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Reflections on the Uprising in France

26. Mai 2006

Reflections on the Uprising in France

Sieh an, unsere Nachbarn: “A new and in some ways unprecedented radical movement has emerged in France. Beginning in February as a protest against the CPE, a law that would have made it easier to fire young workers, it rapidly developed into a widespread and much more general contestation. Over the next two months millions of people took part in demonstrations, universities and high schools were occupied, public buildings were invaded, train stations and freeways were blockaded, and thousands of people were arrested. A compromise offered by President Chirac on March 31 was rejected by just about everyone. On April 10 the government backed down and canceled the CPE.

The American media reacted even more cluelessly than usual, solemnly scolding French youth for “resisting progress” and “modernization” — i.e. for not realizing that a “healthy economy” requires us to return to the dog-eat-dog “free market” conditions of the nineteenth century. Behind the commentators’ grumblings one senses their uneasy awareness that America’s supposedly free-market system is hardly a model of success, and that the United States lags behind France and many other countries when it comes to health care, employment security and other social protections …”

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