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Sunday, May 21, 2017

James Petras — President Emmanuel Macron: Reversing Five Decades of Working-Class Power


Not difficult to see where this is headed.

James Petras Website
President Emmanuel Macron: Reversing Five Decades of Working-Class Power
James Petras | Professor (Emeritus) of Sociology at Binghamton University in Binghamton, New York and adjunct professor at Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Nova Scotia

4 comments:

  1. I thought the last part was worth reprinting. The media again presented propaganda.


    The ruling class chose Macron because they know he will not back down in the face of street demonstrations or even a general strike!

    The intellectuals who backed Macron as ‘the lesser evil’ are now discovering that he is the greater evil. They are not too late to be . . . irrelevant.

    Macron’s grandiose vision is to introduce his hyper-capitalist ideology throughout Europe and beyond. He proposes to transform the EU into a ‘competitive capitalist paradise under French leadership’.

    Given the historic role of the French worker, it is more likely that Macron will not succeed in implementing his ‘labor reforms’. His decrees will surely provoke powerful resistance from the streets and the public institutions. When he falters, his parliamentary supporters will fracture into little warring clans. Factory owners will bemoan the workers who occupy their plants and bankers will complain that the farmers’ tractors are blocking the roads to their country villas.

    The Germans and British elite will urge their ‘little Napoleon’ to hold firm, for fear the ‘French contagion’ might spread to their somnolent workers.

    On the one hand, Macron’s successful decree can open the way for a transformation of capital-labor relations into a modern 21st century corporate state.

    On the other, a successful general strike can open the door to a Europe-wide revolt. Macron’s enigmatic (and meaningless) slogan ‘neither right nor left’ is now exposed: He is the “Bonaparte of the Bourse”!

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  2. Their last "tough guy", Nicolas Sarkosy, turned out to be a disappointment. Maybe we'll see a repeat.

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