
The Lady and the Unicorn tapestries have frequently been
interpreted as symbolic of a woman renouncing everything
in the physical world (i.e. physical human senses) for
the greater significance of the spiritual world.
THE FRENCH HAVE AN URGENT PROBLEM
February 15, 2008
By Andre Vltchek
www.zmag.org
For decades, the French economic and social system
has been haunting Anglo-Saxon market fundamentalists.
While Americans work late into the evenings, often with
only 2 weeks vacations, worrying about inadequate health
insurance, education for their children and crumbling
infrastructure, the majority of the French seem to enjoy
their lives to the fullest. With 6 weeks paid leave they
travel the globe. Their state run medical system is free
and excellent. Education for talented students is still
considered something of a human right instead of an
"investment".
The French chat with their friends and colleagues
over long lunches, read newspapers and books in cafes;
most of them work only 35 hours a week. They live longer
than the citizens of the US and Great Britain and their
HDI - Human Development Index (normalized measure of life
expectancy, literacy, education, standard of living, and
GDP per capita for countries worldwide) - is higher.
While there is an undeniable movement of educated,
mostly business and trade oriented, men and women seeking
opportunities across the Channel, an incomparably larger
number of British citizens are settling down in France,
which is renowned for its high quality of life and
pleasant living conditions. To many around the world,
France is synonymous not only with elegance, but also
with a high quality in scientific, academics, culture and
creative standards.
Yet the French system is constantly under fire, at
home and abroad. It is often described by its critics as
archaic or even obsolete. The left and center want to
reform it while the right seems determined to destroy and
replace it with the standardized Anglo-Saxon model.
French citizens show periodically erratic and confused
behavior, showering with votes extremists like Jean-Marie
Le Pen a French far-right nationalist politician, founder
and president of the Front National (National Front)
party. Le Pen has run for the French presidency five
times, including in 2002, when in a surprise upset he
came second, securing more votes in the first round than
the main left candidate, Lionel Jospin.
Were French voters "punishing the
establishment" yet again when they elected Nicolas
Sarkozy?
It seems that it had already been decided by the
corporate world (and therefore by the media that it
controls) that the French system is gangrenous, deadly
and highly contagious. The French don't work enough, they
are not stimulated to work; they waste precious time on
frivolous activities, mostly leisure.
While the mainstream English-language press rarely
reviews contemporary French fiction or non-fiction books,
there was plenty of fuss around Corinne Maier's
"Hello Laziness" ("Bonjour Laziness -
Jumping Off The Corporate Ladder"). As one reader
put it, "Maier encourages an anarchistic approach to
corporate life, one which professes that the avoidance of
responsibility and action is the best revenge against an
oppressive bureaucratic structure, and that increased job
satisfaction will come with working less." That
seemed to be exactly what critics of the French social
state were waiting for. Maier and her short best seller
were immediately brought to the spotlight; allegedly the
book was proving that work ethics and the social state
couldn't share the same bed. Commentaries had an almost
identical conclusion: the present French system
encourages laziness and makes France uncompetitive.
False. Of course the French tend to work fewer
hours than citizens of other industrialized nations.
That's what they fought for and won. According to a
Forbes reported survey (03.22.05 "France, Bastion of
Productivity") of 25 industrialized countries
conducted by the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD), the French do work less than most
others. They clocked an average 1,431 hours per year.
Even allowing six weeks vacation, this works out to just
31 hours per week, less than even "les heures"
would dictate. But Norwegian and Dutch employees worked
even less. German workers, who traditionally have been
viewed as paragons of industrial effort, put in 1,446
hours, barely more than the French. British (1,673
hours), Americans (1,792 hours) and Koreans (2,390 hours)
worked substantially more." But the article
continues: "Still, French workers remain among the
most productive in the world, ahead of Britain, Germany,
the United States and Japan, according to the European
statistics agency Eurostat, the AP reports."
France produces first-rate automobiles and
airplanes (Airbus is assembled in Toulouse). Its state
run energy and transportation sectors are probably the
most efficient, high-tech and ecological in the world.
France has the fastest trains in the world, connecting
almost all major cities. Its urban areas as well as
countryside are elegant, served by modern public
transportation, with large public spaces, combining
centuries-old history and cutting edge technologies.
French design, arts and fashion are considered an etalon
of quality all over the world. So are the food and wine.
But that doesn't seem to be enough and it probably
isn't, at least from the corporate point of view and from
the angle of the New World Order. France may have some of
the mightiest companies in the world, some of the largest
banks and some of the richest people on the planet. But
it also has an "extremely spoiled" work force;
men and women who are stubbornly convinced that their
country should serve its citizens, not the corporate
culture, convinced that they should work in order to eat
and travel and enjoy life, not in order to make a few
corporate tycoons outrageously rich.
And these annoying people are determined to fight
for their rights, as they did for decades and centuries.
That may be unacceptable in a world where daring to
even criticize the present system may be synonymous with
extremism, even terrorism.
To a large extent thanks to its free and excellent
education system, French citizens are extremely well read
and informed. Although the circulation of major
newspapers (like everywhere else) is declining, France
has still some of the mightiest alternative publications
in the world and these in turn have a global impact, like
Le Monde Diplomatique. French films may not be as
revolutionary and avant-garde as they once were, but many
still carry strong social messages. Politics,
globalization, the environment and imperialism are some
of the topics still discussed at those long and
leisurely-spent hours in cafes, restaurants and bars. The
French dare to take precious time off and trash the
system, instead of making the companies and their CEOs
richer and richer. It would be unacceptable from the
point of view of New Labor in Britain or the Democratic
Party in the US.
And to make things worse, even conservative French
Presidents like Jacque Chirac actually opposed several US
military actions, including the US-British invasion of
Iraq. At least pro-forma and for a time. Not that the
French government would ever send troops or the air force
to defend some desperate country under US attack (like
Laos or Vietnam), but at least it made sufficient noise
to help show that the world is not yet fully run by
global dictatorship.
French "dissent" is not taken lightly by
the ruling powers. France has become a target of ridicule
and criticism, similar to that unleashed, for different
reasons, against China (PRC).
But to neo-cons and market fundamentalists in
Washington and London (and also in places like Singapore,
Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur or Riyadh), France's social system
represents a much greater danger than its foreign policy.
Fear of becoming unemployable, fear of being
labeled as extremists, fear of being photographed and
marked: all that prevents American and British workers
from doing what they were doing in earlier decades and
centuries: fighting for improvement of their conditions
even if it meant trashing their own cities in order to
get better pay and benefits, to gain free education for
their children and free and decent medical care for their
sick. Surveillance techniques employed by the state and
private sector, a general lack of political opposition,
and the deeply implanted belief that it is impossible to
change the system: all this has thrown the workers in
Anglo-Saxon countries and elsewhere back to the ages of
pre-industrial revolution.
But in France, people are still fighting. They
strike. They riot. Sometimes the opposition is fragmented
or marginalized (Dominique Vidal, deputy editor of Le
Monde Diplomatique, once explained to me how the state
went far out of its way to sow the seeds of mistrust
between the French poor, workers and foreign migrants:
groups that should naturally form one strong alliance).
Despite the setbacks, alliances are periodically
forged and some unions are playing more than a decorative
role. French people are deeply suspicious of capitalism.
They know well that if unchecked, the market system will
act like that old computer game Pac Man, eating all there
is on its way. Only the state can prevent it from taking
full control of the society. Only the state can act in
the interest of the people, of the majority. It can
hardly be expected from private enterprise, as history
has repeatedly proven.
Multi-national companies hate it, but French people
simply know too much. They understand too much. They have
too much time on their hands to think and to read. They
don't worry enough about their health and education, and
about their mortgages. Their children can even go to
subsidized kindergartens. Six weeks a year, often longer,
French citizens can travel the world, compare and learn
how it ticks. And they want more social securities, not
fewer. And when monied forces try to take all that away
from them, they go to the streets and Paris burns. And
other regional capitals burn. "Chaos!" screams
mainstream media all over the world.
"Well, better than the chaos of tens of
millions of people dying prematurely because of
inadequate or non-existent medical insurance, like in the
United States," many French would argue.
"Better than the chaos of working day and night and
feeling too scared to even complain to the face of your
boss."
But it is not easy to be different. Mainstream
media, as well as foreign media, bombards French voters
with assiduous criticism of their country's social and
economic system. The thousand times repeated lie, about
how uncompetitive of a system they have inherited, is
becoming truth. Unemployment is being mentioned
relentlessly; the unemployment that is, at 7.9%,
definitely high, but still lower than in Germany (8.1%)
and just slightly higher than the EU average of 7.2%.
Often given as comparison is the unemployment rate of
only 4.9% in the US, but what is not pronounced is that
almost no French worker in his or her right mind would
accept salaries and "benefits" offered to
low-paid American workers, many of who are "fully
employed" on paper only.
The French are being told that they are missing the
train, that they will not be able to compete with Asia,
with the US, the Irish Republic, Britain. There are no
solid indicators backing it, but the need for a change is
emphasized so frantically and repeatedly, that last year
many French voters opted for a radical move and elected
an over-ambitious pro marketer and self-proclaimed ally
of the United States - Nicolas Sarkozy.
And Nicolas Sarkozy went to work as he promised:
determined to dismantle the French social state in the
shortest time possible. He is, of course, facing street
protests and growing resentment from the French people.
But he is on a crusade; he is determined and inspired by
multitudes of "reformers" of recent years and
decades: from Ms. Thatcher and Ronald Reagan to Tony
Blair, Helmut Kohl and Berlusconi; by all those
"leaders" who took advantage of the
disappearance of global pluralism and began turning back
the clock of history.
This return to an early stage of capitalism may not
go as smoothly in France as it went elsewhere. The
country was on the vanguard of social movements and
revolutions for decades and centuries. It was a home base
of some of the greatest humanists, rebels and social
thinkers, from Anatole France to Victor Hugo and Emil
Zola and countless others. That's where La Marseillaise
was written, sung and later became the national anthem,
where The Internationale - the famous socialist,
anarchist, communist, and democratic anthem was born.
France is the country where democracy and striving
for equality and social justice didn't fall from the sky
or arrive from abroad: the country fought for them, step
by step. And each step had tremendous and often terrible
costs, counted in human lives and lakes of spilled blood.
Some of the bravest and brightest sons and daughters of
France died in the barricades, on the streets and in the
prisons. Nicolas Sarkozy has no right and no mandate to
dismantle the legacy of centuries long struggle for
justice and social rights.
France may be one of the last bastions of social
and socialist ideals, along with several countries in
Latin America and a few in Europe. It is not a perfect
country, far from it. Its colonial past is appalling and
its periodic outbursts of intolerance deeply regrettable.
But there is no perfect country on this planet and there
is definitely more in modern France and its system worth
defending and improving than rejecting and discarding.
Unlike Britain (and to some extent Germany), France
will not go without a fight. Europe, unlike Venezuela,
does not allow referendums where the people can freely
vote for the economic system (socialism or capitalism)
that they desire. Therefore we don't know what percentage
of people will join on each side. The outcome of the
fight is uncertain. But it is fair to predict that unless
Sarkozy wants to trigger riots on the scale of the civil
war, he will not dare to touch the core of the social
system of France.
"Punishing the system" went too far.
French voters already made their point. And they saw the
face of the alternative. The face is scary. It is time to
return to real progress, to build on the foundations of
solidarity, fraternity and equality. Otherwise French
people may end up, like elsewhere, as servants and slaves
of the faceless corporate monster.
As
a nightmare, as a computer virus, an inflated Sarkozy is
now hanging over Paris, threatening to bring France some
hundred years back to the beginning of the 20th Century.
He should be quickly deleted from political power,
reduced to normal human size.
The French people are definitely not lazy, no
matter what the market fundamentalists say. Lazy people
can't make the most comfortable passenger planes, trains
that run well over 300km/h, they wouldn't be able to
design architectural masterpieces and write hundreds of
great novels, direct wonderful films and make delicious
cheeses and noble wines. They can do all this on 35 hours
a week average. Why should they do more? There is no
shortage of anything in the stores as it is!
Now that we determined that they are not lazy at
all, we should ask French people to work feverishly on
one particular project that is so important for them and
for the rest of humanity: the project to get rid of
Sarkozy. Maybe they should try to find a way to
send him as a cheerleader to Washington. Or he should be
offered to run an outsourcing company in Britain.
Anything, just not this, not what he is allowed to do
now. If not deleted soon, he may really try delete all of
France as we know it.
Andre Vltchek: novelist, playwright and journalist.
Co-founder of Mainstay Press (http://mainstaypress.org), publishing house for political
fiction. Editorial director of Asiana Press Agency (www.asiana-press-agency.com). He lives and works in Asia and
South Pacific and can be reached at: andre-wcn@usa.net

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