The French intelligence service’s warning that pro-freedom, anti-health pass protesters pose a new terror threat is risible
By: Rachel Marsden
The security agency fears citizens opposed to the government’s liberticidal Covid rules might turn to extremism. But it is the Macron government’s own draconian actions that are fomenting radical dissent.
A new law christening the Covid-19 health pass and QR code tracking system in
the daily lives of French citizens has cleared hurdles in the Senate, with only
the Constitutional Council standing between freedom and a new world in which
French citizens are required to present proof of an anti-Covid double-jab, or a
nose swab test within the previous 48 hours, to access restaurants, movie
theaters, gyms, swimming pools, bars, hospitals, and some shopping centers.
The pass would also become a condition of continued paid employment for those
working in these venues, along with non-negotiable mandatory jabs for health
care workers.
The law effectively creates a two-tier society that defines citizens by a
specific medical act. The precedent is jarring. Until now, a person’s medical
history was considered taboo and part of their private life. So it’s hardly
surprising that a pro-freedom movement has emerged, spilling into the streets of
Paris and other French cities every Saturday for the past two weeks, with no end
in sight, to protest the government’s segregation efforts.
There’s a sense among the protesters that the government's efforts are far more
political than sanitary. For example, although the unvaccinated are expected to
take a Covid test prior to entering venues controlled by the health pass, the
vaccinated aren’t. Yet it has now been established that vaccination doesn’t
prevent transmission. So health pass venues could very well become breeding
grounds for the untested vaccinated carriers of the virus to infect the
unvaccinated Covid-free.
Nor is the health pass going to stop transmission in crowded public
transport, open-space work areas, or private residences, where much of the
transmission tends to occur. So case numbers are bound to increase regardless
for this relatively non-lethal virus.
And the government already has its scapegoat: the unvaccinated, whom French
authorities are already trying to portray as selfish, extremist, marginalized,
uneducated cranks.
French government spokesman Gabriel Attal labeled the pro-freedom protesters as
a “defeatist” minority, contrasted with the “majority,” compliant with
government vaccination pressure, that “wants to put the virus behind it and
work.”
And now French domestic intelligence services are warning about the
radicalization of the pro-freedom movement, akin to the protests of the ‘yellow
jackets’, and the role that ‘extremists’ could take in shaping it, all while
apparently ignoring the role that the government itself is playing in fostering
such extremism. The government is portraying normal people who value their basic
freedoms as radicals, all while introducing some of the most widespread,
radical, liberticidal measures in history.
The rhetoric creates a standoff between the ‘good’ vaccinated potential
transmitters of the virus and the ‘bad’ unvaccinated potential transmitters of
the virus, with each focused on blaming the other for their sorry lot in life
rather than both blaming the government for playing up and exploiting fear to
introduce a whole new electronic tracing system apparently to combat a minimally
lethal virus.
Now where have we seen this before? Well, the other warning posters on French
buildings alongside those mandating mask-wearing should provide a clue. Hardly
anyone even notices those terrorist alert warnings anymore. It just seems so
pre-2019. But terrorism, too, gave government carte blanche to impose a series
of restrictions on the general population due to this close-to zero risk to
public safety. And people were willing to pay the price of freedom for what they
figured to be increased protection.
The government pointed to people in faraway lands as the culprits, rather
than their own responsibility in cozying up to Saudi Arabia as it fomented
jihadism, or the role of France’s own foreign interventions in inciting people
in some foreign countries to violently mobilize against the French state.
And the terrorist attacks that took place on French soil were largely the result
of two things. First, intelligence failure on the part of the government.
Second, a justice and penal system that has allowed extremism to flourish on
French soil, in prisons, and in certain no-go zones.
Failing to take responsibility for its own failures, the government insisted on
downloading the problem onto the entire population.
The French were supposed to think that terrorists were responsible for the
security state that the government imposed on them. In reality, the French state
created it in response to its own failings. And the same is now true with the
health pass: the unvaccinated are being framed as the new terrorists, while the
government is able to get away with suppressing even more fundamental freedoms.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN