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View Full Version : Socialists in France cut power to cities to try and spark Revolution




Cowlesy
04-23-2009, 05:42 PM
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article6150447.ece

Scary stuff.


At an electricity substation on a bleak industrial estate north of Paris a masked union militant is preparing to deprive a neighbourhood of power.

His colleague is outside, dragging nervously on a roll-up cigarette while keeping a lookout for police or security guards. “Get a move on,” he says. “And then let’s get out of here.”

A switch is pulled down, the door of the sabotaged transformer is locked and the two activists — employees of EdF, the French state electricity supplier — drive off.

In their wake hundreds of houses and a handful of businesses in Montigny-lès-Cormeilles are left without electricity for much of the morning.

It was the second time in a week that blackouts had hit the Paris region as striking gas and electricity workers adopted radical tactics to support their call for a 10 per cent pay rise and an end to outsourcing of jobs.

They are denounced as industrial saboteurs by the Government and face disciplinary action and prosecution, but say they are determined to press ahead with what they portray as a struggle against free-market forces.

After failing to prevent the partial privatisations of EdF and GdF, the gas supplier, they believe that the tide has turned in their favour because of the recession.

Redundancy plans have caused violent protests in private sector companies, left-wing students have blocked universities and unions are planning a demonstration on Labour Day. “There is a risk of revolution,” Dominique de Villepin, the former prime minister, said.

For Stéphane Miliadis, a representative of the Confédération Générale du Travail union at the EdF plant in Saint-Ouen-l’Aumône, near Montigny-lès-Cormeilles, it offers a golden opportunity.

“The Government is losing control,” he said. “So now is the moment to push back the capitalist logic which has crept into the company.”

The movement got off to a slow start. “We’ve been on strike for three weeks but at first no one paid any attention at all,” he said. “It was only when some of the guys started cutting the electricity and gas that things got moving.”

The militants armed with a map showing the substations and keys to the locks can shut down power to thousands of homes in a few minutes.

Last Thursday 66,500 EdF customers lost their electricity supply, some for several hours. In Douai, northern France, two patients in intensive care had to be moved when a hospital lost power for 40 minutes.

In the Paris region the Grand-Val shopping centre suffered the same fate. “We had to turn away customers from all 48 shops,” Félix Crespo, a technical manager at the centre, said.

A bakery worker told The Times that she had been late for work “because I have an electric alarm clock and of course it didn’t go off”.

Earlier this week the activists sought to win public support by switching 350,000 customers from peak to off-peak tariffs — a 50 per cent saving. They also restored power to hundreds of households that were cut off by EdF because they had failed to pay their bills.

The power cuts have continued. In Montigny-lès-Cormeilles the saboteurs took action against EdF offices and several hundred homes were affected. A home-help assistant said: “I look after a 92-year-old woman and this sort of thing means she hasn’t got a proper meal because there was nothing to cook it with.”

History of revolt

— The revolutionary movement that shook France between 1789 and 1799 rejected the social and economic inequalities of the ancien régime, overthrew the Government and abolished the monarchy

— Popular revolt in 1848 led to the creation of the Second Republic and established the principle of the right to work

— In 1920, strikes on the railways forced the army to drive trains to get food around the country

— The de Gaulle administration's deployment of police against student rioters in 1968 provoked a widespread revolt, ending in widescale reform of the education system

— In 2005, rioting among poor African and Arab immigrant communities prompted the Government to impose a three-month state of emergency

— In 2006, students nationwide protested against an attempt to make it easier for French companies to sack employees under the age of 26. The law was withdrawn

— “Bossnapping” has become a popular technique in French labour disputes. Striking workers take their bosses hostage until they agree to demands

nate895
04-23-2009, 05:45 PM
Revolution is France's thing since 1789, and they haven't had one recently. Who do you think will win?

ItsTime
04-23-2009, 05:52 PM
Wait I am a little confused. The socialists who are already in control are trying to start a revolution to prevent the take over by capitalists? So this is a preemptive revolution?

Cowlesy
04-23-2009, 08:09 PM
No, the socialists think that the socialists in control are not giving them enough largess. They want MORE for FREE and to WORK LESS!

gimmegimmegimme.

Andrew-Austin
04-23-2009, 08:14 PM
People are really bat fuck insane over there huh.

Original_Intent
04-23-2009, 08:15 PM
They already have a 35 hour work week and a mandatory 5 weeks of vacation a year. :rolleyes:

Original_Intent
04-23-2009, 08:16 PM
People are really bat fuck insane over there huh.

I think the term you are looking for is bat-shit crazy. Or maybe you were just going for extra vulgar and originality points? :confused:

Bern
04-23-2009, 08:18 PM
Reminds me of the shenanigans the state workers pulled in Costa Rica when the government was making noise about opening up some of the public monopolies to market competition.

Andrew-Austin
04-23-2009, 08:21 PM
I think the term you are looking for is bat-shit crazy. Or maybe you were just going for extra vulgar and originality points? :confused:

I've always said bat fuck insane. Don't know why, it just feels right to say whenever I hear about something really crazy. Say it aloud and give it a go.

slacker921
04-23-2009, 08:22 PM
People are really bat fuck insane over there huh.

give the US a few years... we'll be right there with them. The gimmiegimmiegimmie society is just getting power.

Zippyjuan
04-23-2009, 08:35 PM
A bit early for Strike Season in France. Usually they wait until August and take the whole month off for an extended summer vacation. There almost always seems to be somebody on strike in France. It is a way of life.

Zolah
04-23-2009, 08:44 PM
A bit early for Strike Season in France. Usually they wait until August and take the whole month off for an extended summer vacation. There almost always seems to be somebody on strike in France. It is a way of life.

It's always strike season in France ;)

I very much dislike the complete disregard for private property, property damage, etc., etc. that has slightly started in Europe this year, I assume it will become more large-scale and frequent, lots of socialist-students with delusions of grandeur here in Europe.

On a different note, I noticed in the news last night that Poland has banned 'Che' shirts - under a law which forbids incitement to facism and totalitarianism (i.e Nazi posters and iconography) - communist 'merchandise' such as Che Guevara shirts, posters will seemingly be forbidden in Poland, maximum penalty of 2 years in prison apparently :eek: On the one hand, Poland has already suffered the consequences of communism's failure (as well as the wrath of facism), and won't tolerate it happening again I guess :p I do find it a bit ironic that an anti-facism law could mean people getting sent to jail for 2 years for wearing a common t-shirt, but whatever.

Andrew-Austin
04-23-2009, 08:47 PM
Do not support fascist personas of the past, or else!


It's always strike season in France ;)

I very much dislike the complete disregard for private property, property damage, etc., etc. that has slightly started in Europe this year, I assume it will become more large-scale and frequent, lots of socialist-students with delusions of grandeur here in Europe.

On a different note, I noticed in the news last night that Poland has banned 'Che' shirts - under a law which forbids incitement to facism and totalitarianism (i.e Nazi posters and iconography) - communist 'merchandise' such as Che Guevara shirts, posters will seemingly be forbidden in Poland, maximum penalty of 2 years in prison apparently :eek: On the one hand, Poland has already suffered the consequences of communism's failure (as well as the wrath of facism), and won't tolerate it happening again I guess :p I do find it a bit ironic that an anti-facism law could mean people getting sent to jail for 2 years for wearing a common t-shirt, but whatever.

Cowlesy
04-23-2009, 09:20 PM
Liberte` to take more from the government! oui oui!

silverhawks
04-23-2009, 09:43 PM
Revolution is France's thing since 1789, and they haven't had one recently. Who do you think will win?

It's a coin toss, since both sides will be surrendering at the first sign of violence.

silverhawks
04-23-2009, 09:45 PM
People are really bat fuck insane over there huh.

It's Europe. As Churchill said:

"Each time we must choose between Europe and the open sea, we shall always choose the open sea."