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FREX IT or FLEX IT (Édité en français)

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A protest by thousands of French firefighters in Paris on Tuesday ended in violent clashes with police with video images showing riot officers using tear gas, batons and water canon on demonstrators. Three police officers were injured. Later the bloody demonstration moved to eastern Paris...

FREX IT or FLEX IT (Édité en français)
FREX IT or FLEX IT (Édité en français)

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À propos de l'événement

Édité en français

These are responses from the UK, for the article found by clicking the links provided below; the article published by The Sun (Ce sont des réponses du Royaume-Uni, pour l'article trouvé en cliquant sur les liens fournis ci-dessous; l'article publié par The Sun): https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/10152673/paris-cops-firefighters-protests-teargas/

  1. France on a whole is suffering a slow death. Tax upon tax is taken, next to nothing is given back to the people, they live in poverty. While us brits flock here for the cheap house prices and stunning surroundings, great weather and cheap wine, little did we know about all the taxes and crippling living costs it’s people have endured for century’s. The fire trucks if you can call them that don’t fill you with hope of survival should you need them, they might as well have donkeys pulling them. We are now entering the second winter of the yellow jackets and still the goverment are not listening. Every weekend Paris burns, yet little to no news coverage is shown…    

(La France dans son ensemble subit une mort lente. L'impôt sur l'impôt est pris, presque rien n'est rendu à la population, elle vit dans la pauvreté. Alors que les Britanniques affluent ici pour les prix de l'immobilier bon marché et l'environnement magnifique, le beau temps et le vin bon marché, nous ignorions toutes les taxes et tous les coûts de la vie invalidants que ses habitants subissent depuis des siècles. Les camions de pompiers, si vous pouvez les appeler, ne vous remplissent pas d’espoir de survie si vous en avez besoin, ils pourraient aussi bien avoir des ânes qui les tirent. Nous entrons maintenant dans le deuxième hiver des vestes jaunes et le gouvernement n’écoute toujours pas. Tous les week-ends, Paris brûle, mais peu ou pas de nouvelles sont présentées…)

  1. That's how it was under the Labour Tyranny in the 60's / 70's, another reason to get away from the Stalinist EU disaster to come, we have seen enough, and France will have to leave to survive, as will all EU states  

(C’est ce qui s’est passé sous la tyrannie ouvrière des années 60/70, raison supplémentaire pour nous éloigner de la catastrophe stalinienne en Europe, nous en avons assez vu, et la France devra partir pour survivre, de même que tous les pays de l’UE)

  1. France is so poor, and the cost of living so high, it’s going to turn ugly when there’s no more miner from the UK and we buy from other non EU countries  

(La France est si pauvre et le coût de la vie si élevé, elle va devenir moche quand il n’y aura plus de mineur britannique et que nous achèterons à d’autres pays non membres de l’UE)

  1. That's how it was under the Labour Tyranny in the 60's / 70's, another reason to get away from the Stalinist EU disaster to come, we have seen enough, and France will have to leave to survive, as will all EU states  

(C’est ce qui s’est passé sous la tyrannie ouvrière des années 60/70, nous en avons assez vu, et une autre raison de nous écarter du désastre stalinien en Europe, et la France devra partir pour survivre, de même que tous les États de l’UE.)

AND HERE IS WHAT I POSTED IN RESPONSE TO ALL THE ABOVE TO THAT NEWSPAPER

(ET VOICI CE QUE J’AI PUBLIÉ EN RÉPONSE À TOUT LE CI-DESSUS À CE JOURNAL)

...why does everyone blame the French, they want to leave the EU too, don't the riots spell that?

The current government is the gov. of the European Union and the EU are the Government of the rich, they are the ones lying to everyone about a brighter future; if we recap, in 2009, it was the EU Courts who violated the French voters right to say 'no' – the people were betrayed by Sarkozy, who became the president of the French Republic in 2007, after a well paid campaign funded by the Libyan Government – the violation of their political rights has not yet been corrected and now they want out of the EU, but fighting dictatorship; the French public on a majority actually support the UK for wanting out, it’s Germany who are saying ‘Not without another 39 Billion’… please stop blaming the French for everything, this is not their wrong doing but that of the European Union. I’m not French, I’m from Australia so I have no reason to support them other than what I have witnessed living here in Paris for 2 years, since 2017, and I can tell all of you that the French, have a reputation undeserved outside of the country and are sadly the most misunderstood people on earth.  

In addition, I’d like to add that I have travelled to eight different countries since departing Australia in 2012, and I can honestly tell you that in no other country DO THEY FIGHT FOR PEOPLES HAPPINESS LIKE THE FRENCH!

I am trying to help them advance in their political choices, currently speaking to an investigative reporter from Italy (who agrees that the problem is the European Union not the French public), and am at the very beginning of a FREXIT Referendum Campaign online (dealing with EUROPOL, trying to block my every move), if there is anyone that would like to offer any information that would be useful in moving matters forward for the citizens of France, please feel free to contact me via the contact pages of my website:  

https://gelicrisio73.wixsite.com/championschoose-fr/news-update

Vive La France and Merci Jeanne D’Arc

Anne Lucy Gelicrisio

MACRON, WTF IS THIS!!! 

A protest by thousands of French firefighters in Paris on Tuesday ended in violent clashes with police with video images showing riot officers using tear gas, batons and water canon on demonstrators. Three police officers were injured.

https://www.thelocal.fr/20191015/in-pictures-french-firefighters-clash-with-riot-police-in-paris

Thousands of fire heroes from across the country attended the demo in the French capital, calling for better pay, guarantees of their pension benefits and greater respect for their profession.

Firefighters clashed with cops during a protest over working conditions… (click the links); https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/10152673/paris-cops-firefighters-protests-teargas/

Some (Firemen/Pompiers), tried to climb the steel barriers around France’s lower house of parliament while police officers threw teargas grenades at them, a Reuters journalist reported.

Later the bloody demonstration moved to eastern Paris where firefighters rampaged despite more teargas grenades and faced off against riot police.

“There is real anger and the problem is we’re not listened to. That’s why people are getting more angry and it’s starting to get violent”, said Eric Brezault, a firefighter from Aubagne in southern France.

Footage from the scene showed screaming protesters carrying banners forcing back baton-wielding cops.

One shield-bearing police officer is seen spraying CS gas directly into the faces of the firefighters as they try and force their way through a police barrier.

Bricks, lumps of wood and fists were also thrown as the clashes turned increasingly violent.

Other clips showed running battles through the historic streets of Paris - as tear gas canisters rained down on those below.

At one point, cops in helmets were spotted taking shelter behind riot vans as they are outnumbered by the unruly mobs.

Andre Goretti (pictured above), president of the Union of Professional Firefighters, said the firefighters had been on strike since June, but had won only "total disdain" from authorities.

The protest march - like the nationwide strike - involves only professional firefighters not volunteers who make up a large majority in France.

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© 2018 Anne Lucy Gelicrisio; date of publication of this website 28th July, 2019 - All Rights Reserved

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