Thank God for France
by Mike Whitney
Thank
God for France. While American liberals tremble at the idea of sending
an angry e mail to congress for fear that their name will appear on the
State Department's list of terrorists, French workers are on the front
lines choking on tear gas and fending off billyclubs in hand-to-hand
combat with Sarkozy's Gendarmerie. That's because the French haven't
forgotten their class roots.
When the government gets too big for its
britches, people pour out onto to the streets and Paris becomes a
warzone replete with overturned Mercedes Benzs, smashed storefront
windows, and stacks of smoldering tires issuing pillars of black smoke.
This is what democracy looks like when it hasn't been emasculated by
decades of propaganda and consumerism.
Here's a blurp from the trenches:
Headline: "French Energy Sector Crippled by
Nationwide Strike... French energy facilities are close to total
disruption in the wake of nationwide strike against the raise of the
retirement age.....France has been hit by numerous protests across the
country against a controversial pension reform that would rise the
retirement age to 62 from 60....On October 22 morning 80 protesters
blockaded Grandpuits oil refinery outside Paris, key supplier for
Charles de Gaulle and Orly international airport." (The Financial)
They're shutting 'em down.
Take note, Tea Party crybabies who moan about
restoring "our freedoms" while stuffing the backyard bunker with seed
corn and ammo. Glenn Beck won't save you from the "mean old" gov'mint.
Liberty isn't free anymore. If you want it, get out of the barko-lounger
and organize. The amount of freedom that any nation enjoys is directly
proportionate to the amount of blood its people spilled fighting the
state. No more, no less. The man who is willing to accept the blunt
force of a cop's truncheon on his back is infinitely more praiseworthy
than the leftist/rightist scribe crooning from the bleachers. The state
isn't moved by lyrical editorials or prosaic manifestos. It responds to
force alone, which is why it takes people who are willing to "throw
themselves on the gears" of the apparatus and stop it from moving
forward. Unfortunately, most of those people appear to live in France.
The resistance is steadily building in France. The
budding rebellion is cropping up everywhere---"secondary schools, train
stations, refineries and highways have been blockaded, there have been
occupations of public buildings, workplaces, commercial centers,
directed cuts of electricity, and ransacking of electoral institutions
and town halls..." And the big unions are calling for more strikes, more
agitation, more ferment.
For more than a week, transportation has been
blocked across the France due to the protests by students and workers.
Sarkozy's popularity has plummeted. 65% of people surveyed don't like
the way the French president is handling the strikes. 79% of the people
would like to see Sarkozy negotiate with the Union on terms and
conditions, but he won't budge. Thus, the cauldron continues to boil
while the prospect of violence rises.
"STRIKE, BLOCKADE, SABOTAGE"
This is from an anonymous striker:
"In each city, these actions are intensifying the
power struggle and demonstrate that many are no longer satisfied with
the order imposed by the union leadership. In the Paris region, amongst
the blockades of train stations and secondary schools, the strikes in
the primary schools, the workers pickets in front of the factories,
people create inter-professional meetings and collectives of struggle
are founded to destroy categorical isolation and separation. Their
starting point: self-organization to meet the need to take ownership
over our struggles without the mediation of those who claim to speak for
workers.
We decided Saturday to occupy the Opera Bastille.
This was to disturb a presentation that was live on radio, to play the
trouble makers in a place where the cultural merchandise circulates and
to organize an assembly there. So we met with more than a thousand
people at the “place de la nation”, with banners stating “the bosses
understand only one language: Strike, blockade, sabotage." (end of
communique)
The action was met with predictable police violence and mass arrests.
The pension turmoil is not limited to France
either. US pension funds are underfunded by nearly $3 trillion. Will US
workers be as willing as their French counterparts to face the beatings
(to defend "what's theirs") or will they throw up their hands and appeal
to Obama for help?
There's no question that Washington elites have
joined with Wall Street to offload the massive debts from the financial
meltdown onto workers and retirees. Nor is their any doubt that they
will invoke (what Slavoj Zizek calls) a "permanent state of economic
emergency" to justify their actions. That will allow them to move ahead
with so-called "austerity measures" that are designed to impoverish
workers and strip popular government programs of their funding. The
trend towards belt-tightening merely masks the ongoing class war which
is aimed at restoring a feudal system of royalty and serfs. This is from
an article by economist Mark Weisbrot:
"If the French want to keep the retirement age as
is, there are plenty of ways to finance future pension costs without
necessarily raising the retirement age. One of them, which has support
among the French left – and which Sarkozy claims to support at the
international level -- would be a tax on financial transactions. Such a
“speculation tax” could raise billions of dollars of revenue – as it
currently does in the U.K. – while simultaneously discouraging
speculative trading in financial assets and derivatives. The French
unions and protesters are demanding that the government consider some of
these more progressive alternatives."
But the retirement age is not really the issue at
all. This is about union busting and "putting people in their place."
It's about "who will call-the-shots" and in whose interests will society
be run.
The French are fighting back against this
oligarchy of racketeers and the ripoff system they represent, while,
namby-pamby Americans are placated by signing their umpteenth petition
or venting their spleen at a Palin rally.
Vive la France. Vive la Résistance.