Is France ready to embrace a new revolution?
By: Rachel Marsden
The upcoming French presidential election isn’t just another vote. According to one candidate, it’s a potential opportunity to reverse course and stop being “vassals of the US, NATO, and the EU.” Will the people take it, though?
For far too long, French voters have wanted their presidential candidates to
bring them change. Just not too much of it, s’il vous plaît. For far too long,
they have watched their social security system provide them with less and less –
meaning more out-of-pocket costs – as taxation on their increasingly poorly
compensated work fails to follow the same trajectory, while their cost of living
increases.
Meanwhile, France has fallen into bed with the US-led Western economic
collective suicide to the point of mimicking the American establishment’s worst
tendencies, from deindustrialisation and outsourcing of industry to low-cost
foreign jurisdictions, to adhering to whatever globalist narratives are cooked
up. The entire system is sold as some kind of benefit to the entirety of the
Western economic and political sphere, but it really just benefits global
corporatism and its ruling elites.
France is a middle power, like Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, and
others. And there’s a real role for such countries in the world that they
repeatedly fail to exploit, preferring instead to shoot themselves in the foot
by simply going along with the conventional narrative. Yet on the rare occasion
when one of these countries dares to assert its own sovereignty and breaks away
from the globalist straitjacket, it finds a distinct advantage. Which is why
they should do so more often.
For instance, France and Canada ultimately saved themselves considerable
hassle (and money) by refusing to blindly follow the US into Iraq. Meanwhile,
critics assumed that when the UK did the previously unthinkable and broke away
from the European Union in the interests of regaining full sovereignty over its
own decision-making, it would quickly wither away.
The arguments often used on these countries by opponents of their independence
is that they simply aren’t enough unto themselves. These nations are treated
like trophy wives who can’t survive without their husband’s protection. France
needs the EU, without which it would be steamrolled by the US, according to
conventional wisdom. Canada needs the US, and particularly its military might,
for fear of being targeted by pretty much any imaginary global baddie who might
want to have a go.
As the UK has already shown post-Brexit, leaving a dependent relationship can
allow you to date around, play one suitor off the other, all while enjoying your
new-found freedom.
Until now, every French president elected this century has attempted to convince
voters that they’d restore their once-cherished way of life. And every one of
them has not only failed, but has presided over an overt decline. None has truly
had the courage to take the more drastic measures needed to restore the kind of
economic and political independence and national freedom of choice that would
even have the chance to trickle down to the average citizen.
Into this breach has stepped 63-year-old former political commentator Eric
Zemmour – a different kind of presidential contender, running second to
incumbent Emmanuel Macron in some early polls – who has spent a career thinking
about the broad strokes of his campaign platform, all of which point to greater
French independence.
Zemmour referred to France at his candidacy announcement as the “country of
the Concorde and nuclear power plants, which invented the cinema and the
automobile, this country that you seek everywhere with despair, of which your
children have nostalgia without even having known it, this country that you
cherish, and which is disappearing.”
A few days later, at a massive campaign launch rally on December 5 which seemed
to be teeming with young college-aged people, the crowd cheered at each
statement as Zemmour promised that, if elected, he’d reduce the difference
between gross and net salaries, and “massively reduce production taxes for all
companies,” in the interests of France once again becoming a “global industrial
power” to create jobs and spark innovation. He promised to put major questions
of national importance to voters directly via referenda, and pull France out of
NATO.
“We are France,” Zemmour said. “We are not the vassals of the United States, of
NATO, of the European Union.” He added that France should “talk to all
countries, the US, China, Russia, but also be skeptical of all, since
geopolitics is never a long, quiet river.”
This isn’t incremental change that the former editorialist is laying out. It’s
revolutionary change back to the era where France enjoyed independence and
prosperity under President Charles de Gaulle, whose blueprint Zemmour seems to
want to follow. Some critics are saying that the world has changed too much for
Zemmour’s ideas, that he’s living in the past and his ambitions are useless
anachronisms. But it’s a bit like buying a lottery ticket, in that French voters
can never hope to win if they can’t find the courage to even take a chance.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN