Yellow Vests resurgence in France, Macron reeling (user search)
       |           

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
April 26, 2024, 01:09:46 PM
News: Election Simulator 2.0 Released. Senate/Gubernatorial maps, proportional electoral votes, and more - Read more

  Talk Elections
  General Politics
  International General Discussion (Moderators: afleitch, Hash)
  Yellow Vests resurgence in France, Macron reeling (search mode)
Pages: [1]
Poll
Question: Opinion of the Yellow Vests protesters
#1
FF
 
#2
HP
 
Show Pie Chart
Partisan results

Total Voters: 41

Author Topic: Yellow Vests resurgence in France, Macron reeling  (Read 4132 times)
Deleted User #4049
MT2030
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 386
United States
« on: January 06, 2019, 05:17:47 PM »

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-france-protests-macron/frances-macron-reeling-as-tough-stance-against-yellow-vests-backfires-idUSKCN1P00KG
Logged
Deleted User #4049
MT2030
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 386
United States
« Reply #1 on: January 07, 2019, 03:02:32 PM »
« Edited: January 07, 2019, 07:17:01 PM by Mike Lee 2024 »

Macron already gave them too much and the violent leftist thugs still are protesting. He should just take back what he gave and let the brave French police intervene in order to teach them a good lesson. Law and order!

For 40 years thugs have been sabotaging attempts to make France a normally functioning nation (isn't that treason?) and every time the president cucked (and lost reelection/legislative majority anyway). It's clear that giving in to the protestors won't work. All French presidents did that and we saw how that ended. If Macron gives in his approval rating will be 30% instead of 25% and he'll lose reelection anyway. Macron should just ram through his economic agenda (whatever the f**k these violent thugs will do) and see what happens. The people will never love him anyway, but if unemployment drops below 8% by 2022 they'll give him a second term. If he fails, alas. As if it matters whether you lose reelection with a 80% disapproval rating or a 65% disapproval rating.

But seriously, the situation in France really is a vicious circle. President tries something to liberalize the economy, people protest, president gives in, president loses some elections because the economy still is sh**t, enter new president/prime minister. The choice is Macron's now. Either he gives in, keeps the wheel spinning and leaves office in 2022/2027 with his reputation somewhat intact and France still in tatters or he can make a shot at breaking the wheel and be a truly great president (with the risk that it horribly backfires). One way or another, it has to come to a confrontation. If it doesn't happen now it'll happen in 5 or 10 years anyway. Macron can choose whether he wants to be Edward Heath or Margaret Thatcher. Let this be Macron's ''the lady's not for turning'' moment!

LOL. You sound awfully fascist here. edit: I don't understand sarcasm and hyperbole apparently

We could learn a lot from the French and their refusal to passively accept globalist neoliberalism rammed down their throats. Furthermore, it's not a "leftist" movement, it's a leaderless movement with large support on both left and right. It started out as essentially a modern peasants' revolt against "benevolent" fuel taxes that hurt the rural poor, and has grown into a broader protest of the Macronistas' nihilistic and sociopathic worldview. The French will do almost anything to defend their country, culture, and way of life, and I applaud them for that.
Logged
Pages: [1]  
Jump to:  


Login with username, password and session length

Terms of Service - DMCA Agent and Policy - Privacy Policy and Cookies

Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Page created in 0.031 seconds with 14 queries.