Monday 23rd of September 2024

we will never accept the anti-democratic power grab....

Large protests took place across France on Saturday over the appointment earlier in the day of a right-leaning government. Thousands marched in Paris, denouncing President Emmanuel Macron and his new conservative prime minister, Michel Barnier, claiming they had disregarded the results of the July parliamentary election.

The vote left France deadlocked and with a hung parliament consisting of three roughly equal blocs – the left-wing New Popular Front (NFP) alliance, the center, headed by Macron’s Renaissance party, and the far-right National Rally. Although no party won a majority, the NFP coalition secured the most seats, which was seen as providing a mandate to present its candidate for prime minister.

However, Macron refused to appoint the NFP’s choice, Lucie Castets, triggering accusations that he “denies democracy.” Earlier this month, meanwhile, Macron nominated Barnier, from the center-right Republicans party, for the post.

Barnier failed to form a government quickly and when he finally announced a new cabinet on Saturday, it included only one left-wing politician, Didier Migaud, as justice minister. The rest mostly comprised centrists and right-wingers.

The protesters saw this as an act of “disrespect” for the left-wing alliance’s electoral victory and democracy as a whole, according to numerous placards seen on the streets on Saturday. Activists waved flags and signs reading “Rule by idiots” and “Impeachment for Macron,” and called for the president’s resignation. Some wore Macron masks topped with a crown, accusing the French leader of trying to become a “president-monarch” by attempting a “coup de force” with Barnier’s appointment.

 

Footage also showed demonstrators chanting slogans denouncing the Macron-Barnier government and calling for the people to mobilize against them and defend their right to choose their leaders.

“We are here to reiterate that we will never give in, that we will never accept the anti-democratic power grab by the president of the republic,” one demonstrator stated.

 

“Macron no longer has any legitimacy in power... The French people voted, and it was clear that the NFP was in the lead. But [Macron] took as prime minister one of the group that received the fewest votes,”another protester explained.

The largest demonstration was in Paris, where organizers claimed up to 40,000 people took part. Protests also took place in Lyon, Nantes, Marseille, Bordeaux, Angouleme, and Strasbourg.

 

In addition to the popular discontent, France’s new government faces a slew of problems, from sorting out tax policy to fixing the budget crisis. Many experts warn that an added challenge will be to actually manage to push legislation through a highly fractured parliament.

 

https://www.rt.com/news/604459-france-protests-new-government/

 

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

statistics victims....

Poll finds 52% are satisfied with Macron's choice of Barnier as French PM

An Ifop poll commissioned by the French weekly Journal du Dimanche found that 52 percent of respondents said they were satisfied with newly appointed Prime Minister Michel Barnier, who was named by Emmanuel Macron after two months of political deadlock. The poll, which had a margin of error of up to 3.1 points, also found that almost three out of four respondents believed the conservative prime minister would quickly be toppled by a no-confidence vote.

https://www.france24.com/en/france/20240909-just-over-half-of-french-satisfied-with-macron-s-choice-of-barnier-as-pm-poll-finds

 

The Art of Uncertainty by David Spiegelhalter review – a search for sense in probability and chance

...

Uncertainty, in Spiegelhalter’s view, is a relationship between an individual and the outside world. And, because of that, our personal judgments play an essential role whenever we are faced with it, “whether we are thinking about our lives, weighing up what people tell us, or doing scientific research”. And tolerance of uncertainty varies hugely among people: some are excited by unpredictability, while others are crippled by anxiety.

...

At another point he addresses the important question of how long it would take a group of monkeys to compose the works of Shakespeare. He installed a Monkey Simulator program on his PC and left it running for days. After 113m imaginary monkey keystrokes (equivalent to about 26 days for 50 monkeys typing one character per second) the best the simians could do was “we lover”, which appears in Love’s Labour’s Lost, Act 2, Scene 1.

All of this is typical of the astute way that Spiegelhalter sweetens an important pill. Most of us (including journalists) are woefully ignorant about probability, chance and risk. Mass media consistently creates needless alarm about small risks (travelling by air) while ignoring real or more significant ones (driving to work). People are hoodwinked by anti-vax propaganda and spooked by pure coincidences. Politicians smugly repeat ancient tropes about “lies, damned lies and statistics”, and constituents nod complacently. It’s all stuff aimed at triggering Kanheman’s System 1. Faced with such wilful blindness, most academics would have shrugged and returned to their rooms. Fortunately, Spiegelhalter is made of sterner stuff.

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2024/sep/22/the-art-of-uncertainty-by-david-spiegelhalter-review-a-search-for-sense-in-probability-and-chance

 

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.