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
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
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To be honest, I don't blame the driver at all.
 
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.
Makes sense, unfortunate. I was concerned that would happen especially when those stooges were starting up 'Yellow Vest Party's to subvert energy from street action into fruitless voting. I doubt that anything good can come of this without a political movement that wants to guillotine much of the establishment.
 
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58 weeks so far. That other general strike is still going on every day I think.

https://twitter.com/CharlesBaudry/status/1208363332266319872 (http://archive.vn/s3FT5)

Suède non!

Lot of French cops gonna be on the Naughty List this year...

Tweet makes a bit of a generalization but firefighters are always cool

Now this is the weird shit I always love seeing and bringing to you fine spergs

Also Macron turned 42 yesterday. Probably explains (some) of the weird shit like the ones at the Louvre with paper Macron masks
 
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Are the French the most based of the races? They might be.
there must be something there if Napoleon is any evidence.
 
IIRC, Corsica was under French control in his time, so no he was still French.
That's like saying Afghans are American because they're under American occupation. Napoleon was born like a year after France annexed it and was a Corsican Nationalist in his youth. When he was in military school the frogs would talk shit because of his accent.
 
That's like saying Afghans are American because they're under American occupation. Napoleon was born like a year after France annexed it and was a Corsican Nationalist in his youth. When he was in military school the frogs would talk shit because of his accent.

Wasnt it the same year ?.

I remeber something like Napoleon was born on Corsica that year French from history book.
 
Wasnt it the same year ?.

I remeber something like Napoleon was born on Corsica that year French from history book.

He was born a year after Corse got given to France by Genoa. But yes, French patriotism was very slow to develop on the island. Hell, even to this day, they mostly feel like "Corsicans first, Frenchmen later".

Anyways, back to the strikes. I was a bit busy to post it at the time, but a couple of days ago, protesters blocked the Gare de Lyon in Paris, aka one of the biggest and busiest train stations where most of the trains to the South East (French Riviera, Lyon, Italy etc.) depart from.

It was a surprise protest that initially started at the HQ of the RATP (Parisian public transport company), and then moved to the train station itself.
Here's a clip from the metro under the train station. They blocked people from accessing the platforms, sang, and threw smoke bombs in an enclosed location. Then, they went out top, walked on the rails, and threw more smoke around. They got forcibly removed by the police a couple of hours later, and continued the protests on the square outside.

Meanwhile, most trains that were about to depart got cancelled, and the poor travellers that were trying to make it home by Christmas got gased for nothing.

















Here's the police forces trying to charge the protesters across the toll booths. It's pretty funny.


















This is from the news reports showing how fucking smoked up that place was.


















And here's all the people casually chilling on the rails.
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Think of it as the French equivalent of the New York Central Station. I'm still in amazement at how the police / army mishandled this "flash mob".

Oh and yeah, the strikes continue. The government is supposed to meet with the syndicates on January 7, there's a big strike already scheduled for January 9, and until then, shit's ongoing.
 
IIRC, Corsica was under French control in his time, so no he was still French.
He was born in the year after the French took over the island from Genoa, so he's about as French as three quarters of the French National Football team is.

EDIT: Damn @Azovka you beat me to it
 
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59 weeks. Other strike still going on as evidenced by last week's boogaloo at the train station
https://twitter.com/CharlesBaudry/status/1210910441549049856 (http://archive.vn/kT8BP)
https://twitter.com/Ian56789/status/1210903534004318208 (http://archive.vn/uYuId)

Joyeux noël...
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Longer version with more rancor and tear gas

I post this in thread every week because of how the media downplays or straight up refuses to even mention either of these protests. Case in point
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In fairness this is the internet and that person could be totally lying their ass off about their employment. Really I only mention it because it referenced that ballerina tweet I posted a few days back.

Posting this solely because I think flares are cool

So yeah, a "regular" Saturday. Didn't spot any particularly strange stuff this week. Didn't spot hotwheels either, but I know s/he's out there still rolling on.
 
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https://twitter.com/CharlesBaudry/status/1213440395671228417 (http://archive.vn/cx2Q8)
https://twitter.com/Ian56789/status/1213444184641810432 (http://archive.vn/y3oep)

First one qualifies as strange shit considering who's at the front of the march lol

First protest of the decade for baguettes. Other strike or whatever is still going on. Should you feel like looking at it just put #greve then the day and month in French.

I'd love to know how many canisters of CN have been used since this started last year. That and flashballs. Man whoever's making that shit must be making a killing.

Le anonymoose takes us on a trip back to 2007
https://twitter.com/Ian56789/status/1213454029369544705 (http://archive.vn/vWO7z)

99 Ballons Jaunes Passent

In addition to Ballerinas, some Orchestra put on a performance last week. Very cool.

Also New Year's Eve/New Year's day was fucking lit in some places in Baguette Land -- quite literally
 
Yesterday was supposed to be the start of the exams in most of French unis, and in those that didn't postpone them due to the ongoing strikes, students have blockaded the campuses.
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Here's a couple of French articles about it, basically just saying that students are blocking campuses in several cities (Paris, Bordeaux, Rennes), asking for the exams to be postponed since a shit ton of them can't get there what with the transport strikes and all.
The police have intervened at the Nanterre University, where students have locked themselves inside.

French article
Another one

At Nanterre (suburb of Paris, Macron's uni btw) specifically, the uni administration has opened a fitness room to "host" students that are unable to get home overnight. It only fits like 50 people though, when the uni itself boasts 33K of them.

It's not really that unusual though. Back in 2017, my sister was finishing her L3 (final year of Bachelor degree) there, and her end of the year exams got postponed and ultimately cancelled because students had overrun the campus and locked themselves in (cf: . They ended up having literal "homework" to upload online as their final fucking assessment.
 
https://twitter.com/Ian56789/status/1215973308669349888 (http://archive.vn/uiGCc)
https://twitter.com/CharlesBaudry/status/1215981996326957057 (http://archive.vn/MkESl)


C'EST SPARTA PARIS


Night time torch marches aren't just for cringy alt-right rallies

"Watch out Henri, those protesters in the building are coming right for us!"

A short but proper boogaloo

Riot cops getting the Hong Kong laser treatment

Drama at a courthouse
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Someone had one hell of a nosebleed

The other non-yellow jacket strike/movement is on day 38, and their uninterrupted protesting might pay off soon. Key word "might"

-----Article-----​
France strikes: PM offers to temporarily withdraw controversial pension plans on 38th day of nationwide protests

Union welcomes proposed change as sign of government's 'will to compromise'

The French Prime Minister has offered to temporarily withdraw plans for controversial pension reforms following weeks of protest action in towns and cities across the country.

In a letter to union chiefs, Edouard Philippe said he would be willing to pull back plans to raise the age at which citizens would receive full pension benefits.

It comes as strikes against the changes to the law roll into their 38th day, with protestors including CGT union members and Gilets Jaunes activists taking to the streets of Paris to air their grievances with the policy introduced by Emmanuel Macron.

The proposal to extend the age at which workers would be eligible to full state pension benefits to 64 from 62 was considered to be among the most controversial elements of the reforms that made up a key election pledge for Mr Macron in 2017.

Initially the French government had proposed increasing the pension age to 62 years and four months in 2022 - gradually increasing the boundary until it was set at 64-years in 2027.

In his letter Mr Philippe said that he was "prepared to withdraw from the bill the short-term measure which I had proposed, consisting in gradually converging from 2022 towards an equilibrium age of 64 years in 2027'".

It is unclear if the change will be enough to simmer tensions that have led to protest action the length and breadth of the country since December. At the time the letter was announced activists amassed at the Place de la Republique in Paris remained sceptical – urging for action to carry on until the withdrawal of the policy takes place while singing "and we will go until we withdraw, and we will go until we withdraw".

However union the French Democratic Confederation of Labor (CFDT) welcomed the move, saying it marked "the government's will to compromise" and will help to "continue discussions" on the policy.

Original link
-----End Article-----​
 
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