "taxed" by those cotisations, and 110e are ultimately taken every month.

This is a contribution to make up for the Social Security budget deficit (<insert appropriate reaction about free healthcare>). It was supposed to be "filled in" this year, but the government pushed back the "ultimate filling in" date back to 2024 because of all the shit they've done for the Yellow Vests since last November (wish I were kidding, but yes, this is the reason. "We didn't increase your fuel price, so take another 5 years of extra taxes").
Because yes, this is an "extra" tax, one that was implemented in 1996, and that should (normally) disappear once we've filled in the deficit in 2024, though most likely the government will use it to some other funds, and not necessarily retirement. Hell, in my opinion, they'll probs keep using it as a "making our economy green", "climate change" etc. excuse.

Anyways, what this Economy dude is saying is that you can keep that social contribution up, and finance the pension scheme with it. Add to that all the savings that the private pension funds have been sitting on for years, (by private pension funds I mean mandatory "additional" funds for workers of the private sector Argic & Arrco), and - great job, you've fixed the budget issue.
Here's even a little graph to illustrate that theory.
Screen Shot 2019-12-12 at 08.26.53.png

Here you have the savings of the base and integrated retirement scheme funds, next the "additional" private funds' savings, an the reserve fund for pensions, compared to the debt of the retirement schemes pulled from the Social security debt as of 2019 (in billions of euros).

However, for one, this "loot" comes from the additional pension funds that exist for workers of the private sector, and they are the majority. Doubt they'd want to see the funds for their sweet retirement go to public servants, farmers, and others. For now, that money's in limbo, as in - private sector workers don't get extra cash for retirement from it, but they could, and that hope is what would make the private sector rebel if the government just seizes that money .

Secondly, another issue with that is that, as of 2019, the deficit caused by the retirement system is "only" 2.9bn (after you get the amortisations and shit). But according to estimations, it will rise to 7.9bn - 17.2bn euros in 2025. Now here, honestly I can't comment. I do have a Bachelor in Economy, but I'm not an expert ; they give it to literally everyone these days.
But, assuming that the "official" data is indeed correct, and the deficit amount will increase exponentially, then the savings as seen in the graph above won't last more than a couple of years, assuming the State can even manage to take that money out of the private sector in the first place.

Then, you also have the aging population. Currently, we have 1.7 workers per retiree, a number which will drop to 1.6 workers / retiree in 2030. That and, while the retirement spending is expected to stay about the same (roughly 14% of the GDP according to that super fucking lengthy official report on retirements and prognostics , the funds the retirement system has won't necessarily increase. It would really depend on what the government plans on doing with the "Social Security" social contribution I mentioned above past 2024.

So while yes, there could technically be a solution for the budgetary deficit caused by retirement schemes, it's very complicated, involves fucking over the private sector (which again, is the overwhelming majority here), and actually using a tax "social contribution" that's supposed to disappear past 2024 for retirement purposes.

Also, and it seems pretty important to me, a main bullet point in the whole "pension reform" plans has always been to make the system more just, at least according to Macron. This is literally what he was preaching back in 2017 in his election campaign. He wasn't REEing about the deficit as he does now ; he was saying he wants to reform all the retirement systems to have less bureaucracy and more equality, which is why most people were fine with his proposals way back then. That, and he had promised he wouldn't raise the retirement age of 62, which well, guess he did an oopsie and broke that promise.

And regarding the whole "more equality" thing, on paper, it does appear to be so, since every independent cotisation for your retirement that varies wildly according to the special regimes is getting converted into simple points for everyone (as we have now in the private sector). That, and they will give more benefits to mothers starting with the 1st child instead of 3rd etc. etc.

BUT, it will fuck over nurses and teachers, to name a few, because the new regime plans on counting points based on your salaries throughout your career, whereas they have right now a special fund that counts only the last 6 months of salary before their retirement (which is usually way higher than what they started with - interns, substitute teachers etc.).
The new system also won't take into consideration the "primes", you know monetary bonuses you get from your employer, usually for Christmas. Then again, the teachers' "bonuses" are bad, but the hospital ones are aite.

Anyways, yesterday, the Prime Minister promised that ultimately, the teachers' retirement won't decrease, "and this will be enshrined in law". How are they going to do that is beyond me though.

Like, lets face it. A reform is necessary, if only for bureaucracy's sake. The main issue that protesters still seem to have now that the government has kind of "reassured" people that their pensions won't drop is that they're raising the retirement age to 64 (though in practice more like 67 to get a full ride). And regarding that, yes that retirement age will be gruelling for professions that are physically demanding like railroad employees, aircraft employees, etc. But the population is also aging and, in those sectors specifically, there really aren't that many people willing to go replace them. There's about 4.1 workers per retiree lawyer compared to 1.6 worker per retiree in the public transport sector.

So ultimately, I can see why they raised the retirement year, despite having promised not to do so. People live longer, and there just isn't that much population growth (<insert African replacement migration arguments>). So naturally, the State needs to get its money somewhere. But in practice, I guess people will just wait to see the first work accidents with casualties to happen because an elderly train conductor fell asleep on the job or had a stroke, and then look at the Government pointedly and say, "I told you so".

A thing that most French people forget is that our system is already "more just" than a system by capitalisation, where a worker just saves money himself for his retirement, and that's it. Like here, you still get some form of social safety net if you have indeed worked full-time most of your life. So even with all these changes, it will still be more "just" to the poor working class people than a "capitalisation" system where it's like - save your money yourself, man.

As for what I personally would do? Nothing. Because I wouldn't be in that position in the first place. Would much rather be someone executing decisions rather than making them. That, and I genuinely don't think I'm smart when it comes to Econ & Finance. As I said, they literally give degrees to fucking anyone in the UK. The most difficult part is getting into a good uni and networking your way through your 3 years there, but if you come from a private school, know people, and know how to behave, it's not even that hard.

So yeah. You're right in the sense that I did and still do frequent those people, well mostly their children, and have the same education and background as them, at least in terms of wealth if not status, but my journey's different, and I have no ambitions of grandeur, but given how much my family has invested in me so far, there are certain expectations that I have to fulfil. They still can't forgive me for breaking up with my ex, who's one of the grandsons of a former French President, and that was years ago, so I can't fathom what they would do if I told them that I don't have any career ambitions nor want to be a trophy wife (because it's one or the other).

So yeah either way, back on track - yes, I would do a reform I suppose, but I'm iffy about that whole "raising retirement age to 64" for railroad workers, flight dispatchers etc. because while the population does live longer, they don't necessarily stay fit or sane longer at the same rate.

Edit:
TLDR - this is what they’re trying to fix.
E01632B6-9802-4AFD-921A-1DEB1EF2CFBF.jpeg


- private sector workers retiring legally at 62, in practice at 63, and having a lesser pension than respectively civil servants and public transport workers.

Good idea, seems “fair”, except transport workers have more chances of killing you when senile on the job than a magistrate or lawyer does.
 
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If I was in Europe I would flee to the United States as soon as possible. The flight to America will become a trend in Europe, even though Europeans like to pretend that America is a land of obese idiots.

Why though? I know a lot of people from Russia that “fled” to America, and none of them regrets it, but most of Frenchies at least, tend to come back after a couple of years.
 

Hotwheels will never be deterred or broken. Vive Le Hotwheels

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Christmas in France is...different

Some "indestructable" traffic camera got destroyed only a few hours after it got installed. I mention this only because the whole movement of ornery frogs putting on yellow vests and protesting started in part because of nickel and dime bullshit from cameras like this.
In English said:
Ardèche: the new Peaugres turret radar destroyed a few hours after its installation
Presented as "indestructible", the device was set on fire Thursday night in Peaugres, between Lyon and Valence.


By Le Parisien
December 13, 2019 at 12:55 p.m.

They are supposed to be "indestructible". A good part of the new generation turret radars installed recently, however, did not make old bones. Like that of Peaugres, near Annonay (Ardèche). As reported by France Bleu, the device was set on fire Thursday evening around 10:45 p.m.

Tires were dropped at his foot and ignited. The brand new radar had been installed a few hours earlier on this Ardèche department.

These new radars have been installed to replace those which have been degraded regularly over the past year and the start of the Yellow Vests movement. But the novelty is far from being unanimous. Since their installation, the devices, supposed to escape vandalism due to its high-pitched positioning, have been subject to degradation.
Degradations are increasing

In late August, the bill for these degradations amounted to 360 million euros, estimated Road Safety. And Emmanuel Barbe, interministerial delegate for road safety, warned in an interview with the Parisian: “Each time a speed camera is damaged or destroyed, an investigation is systematically launched. "And Emmanuel Barbe recalled that the authors risk not only a judicial sanction, but also a very heavy fine: up to five years of imprisonment and 100,000 euros in fines.

In Guadeloupe, Oise, Haute-Marne, Haut-Rhin and Côtes-d'Armor, several radars have already been degraded.
These new radar models are capable of checking the speed of drivers. If they are currently only approved for this offense, they can also know whether a person is wearing their seat belt or not, check that the safety distances are respected, identify an overshoot by the right, etc.

Thank God for online shopping, eh?

Botany, bitch
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Santa brings free tolls
 
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Transport workers erect flaming barricades as France brought to standstill in massive strike (VIDEOS)

French transport infrastructure ground to a halt on Monday as drivers and conductors at state-run companies continued to strike against proposed pension reform, while truckers protested for better wages and working conditions.
As many as 200 people from a local transport trade union congregated outside a TCAR bus depot near the French city of Rouen in the early hours of Monday morning, erecting a burning barricade of shopping carts and setting dumpsters on fire.
#grevedu16decembreDes #Giletsjaunes et des syndicalistes bloquent les entrées du dépôt de la TCAR, le réseau de transport de #Rouen, depuis 4h30. "Aucun bus n'est sorti depuis", indique une syndicaliste. pic.twitter.com/4SkoY1QC1L
— Mathieu Normand (@oMatnor) December 16, 2019
The depot gates were blocked off, trapping several staff members inside the facility. The move was ostensibly aimed at ‘encouraging’ public transport workers to join anti-government protests in a more visible manner.
#Greve16Decembre à #RouenLa présence syndicale s'amenuise un peu devant le dépôt de bus du fait des prochaines AG de la matinée. Les #Giletsjaunes réchauffent l'ambiance et restent motivés. pic.twitter.com/cYjaBzWK0M
— Mathieu Normand (@oMatnor) December 16, 2019
The first bus reportedly left the depot at 9:55am local time.

The four major road transport unions (CFDT, FO, CFTC and CGC) called a professional strike on December 15 ahead of a national demonstration against the proposed pension reform on December 17.

Des routiers de Drôme-Ardèche bloquent le marché de gros à Corbashttps://t.co/nWcILb6YCkpic.twitter.com/eS15MUQWIh
— France Bleu Drôme Ardèche (@francebleuDA) December 16, 2019
French truckers also installed blockades at several locations nationwide, including Lyon and Vannes.

A cumulative total of 600km in traffic jams was reported around Paris as commuters were all forced to drive to work due to the transport strikes, according to road information site Sytadin.

Il est 5h30 et déjà pas mal d’embouteillages sur le périphérique parisien : ça promet #Greve16Decembrepic.twitter.com/6hjw80Ppon
— Guillaume Poingt (@guillaumepoingt) December 16, 2019
Meanwhile, some 61 percent of drivers are on strike according to the SNCF, France’s national state-owned railway company, with Monday marking the 12th consecutive day of strikes against proposed pension reforms.

A third of France’s high-speed TGV routes will also face disruption and in Paris, just two of the capital’s metro lines will remain in operation.

Il est 7h50 et les agents de sécurité demandent déjà aux voyageurs d'arrêter de pousser pour monter dans le RER. "Attention il y a des personnes âgées", alerte un agent alors que, plus loin, on entend une femme crier, certainement emportée par la foule #Greve16Decembrepic.twitter.com/pSLzOcyygG
— Morgane Rubetti (@MRubetti) December 16, 2019
In the face of such widespread public discontent over the pension reforms, and against a backdrop of ongoing Yellow Vest protests and other civil disobedience, the French government’s High Commissioner for Pensions Jean-Paul Delevoye resigned on Monday.
Are the French the most based of the races? They might be.
 
We’re going on day 13 tomorrow, and the strike participation and support still hasn’t dwindled.
It’s impressive, and I say that as someone that lived through the burning suburbs of autumn 2005, the massive strikes of autumns 2008 and 2010, the air strike of 2014, and more recently, the student strike of 2018 that cancelled my exams and locked down campuses for a month. (insert every small “daily” strike in between)

Anyways, it doesn’t help that the guy who made the pension reform is shady af (didn’t declare being in think-tanks along with his government employment, has to back-pay 140,000e etc.) And today, he announced that he will be stepping down, so that just adds fuel to the fire.

Please find enclosed a humble collection of my photographs, titled “Lazing on a strike-y afternoon”. (Though technically taken during the weekend and today).

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Queue at the bus stop

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That’s a bus that flat out took the tramway road?/rails?/path? whatever near my sports club, since the actual roads were all blocked by protesters.

B447509F-B0A4-4D5F-8E26-434F19557827.jpeg


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A parody of a French saying “A la guerre comme à la guerre”, meaning “making do” or “all is fair in love and war”. Here war is replaced with “grève” - strike.

A46EA329-BAFA-4094-B12F-5B6E79BE8FD0.jpeg


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Beautiful traffic jams.

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We’re going on day 13 tomorrow, and the strike participation and support still hasn’t dwindled.
It’s impressive, and I say that as someone that lived through the burning suburbs of autumn 2005, the massive strikes of autumns 2008 and 2010, the air strike of 2014, and more recently, the student strike of 2018 that cancelled my exams and locked down campuses for a month. (insert every small “daily” strike in between)

Anyways, it doesn’t help that the guy who made the pension reform is shady af (didn’t declare being in think-tanks along with his government employment, has to back-pay 140,000e etc.) And today, he announced that he will be stepping down, so that just adds fuel to the fire.

Please find enclosed a humble collection of my photographs, titled “Lazing on a strike-y afternoon”. (Though technically taken during the weekend and today).
That was particularly nasty from what I've heard.
View attachment 1053743
Queue at the bus stop

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View attachment 1053746

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That’s a bus that flat out took the tramway road?/rails?/path? whatever near my sports club, since the actual roads were all blocked by protesters.

View attachment 1053757

View attachment 1053759
A parody of a French saying “A la guerre comme à la guerre”, meaning “making do” or “all is fair in love and war”. Here war is replaced with “grève” - strike.

View attachment 1053760

View attachment 1053761
Beautiful traffic jams.

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Surprised that bus didn't get stuck with how wet the grass and soil looks. Also the skyline does look really nice. Ol' pa always said you don't need to go to some exotic locale for a beautiful sunset, just walk out the door and look up. How's the Champs? Fortified with riot APCs and paddy wagons like it is every Saturday or just more cops on the beat keeping protestors away? I heard workers at the Eiffel Tower fucked off for the duration of the strike, too. Sucks to be a tourist who wanted to sightsee this month.
 
That was particularly nasty from what I've heard.

Surprised that bus didn't get stuck with how wet the grass and soil looks. Also the skyline does look really nice. Ol' pa always said you don't need to go to some exotic locale for a beautiful sunset, just walk out the door and look up. How's the Champs? Fortified with riot APCs and paddy wagons like it is every Saturday or just more cops on the beat keeping protestors away? I heard workers at the Eiffel Tower fucked off for the duration of the strike, too. Sucks to be a tourist who wanted to sightsee this month.

There’s the army and the Gendarmerie (branch of the military that deals with civilians, kinda like cops, but nastier) on every single corner, yeah. And they force cars to make a detour since the rue Saint Faubourg Honor, where the Presidential Palace is, is indeed fortified and off-limits.

But otherwise, it’s surprisingly okay. All the action happens at Nation /République, literally on the other side of Paris.

The traffic jams on the other hand are horrible. My round trip to the airport took 5+h today.
 
There’s the army and the Gendarmerie (branch of the military that deals with civilians, kinda like cops, but nastier) on every single corner, yeah. And they force cars to make a detour since the rue Saint Faubourg Honor, where the Presidential Palace is, is indeed fortified and off-limits.

But otherwise, it’s surprisingly okay. All the action happens at Nation /République, literally on the other side of Paris.

The traffic jams on the other hand are horrible. My round trip to the airport took 5+h today.
What's your take on the presence of French patriotic movements at these protests? The mass involvement of the EMS unions is new, but I get the impression that a lot of the middle-aged- going on retired YV base are basically just normie conservative going on slightly populist types who probably would find something else to do on a weekend if a neocon like Sarkozy was still in instead of neoliberal scum trash Macron.

It sounds like the antifa types are still doing some good work attacking cops and corporates, but when I was reading about the initial stages of the protests I was reading about autonomous nationalist types getting some work done too. I understand the state really cracked down hard on them though. Is there still a pro-French presence out there doing radical stuff, or is it just the middle-class anarchist antifa types smashing McDonalds windows?
 
These new pension protesters are playing hardball:
French strikers angry about pension reform cut power to homes, companies

PARIS (Reuters) - France’s trade unions on Wednesday defended their decision to cut power to thousands of homes, companies and even the Bank of France to force the government to drop a wide-ranging pension reform.
The power cuts, illegal under French law, deepened a sense of chaos in the second week of nationwide strikes that have crippled transport, shut schools and brought more than half a million people onto the street against President Emmanuel Macron’s reform.

Asked on French radio whether the power cuts weren’t a step too far, Philippe Martinez, the head of the hardline CGT union, said the cuts were necessary to force Macron to back down.

“I understand these workers’ anger,” the mustachioed union leader said. “These are targeted cuts. You’ll understand that spitting on the public service can make some of us angry.”

Following a meeting with government officials, he hinted at further cuts, saying “we may amplify these kinds of methods”.

Macron condemned the power outages “in the strongest of terms” during a cabinet meeting, a government spokeswoman said. But his office said the president was open to “improvements” to his reform plans ahead of a new day of talks between his prime minister and union leaders.

After the talks, the leader of the more moderate CFDT union said the government had shown more “openness” but that a deal was still “very far” from being agreed.

The government is keen to reach a truce before Christmas, when millions of French people travel to spend the holiday with their families. French hotels, cafes and stores are already feeling the pain of the strike.

Macron’s transport minister condemned the power cuts, which affected at least 150,000 homes on Tuesday according to the power grid, and said the government would ask the grid company to file complaints.


“FAR FROM NORMAL”
“Cutting power to blue-chip companies, prefectures, shopping malls, that’s already rather questionable,” Elisabeth Borne said. “But clinics, metro stations, fire brigades and thousands of French people also saw power cuts. This is far from normal ways of striking.”

Power cuts are an old union tactic that started at the turn of the previous century and were used after World War Two but dropped later on because of fears of a public backlash, said Stephane Sirot, a historian at Cergy-Pontoise university.

“In the 90s, it was mostly set aside because some union members were worried it could turn public opinion against them,” Sirot told Reuters. “So they adopted other methods, like cuts targeting the homes of the elite.”

This time, unions may feel opposition to the reform is wide enough to warrant more radical action. Some 57 percent of French people oppose the reform, a 11-point increase over one week, according to an Elabe poll for BFM TV.

However, 63 percent of the French want a truce during the end-of-year holiday period, the poll showed.

Macron wants to turn the myriad of French pension systems into a single points-based one. That would force staff at state-owned firms such as railway SNCF or utility EDF, who enjoy more generous pension plans than private-sector workers, to work longer.

SNCF train drivers currently can retire at just over 50, for instance, against 62 for those in the private sector. That means taxpayers have to plug the SNCF pensions deficit to the tune of 3 billion euros every year.

Martinez said that rather than reducing the pension system’s deficit by increasing the retirement age, the government should increase corporate social security contributions, tax financial products and make internet firms pay social security charges.

The government argues that increasing pensions contributions would make labor more costly and force young people to pay yet more to fund French pensions.
Don't piss off the guy with his hand on the (literal) levers of power I guess.
 
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What's your take on the presence of French patriotic movements at these protests? The mass involvement of the EMS unions is new, but I get the impression that a lot of the middle-aged- going on retired YV base are basically just normie conservative going on slightly populist types who probably would find something else to do on a weekend if a neocon like Sarkozy was still in instead of neoliberal scum trash Macron.

It sounds like the antifa types are still doing some good work attacking cops and corporates, but when I was reading about the initial stages of the protests I was reading about autonomous nationalist types getting some work done too. I understand the state really cracked down hard on them though. Is there still a pro-French presence out there doing radical stuff, or is it just the middle-class anarchist antifa types smashing McDonalds windows?

Okay so first of all, at some point, the far right and the far left are so similar that it becomes really hard to distinguish them.

Then, while last year’s Yellow Vests did have a very strong « far right » / populist / nationalist presence, this year is mostly under the sign of the Commies.

Sure, there are the same working class nationalists out there fighting the good fight for pension reforms, but mostly it’s just commies that want to seize « the means of production » aka the private employee pension fund reserves.

And ofc the antifags are still there.
 
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