French fury: Farmers sowing seeds of revolution against elites in Paris
By: Rachel Marsden
Brussels’ diktat on climate change and support for Ukraine is seen as more important than the people who actually feed the country
The French government is scrambling to get a whole lot of tractors off the
nation’s major highways. Good luck with that when 89% of French citizens back
the protesting farmers, according to a new Odoxa poll.
France is joining a movement that now encompasses nearly 20% of the EU, with
farmers in five of the bloc’s 27 countries convoying and blockading major roads.
Farmers from Poland, Romania, Germany, and the Netherlands have now been joined
by their counterparts from the country virtually synonymous with revolution. And
one particular incident here in France has just shifted the nascent movement
into overdrive.
Alexandra Sonac, a 35-year-old cattle and corn farmer from the south of France,
and two of her three family members were struck by a car in the dark early
morning hours at a farmers’ highway blockade near Toulouse. Sonac and her
12-year-old daughter were killed, while her husband is in intensive care. The
incident is still under investigation, but to add insult to injury, the three
Armenian occupants of the vehicle that struck the family were reportedly under
an expulsion order.
The symbolism here is glaring. A productive farmer resisting government economic
oppression was killed by someone who has enjoyed the benefits of government
laxity. Just 12% of expulsion orders were carried out by France between 2015 and
2021, one of the lowest rates in Europe, according to recent statistics.
French farmers’ complaints converge with those of their counterparts across the
EU. They’re angry with their own governments, but only because these elected
officials have insisted on sliding into the fitted straitjacket imposed on them
by the unelected technocratic tyrants in Brussels and their top-down,
ideologically driven policies. There’s a good reason why French farmers this
week have ripped up and burned the same EU flag that President Emmanuel Macron
insists on placing alongside the French tricolor in his various appearances.
Farmers all across the bloc have similar demands. They want a fair price for
energy while the EU not only has imposed costly climate policies that treat
fossil fuels like the plague, but has also decided, “for Ukraine,” to destroy
its own supply of cheap Russian gas that drove Europe’s economy. Then, again for
Ukraine, they decided to lift import duties on goods and services from Ukraine,
allowing the EU to be flooded with truckers who undercut local providers and
with equally undercutting farm products that don’t even meet the EU standards
with which European farmers are forced to comply at their own expense. Farmers
don’t want handouts, but they want governments to lay off the increasingly heavy
taxation as their solution to filling state coffers emptied as a result of their
constantly misplaced priorities. They also want their national governments to
defend their interests against Brussels’ attempts to replace them with cheap
foreign imports through endless free trade deals with countries whose farmers
don’t operate under the same regulatory diktats, all while Brussels pushes
member states (notably the Netherlands) to buy out farms whose cattle waste
doesn’t serve its climate change policies.
It’s no surprise that the average person sympathizes, since they’re equally fed
up with their incompetent heavy-handed government serving as a white glove for
Brussels’ iron fist. They see that their gas and electricity costs are endlessly
climbing, and their buying power is circling the drain, all while the French
defense minister, for example, talks about how the Ukraine conflict, that has
served as a convenient pretext for Europe’s transfer of wealth from the people
to the elites, is such a wonderful opportunity for the military industrial
complex. And when the French National Assembly approved themselves a €300 ($327)
a month increase in their own allowances this week, just to offset the inflation
that’s crushing the average citizen, it serves as yet another example of their
total tone-deafness.
On the afternoon of January 24, a massive row of tires and manure was set ablaze
by angry French farmers right in front of the prefecture of Agen, in southwest
France. Some farmers present denounced the move, others voiced their support,
but all agreed to being fed up. More tellingly, police and firefighters on the
scene dragged their feet in reacting as the smoke extended almost to the height
of the adjacent building, considered a symbol of the French state. Apparently,
even frontline workers who serve the state’s institutions are getting fed up
with the establishment elites. And not just in Europe, but elsewhere in the
West.
Canadian Freedom Convoy truckers and their supporters were vindicated in
Canadian Federal Court this week when a judge ruled that Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau’s government constitutionally violated fundamental rights and freedoms
when it evoked the Emergency Act against protesting opponents to the
government’s Covid mandates, which they considered a violation of basic rights
and freedoms. The fact that the government ordered bank accounts blocked as a
deterrent against protesting should have been the first big hint of growing
authoritarianism, but apparently it took a federal judge to spell it out.
German farmers and truckers who began convoying across the country earlier this
month told me in Berlin that they were inspired by the Freedom Convoy as they
railed against the German government’s imposition of more taxes on the diesel
that fuels their farm vehicles, already pricy as a result of the government’s
misguided energy policies driven by ideological, knee-jerk opposition to fossil
fuels and to cheap gas from Russia. In both the Freedom Convoy and farmer cases,
grotesque attempts by government officials to portray protesters as some kind of
right-wing radicals, to absolve elites from responsibility, have fallen flat
among the general population.
Truckers, bakers, students, firefighters, and police are already showing
signs of solidarity with the farmers, backed by an overwhelming and quantified
silent majority. And these national movements are finding common cause with each
other around Europe and the Western world. Attempts to foster division by
pitting big farms against small ones or right against left fall flat.
French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal, who only started in the job on January 9
and probably still hasn’t found all the washrooms at his new office, trudged
down to the rural southern Rhone region last weekend. Attal said that “our
farmers are not bandits, polluters, people who torture animals, as we sometimes
hear.” Where does he hear that? In Brussels? His seduction skills could use some
work. It’s like showing up for a date and saying, “Hey, you’re not as psycho as
I heard you were.” What a charmer. Can’t wait to see how this diplomatic savant
is going to resolve this whole mess.
A meeting last Monday between Attal and farming reps included a delegate for the
Young French Farmers Union. I spoke with several of their counterparts in Berlin
at that protest earlier this month – young entrepreneurs, so well-spoken and
educated. These young farmers say they work 80-hour weeks and feel there is so
much red tape or prohibitions from the EU that it’s paralyzing. And yet France
is desperate to encourage young people to adopt farming as a profession at a
time when it’s a dying business. Gee, big mystery why that might be, geniuses.
The tragic deaths of Alexandra Sonac and her daughter this week will forever
stand as a symbol of struggle against the oppression of the working class by an
authoritarian global governance that’s fomenting chaos as it caters to special
interests increasingly divorced from those of the average citizen. No amount of
tinkering by the offending governments will quell the growing unrest. Only a
deep and fundamental rethinking of their relationship with their citizens, whose
interests they’re supposed to serve exclusively, would have any hope of
resolving this deepening crisis.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN