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2018年12月7日星期五

法國公民想要更平的能源,不是全球變暖精英主義

法國公民想要更平的能源,不是全球變暖精英主義
French Citizens Want Cheaper Energy, not Global Warming Elitism

Diesel moves France. Whereas in the United States diesel is increasingly a rarity used mainly to fuel heavy trucks, drivers in France and much of Europe have diesel cars. In past generations, diesel was believed to be more environmentally friendly. Today, it turns out that is not the case. Diesel is actually far worse for the environment than traditional gasoline.

This weekend, anger over a 6 percent increase on diesel taxes led to the largest and most violent protests France has seen since the 1960s. The “gilets jaunes” (or yellow vests in English) are so named because they don reflective bright yellow-colored vests that all French motorists are required to have in their vehicles when they take to the streets.

In Paris, radical far-right and far-left wing movements are alleged to have infiltrated the protests, unleashing anarchy, chaos, and mass destruction in the French capital. They torched dozens of cars, ransacked and looted hundreds of private businesses, and destroyed both public and private property. Even the Arc de Triomphe, a famed landmark, was damaged.

French President Emmanuel Macron was in Buenos Aires over the weekend for the G20 summit, and the mass protests have come as most unwelcome news as he seeks to resurrect his plummeting approval ratings.

But what, precisely, do the gilets jaunes want?

Ideological Contradictions

As I walked the streets of Bordeaux this weekend amidst tear gas canisters, bright red flares, and eardrum-shattering chanting, the answer remained elusive. Elusive, and certainly ideologically contradictory.

Macron’s hefty diesel tax has a specific purpose that is very much in tradition with the global technocratic elites: fighting global warming. For France’s long-suffering taxpayers, however, the environmental pretext is just another cock and bull story.

After several discussions with protesters, it appears they have no leader and are neither enthused by the traditional right or left paradigm. They express disdain for far-left insurgent Jean-Luc Melanchon and for the economic nationalism of Marine LePen and the National Front.

One could see a healthy dose of Communists and socialists mixed amongst the protesters. Never ideological extremists who would allow a good chance for a protest to go to waste, they were there in full force, waving traditional red and yellow “hammer and sickle” Communist flags and shouting anti-capitalist slogans.


https://www.activistpost.com/2018/12/french-citizens-want-cheaper-energy-not-global-warming-elitism.html







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