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
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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
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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
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To be honest, I don't blame the driver at all.
 
Am I hallucinating, or are all of France's armored vehicles rocking the EU flag instead of the France flag?
You are. Almost all of them don't have any kind of flag (gendarmerie vehicles are usually just plain blue), but I've seen at least one with the UE flag, not sure why though maybe it was deployed abroad
 
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Two of the leaders of the Gilets jaunes movement, Eric Douet and Maxime Nicolle, say that Macron signing the UN migration pact would be a way of "sell out France" https://www.lexpress.fr/actualite/p...ations-sur-le-pacte-de-marrakech_2052570.html
Potato English said:
During his visit to the RTL / Le Figaro / LCI Grand Jury this Sunday, Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian lamented on Sunday the "nonsense" and "manipulations" that gave rise to the UN pact on migrations.

"I have never heard so much nonsense for a very long time ... [...] There is a fantastic lucubration on this text."

European debate
This text unleashes passions across Europe and even led to the implosion on Sunday of the ruling coalition in Belgium with the resignation of Flemish nationalist ministers.

Seven EU countries (Hungary, Austria, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Latvia) announced that they would not send representatives to Morocco to validate the document they had adopted, as all the United Nations except the United States, in July.

"Sell France"
Many in France also believe that the pact will encourage massive immigration to the country, and dispossess the country of its sovereignty in terms of migration policy.

Eric Drouet and Maxime Nicolle, two figures in yellow vests, explained that signing this pact amounts to "selling France", since the text required "eight countries" to "accommodate 480 million migrants". Information largely denied since.

Indeed, this text, which does not affect sovereignty, has nothing strictly legally binding for States that approve it.

"We use and manipulate the pact on migration"
"For somewhat turbulent circumstances of electoral majorities in this or that country, we use and manipulate the pact on migration," reaffirmed Jean-Yves Le Drian.

"First, it is not a binding document [...] Then, it provides that states are responsible for guaranteeing their borders, that migration policy is a prerogative of national sovereignty, that countries origin of transit and destination commit themselves to control migratory flows, dismantle networks, fight traffickers, respect human rights "

"They're everywhere" https://twitter.com/MDP_PFMPE/status/1071825670408425472
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And we also have Macron's desperate simpering tomorrow. That should be good. I hope he goes further into dictatorship with his address.

"It is all ze fault of Trump and Brexit and Salvini and ze Russian trolls. Not ze fact that I 'ave, how you say, funneled subsidies to ze wealthy paid for by ze normies and les deplorables 'u 'ave no ability to know what is good for zem. Alors, zere is only oane solution. We must bring back ze corvée."
 
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I braved the Guardian comments section, toilet of spergery that it is even by other news comment sections, and found this. Citation needed, is all I have to say. @Azovka , any truth to these sorts of allegations?

I do like the shock at how they had the TEMERITY to report illegal immigrants! The monsters! Gasp!

Max 80km/h in the country? Storm the fuckin' Bastille, geez. That's something city people don't get - when you have a long drive in the country, every little bit really helps. And I'm sure (like the other Euro countries I've been in, not been to Frogland yet) the only time you get to that top speed is way outside towns, so it's not a safety thing, really.
 
I’m actually amazed that he even was elected. He poached his election campaign clips promising “the France of tomorrow” from Bernie Sanders’ campaign among others, and is married to his statutory rapist and former high school teacher.
That smelled fishy from the start.

Here’s a video showing how Macron, who announced his presidency as being “sincere, authentic, and true”, stole his campaign clip shots from Harvard, Coca Cola commercials, and Bernie Sanders among others.
Enjoy!

https://youtu.be/vfImRNID27o
 
Maybe the frogs should just start searching for a new manlet to replace Macron
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If you convert the 5 feet 2 inches the then non standard system of measurement the French used then to the standard system then he was really 5 feet 6 inches which in late 1700's and early 1800's was the average height (the average height has augmented since), Napoleon being a manlet was a British lie because if he was a manlet then almost everyone was one
 
The frog parliament is screeching about the economy.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-46499996

And we also have Macron's desperate simpering tomorrow. That should be good. I hope he goes further into dictatorship with his address.
He's saying this as if we haven't had economic problems since the 1970s and Manu hasn't failed to deliver the deeply needed change he promised to
 
I’m actually amazed that he even was elected. He poached his election campaign clips promising “the France of tomorrow” from Bernie Sanders’ campaign among others, and is married to his statutory rapist and former high school teacher.
That smelled fishy from the start.

Here’s a video showing how Macron, who announced his presidency as being “sincere, authentic, and true”, stole his campaign clip shots from Harvard, Coca Cola commercials, and Bernie Sanders among others.
Enjoy!

https://youtu.be/vfImRNID27o
Even before taking into account his prior political career with the Socialist Party, he's literally a former Rothschilde investment banker and a graduate of the ENA, so the very definition of the political-financial establishment. It's like if an American Goldman-Sachs executive and graduate of Harvard's Kennedy School of Government was trying to masquerade as an anti-establishment political outsider.
 
If I recall, he only got in because all of the other parties instructed their bases to vote against FN and Marine Le Pen. He didn’t win because people liked his ideas, he got in due to the spite vote, which is fucking stupid considering who he was. Yet if they recall Macron and hold another election, yet another unabashed globalist will win because FN will not be able to win more than 50% in a runoff election. The problem goes deeper than Macron in my opinion.
 
If I recall, he only got in because all of the other parties instructed their bases to vote against FN and Marine Le Pen. He didn’t win because people liked his ideas, he got in due to the spite vote, which is fucking stupid considering who he was. Yet if they recall Macron and hold another election, yet another unabashed globalist will win because FN will not be able to win more than 50% in a runoff election. The problem goes deeper than Macron in my opinion.

My optimistic side tells me the French already know this and at this point this can go one of two ways.

1. The French vote in an overwhelming majority of either FN or some non establishment left party.

2. They riot to the point the military stages a coup.

Either way it's a shit show simply put.

On another note. I got back with my frog counterpart and he says so far it hasn't gone to the point where jets need to be scrambled. But still maintains that the brass are only going to support the government so long as riots are contained. He also tells me there's a really good chance the riots might spread and even heard of unions planning to stage a general strike.
 
I’m actually amazed that he even was elected.
All of the real candidates got knocked out in the first round, including the original favorite being sunk by some pretty big scandals, and then nobody outside of her party was going to vote for Le Pen in the second round, despite what people on this website might have said prior to that election.
 
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