France: On the Brink of Revolution?

Patrik Fridén
Daily Stormer
May 31, 2016

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Planning a vacation to the Riviera? Maybe the Euro games this summer?

Don’t. You might literally get stuck in traffic.

Transport workers now plan to join the nationwide strikes against the labor reform laws of the government. Strikes and protests have been going on since April of this year, but almost no Western news source outside of France covered them until recently, oddly enough.

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The big black media hole clearly begs the question if the demands of the strikers are ‘anti-semitic’ or ‘racist’ in some manner.

And the strikers are effective, paralyzing large parts of the country as fuel is drying up.

RT:

“The scenes of guerrilla-type action in central Paris, beamed around the world, reinforce the feeling of fear and misunderstanding from visitors in an already angst-filled climate,” Frederic Valletoux, head of the Paris region tourist board, said on Monday, while trying to urge the government to put an end to the civil unrest, Reuters reported.

“A strike of that scope a few weeks before Euro 2016 and at the heart of the tourist season is more than unacceptable,” the French GNI trade association said in a statement last week. It warned of booking cancellations that will hit French hoteliers already suffering after the November terror attacks in Paris.

About 2.5 million spectators are expected to visit France for Euro 2016, which will run for about a month.

Some of the strikes organized by unions, students, and social media movements all around France have descended into violence, with demonstrators throwing stones, bottles and other objects at police officers, who have responded with tear gas and arrests.

Several roads have already been blocked by protesters in recent days, leading to partial paralysis in some parts of the country. Access to oil refineries has also been cut off and fuel shortages that forced the authorities to unseal the strategic fuel reserves are persisting.

The contested reforms were drawn up by Francois Hollande’s Socialist government in an effort to deregulate the labor market and lower the country’s unemployment rate.

Protests against the bill remained peaceful until the government’s attempt to push it through parliament without a vote, based on a rarely-used article of the French constitution.

The media black-out could be due to this being a labor grassroots movement not sanctioned by the Socialist party, but in clear opposition to some of its policies.

It could be due to something else.

But Hollande and his Marxist party seems to have had their days numbered.

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Even then, however, the unions leading the strikes seem to have no better holistic options in mind, many being pro-immigration and supporters of the usual degeneracy. This might just settle as soon as some larger crumbs are doled out to the French people from the tables of the Jews and their shabbozgoys of the Zio-corporate world.

Or if the union leaders get some fat bonuses perhaps?

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“Now I have them in-fighting and tearing their own nation and state apart. Good Goys.”

It could just be that the French Left is now tearing itself apart because the Leftist Establishment always fails to deliver on their promises and can’t even get remotely near any real victory over the Judeo-Capitalist system.

I mean, they can’t possibly hope to defeat the system that has their MPs on the payroll…