"Emmanuel Macron, the French president, has announced that he is dissolving the national assembly, and calling for legislative elections on June 30 and July 7.

The French president said that he can’t pretend nothing has happened, that the outcome of the EU election is not good for his government and that the rise of nationalists is a danger for France and Europe."

  • @kescusay
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    2776 months ago

    Hey, uhh, Europe? Can we talk?

    Look, I know the way the left has been handling immigration has you upset, but could you please take a closer look at the absolute freaks you’re electing today?

    I mean, just take a good look at the United States, circa 2017 through 2020. Did we look like electing an absolute freak worked out for us? Did it fix our own immigration problems? Did it make electing your own Donald Trumps look like a good idea?

    • @[email protected]
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      1186 months ago

      When people feel ignored in a democratic country, they begin to feel like the democracy they live in is a sham or that democracy itself doesn’t work.

      Votes like this aren’t necessarily about “we need a different direction” and more about desperation and/or anger. They want to show the elites of their country that they still have the power, they want to cost them something for treating the population like it’s there to be harvested from, they want to shake up the status quo at all cost.

      They want to prove to themselves that their vote still matters.

      Letting it get to this point is really bad governance. Once you get here, either they win, or they don’t. And of they don’t, most of the people who support them have their suspicions confirmed, they don’t live in a democracy, they voted and didn’t get what they want, again. This creates a division that is difficult to come back from.

      • Neato
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        1096 months ago

        Except the fascists ARE the elites most of the time. This never hurts them. It only hurts themselves.

        • @kescusay
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          426 months ago

          Exactly. And they won’t fix immigration, they’ll just enrich themselves as much as they possibly can.

          • @SlopppyEngineer
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            406 months ago

            These right wing parties need migration. Their whole existence depends on there being immigrants to blame so actually closing the borders and “sending them home” is the worst move they can make politically speaking.

            • @[email protected]
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              136 months ago

              Correct, the next step in the strategy is to blame the immigration on any random external entity (cf Brexit). Eventually this may devolve into full blown war, genocides, etc etc.

            • @[email protected]
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              96 months ago

              Well, you know, there’s a type of “immigration” that fascists love, and the wage cost is zero. You just have to keep the “prisoners with jobs” alive.

            • @[email protected]
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              36 months ago

              not just right wing parties. every country with an aging population needs more young laborers and migrants can help.

              fascists just need someone to blame, and someone desperate to do the same work for less pay.

            • @Valmond
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              16 months ago

              No worries; foreigners, jews, blacks, arabs, and ofc the gays to start.

              There is always someone to blame for everything.

        • @Jimmyeatsausage
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          296 months ago

          Sometimes, you just wanna punch yourself in the dick. It won’t fix your problems, but it’ll make em feel less important for a few minutes.

          • @Siegfried
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            76 months ago

            Jimmy beat sausage, sometimes

      • @[email protected]
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        416 months ago

        They want to prove to themselves that their vote still matters.

        Voting ultra right because of this is like trying to prove life is worth living by eating a bullet

      • @[email protected]
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        166 months ago

        I think you’re being too charitable.

        Some people will happily elect somebody that will be horrible to people they don’t like. Far more people than is comfortable.

      • @[email protected]
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        76 months ago

        Democracy doesn’t work when there’s rampant misinformation and psyops.

        All the shitheads on facebook are drip-fed russian troll-farm garbage and they eat it up like santa eats up biscuits on christmas eve.

        There are literally no consequences to misinformation and disinformation. A politic can literally say anything and get away with it.

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          Well, that’s dismissive. You don’t think that these people are reacting to genuine concerns they have? Not even some of them, some of their concerns?

          In an environment where nobody controls the information, people will lie. If democracy doesn’t work when information flows freely, doesn’t that mean democracy doesn’t work?

          • @[email protected]
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            6 months ago

            What do you mean nobody controls the information? We’re sitting here talking on lemmy, but most people (or at least most vooters) get their information from capital intensive sources controlled by the ruling class. Television is captured and subject to manipulation, mainstream “algorithmic” social media is captured and subject to manipulation, independent (local) print media is dead. I get really depressed when I think about it

            • @[email protected]
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              16 months ago

              So I was responding to the parent statement, he said when there’s disinformation democracy doesn’t work. Well in order to avoid disinformation, you need strong control of information flow. That sounds a lot like a dictatorship. The people you vote for control what you know about them, that’s not democracy. So if democracy doesn’t work because people lie, and democracy doesn’t work if information is controlled, then democracy doesn’t work, right? Interestingly, he confirmed lower in the thread that he does not believe in democracy.

              I’m with you, all news is controlled propaganda. I don’t follow any of it as a result. It is sad, but all we can do is try to live in the world we are in. I don’t let it get me depressed, I just carry on.

          • @[email protected]
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            06 months ago

            “Information”.

            Are their concerns manufactured? Like “immigration bad”, while it’s proven that immigration boosts economy? Like “black people bad”?, “Gay bad”?

            Did I miss any of the “concerns” that Afd party is prompting?

            If I tell you that your nose will fall off if you don’t give €5, that is not information.

            An environment where no-one controls the information is anarchy. Anarchy is not a democracy, no.

            • @[email protected]
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              06 months ago

              An anarchy is an environment where no one controls the application of force. Information has nothing to do with it.

              Seems to me you don’t like democracy and only use it as a means to an end.

              • @[email protected]
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                06 months ago

                …and nobody controls the flow of information.

                I think democracy is shit, when paired with unbridled capitalism and rampant disinformation & misinformation.

                That doesn’t mean I have an alternative. But it’s definitely not anarchy.

      • @John_McMurray
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        6 months ago

        It is a sham. An arrogant 3rd term fool imported a population increase of 3 percent in 18 months during a housing crisis and can’t figure out why people hate him. Successfully lowered wages across the whole country after devaluing the currency intentionally. This is not a mystery why people wants see him at a minimum out of office immediately. I think you all know what a lot actually think should be done with him.

    • @hushable
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      6 months ago

      I just cannot comprehend how anyone can look at post brexit UK and think “yes, I want the same for my country”

      • @kescusay
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        706 months ago

        It’s truly bizarre. Every couple of decades or so, either the United States or significant chunks of Europe decide, “What the hell, let’s give the right-wingers another chance, they say they’ll fix immigration,” and then we end up cutting funding for services and giving tax cuts to the rich. They pull this shit every goddamn time, and we keep falling for the bait-and-switch.

        • @kameecoding
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          76 months ago

          It seems to be coinciding with economic crises, the rise of wealth inequality due to covid is leading to a rise in fascism, it happens always.

    • @cyd
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      306 months ago

      The recent success of the European far right is precisely because they’ve revised their image to get rid of the freakshow aspects. The days when you could dismiss these people just by calling them “absolute freaks” are over.

      • @kescusay
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        396 months ago

        But the freakiness is still 100% present in their platforms and ideologies. They’re just dressing nicer now.

        • CH3DD4R_G0B-L1N
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          306 months ago

          Unfortunately, “decorum” is really the only thing keeping some folks from hopping on board those movements, not the policies themselves.

      • @[email protected]
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        166 months ago

        No… No they are all still freaks. Did you just take off your “they live” sunglasses or something? The Freakshow aspect is in the ideological makeup.

      • @suction
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        16 months ago

        Not true, 95% are still freaks, optically and mentally.

    • @Valmond
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      296 months ago

      We love copying the USA.

      • @Ostrichgrif
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        166 months ago

        The US won the Civilization cultural victory 70 years ago and the world has continually gotten worse as a result.

        • TomAwsm
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          46 months ago

          We might need a Ghandi with nukes…

          • @gbzm
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            36 months ago

            Best we can do is Modi

          • @Anti_Iridium
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            86 months ago

            As an American, I would argue that the United States didn’t win the Cold War, the Soviet Union just lost it.

      • @RGB3x3
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        76 months ago

        And making sure to tell the USA how stupid they are at the same time.

        A bit hypocritical, eh?

        • @suction
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          6 months ago

          If you look a little closer, it’s not. Educated European people do not want to copy American culture, or at the very least try to pick out the good stuff. They are those who criticise the US for the bad stuff, though.

          Our dummies, deplorables, low class people on the other hand have eaten up American culture hook line and sinker, they are culturally in sync with basic bitch Americans and their lifestyle and hobbies (minus guns because of laws)…music, movies, food, holiday destinations, political views, clothing, hobbies is all copied from the US. American soft power works wonders on soft European brains. These are the people who don’t criticise the US but the US shouldn’t take that as a compliment, because they’re morons.

          So there is a huge class divide in Europe between people who want to turn Europe in the US, end those who think that’s not a good idea. No hypocrisy.

        • @Maalus
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          06 months ago

          Not really hypocritical, not all of us are Fr*nch

      • @suction
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        16 months ago

        *our lower classes (in terms of education) do

        • @Valmond
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          26 months ago

          We’re at the USA obesity levels of 1995, now tell me it’s just the ignorant.

          I mean it probably starts there but with a third if a population voting far right, ignorants will soon be the biggest part of our countries.

          • @suction
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            16 months ago

            It might as well be, that’s why the upper classes should look for an alternative.

            Also, who is “we”? I’m not from the UK

              • @suction
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                16 months ago

                In that case “we” are at 53%, the US were at least at 55% in the early 90s, which is 35 years ago. I think that’s a long enough timespan to make any comparison moot.

    • @runjun
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      176 months ago

      It makes me want to mock the EU considering how much, deserved, shit the US gets. But this is just depressing. I would much prefer the US to be mocked as we get our shit, hopefully, together. Not fucking join us.

    • @FordBeeblebrox
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      116 months ago

      Are they electing our Trumps or are we electing their Mussolini? Shitty people being shitty is not a US exclusive, but you’re right.

      As Saint George says, garbage in, garbage out

      • @AngryCommieKender
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        16 months ago

        I’d actually give the Catholic Church a few points in the “Good” column if they made Carlin a saint. He could be the patron saint of jesters and fools.

  • DominusOfMegadeus
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    6 months ago

    I am from the U.S. so I don’t really understand how this works, or what the significance is. Can anyone EILI5?

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      Macron’s party got disastrous results and got trounced by the far right in the European elections.

      He had been selling himself as the shield that protected France from the rise of the local far right party. With these results, he has lost his credibility, and therefore his government did as well.

      Therefore he’s calling out-of-schedule French parliamentary elections that – I assume – he hopes will reelect his party and allies ahead of the far right. It might work: the far right party polls strong at around 30%, but has few allies, and may not be able to form a coalition government. If Macron himself can, that will strengthen his legitimacy.

      Needless to say, this is a risky gamble.

      • @Xeroxchasechase
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        616 months ago

        He acknowledge he lost his credibility and therefore he dissolves the parliament? He just gain my appreciation

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          Because delaying mean’s momentum against him will continue to grow

          You wait it out if you think there’s no chance for you or you hope it fades

            • @[email protected]
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              76 months ago

              It’s the correct move. It’s democracy, you gotta accept the will of the people… even when they’re being idiots.

              • @Cosmicomical
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                46 months ago

                unfortunately they are being manipulated into being idiots

                • @[email protected]
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                  16 months ago

                  The euro election seems to be a low turnout election, so this could absolutely be a wakeup call to apathetic voters as well.

                  It’s a gamble but it’s a calculated one.

        • @Dop
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          116 months ago

          That’s be cause what u/balinares forgot to mention is that Macron has been steadily giving the far right his (barely disguized) support by leading policies that are very well aligned with far right ideas, and he has continuously portrayed lefists as crazy. Oh and he also kept setting up debates between his party and the far right leaders, putting them in some sort of ‘legitimate’ position (like there’s been a debate between our prime minister and the head of the far right list for these election, there was absolutely no reason to do it, but hey who give a crap about fairplay uh?). Oh and also we now have our own fox news (cnews here), broadcasting on a public network, but not respecting there duty to remain neutral. But no wonders why, since these media are owned by a far right billionaire.

          TLDR: Macron carefully set the conditions for the far right to win these election by portraying them as the only opposition, and now he’s all whiny that surprise surprise, the far right is aslo far ahead.

          • @Xeroxchasechase
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            36 months ago

            Oh… Unfortunately, that makes more sense :(

            • @[email protected]
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              36 months ago

              We’ve had two elections since then.

              While I hoped the Tories weren’t popular in 2016, unfortunately for all of us, Boris (and Corbyn proving about as popular as a fart in a spacesuit) kept them relevant.

      • @Lost_My_Mind
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        -196 months ago

        Maybe French elections are different to American ones…but isn’t this essentially “I didn’t win, therefore I invalidate the election”?

        If the people voted, and this is what they want, even if you don’t like it, isn’t that what the people want?

        • @[email protected]
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          366 months ago

          Sorry, I should have been clearer: his party scored badly in the EU elections, so he lost credibility in France and is calling snap elections in France. I’ll edit my comment above to clarify.

          • @meco03211
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            06 months ago

            So the EU vote includes offer countries then right? So like, “I’m not as popular among the other countries, do you still want me around France?”

            • @[email protected]
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              166 months ago

              People vote for EU members from their own countries (so France in this case). Macron’s party underperformed in those elections, so he’s hoping to get ahead of any further decline, maybe with the hope that the EU vote was more of a protest vote, rather than a sincere desire for the far-right to be in power.

        • @babeuh
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          276 months ago

          No, it isn’t. His party “lost” in the EU parliamentary elections, not those of the national parliament. It’s a very bold and bizarre strategy.

          • @Jarix
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            66 months ago

            It’s bold but not bizarre. It’s all about confidence in the next election. Better to have an election when you think you can still win than when you think you wont

        • @A_A
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          6 months ago

          if you equate USA with Europe …
          then France will be one of the states …
          and Macron would be the governor of his state who would decides to call state election because on the federal level his party lost (while there was not yet elections at the state level)

          Also : this election called by Macron calls for a possible change of his government but his own seat as president is not challenge until the next election in 2027.

          • @Lost_My_Mind
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            -146 months ago

            So you’re saying the election he’s in hasn’t even happened, but a bigger election DID happen, but a bigger election his party lost. So this is more like a preemptive surprise election?

            I don’t support the far right, but I also don’t support these tactics. I’m sure if I looked into it I’d find tactics I don’t support on the far right. But you can’t lower yourself to that level if you’re trying to shield your people from those types of tactics.

            You can’t be the savior of the people by being the poster boy of what the people are afraid of.

            • @KISSmyOSFeddit
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              6 months ago

              You’re completely misunderstanding the situation. Macron is basically saying “you voted for the far right in the EU election so I’m calling for French national elections now to see if I still have your support to lead this country”.

              • @Lost_My_Mind
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                26 months ago

                That is a ballsy move then. Maybe even a little dumb, if the far right just won the EU elections.

                • Fushuan [he/him]
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                  56 months ago

                  Most of the time the far right gains power is because people don’t show up. The best moment to win in such an scenario is the moment the results are in. Because anti far right people will freak out and will hopefully show up. If they let this fester the right will just gain more votes.

                • @Jarix
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                  46 months ago

                  Right it is ballsy but it also has metits. The eu election that macrons party did poorly in is bigger in that it involves all of europe, but it has almost no direct power in france(someone please correct me if its flat out wrong to say that) but its not insignificant.

                  The leader of france or any country has long term planning to do and he just got shown his opponents CAN best him.

                  But this election isnt the most important one for france so a lot of people dont take things as seriously. They vote in ways they wouldnt in more important elections.

                  By admitting his weak position it rallys people to actually turn out and vote for realzies this time.

                  The way the world is Macron likely thinks if he waits and has to run an election later its going be bad. But also he will risk needless opposition at home making his job significantly harder domestically. If its harder to manage france its much harder to be a good helpful member of the un and the right is gaining power.

                  Could easily backfire, but he wouldnt do if he himself didnt think it was his best chance. And if he gets the boot he can become the oppostion focusing all his efforts on JUST fighting against the right which he may see as the most important thing right now

        • @NIB
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          6 months ago

          No, it isnt anything like that. The EU elections are different than the national ones and they arent explicitly connected in any way.

          But they are implicitly connected. His party just did very badly in the EU elections. He could technically continue to govern till the next national elections or he could go to early national elections and ask the voters “hey, you didnt vote for me in the EU elections, do you still want me to rule this country or not? Please confirm that you still continue to support me”.

          Basically Macron is saying “You just saw how fucked things are, with the far right getting over 30% of the votes in the EU elections. Vote for me or the fascists will win”. It is a move intended to rally the voters to his party but he also risks losing the elections(resulting in a fascist government).


          As a general rule, in many countries the governing party does worse in the EU elections, because the EU elections are often used as an opportunity to vote for small/minor political parties or protest vote. The EU parliament isnt as legislatively relevant. They dont make laws, they just approve/reject laws proposed by the EU Commision.

          The EU Commision isnt directly elected by the voters. The european country governments appoint EU Commission members(one from each country) and the EU parliament votes for the EU Commission leader. This is a point of contention.

          Technically it is “democratic” because eventually everything comes down to either national european governments(who are democratically elected) or the EU parliament(which is also democratically elected). But many people think it is weird to have the most powerful EU institution appointed instead of directly elected. The procedure isnt as transparent as people would like and it involves a lot of backdoor “politicking”.

          PS On the other hand, directly electing the EU Commission would give its members a lot more political power, basically on par or higher with the elected country leaders. Being directly elected greatly increases your political power.

        • @[email protected]
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          26 months ago

          This is somewhat analogous to the way midterm elections are treated in the US, and a decent comparison would be when Mitch McConnell blocked Obama from appointing a Supreme Court Justice towards the end of his second term.

          The Democrats lost seats in Congress during that midterm season, which the Republicans used to claim that the American people had no faith in the Democrats and therefore no faith in Obama. They then used this claim as an excuse to block the Democrats ability to govern.

          In this case, the people of France have voted for another party to represent their interests internationally to the EU parliament.

          Macron will now face claims within the French government that the people voting against them in the EU elections indicates that they have no faith in his party’s leadership and that will make it difficult for him to govern.

          With this move, calling an election early, they will have a clear indication of who the French people wish to lead them internally and, if they reelect Macron’s party, can dismiss the claims from opposition parties that the people don’t trust them.

          It’s worth mentioning that many governments around the world don’t have fixed election cycles the way you do in the US. Instead many countries have an end date by which the election must occur, but a new election can be called at any time before that date if the government thinks it’s necessary. A similar thing is currently happening in the UK where the Conservative Party has called an election for early July, even though the election didn’t have to take place until late January 2025.

    • @[email protected]
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      196 months ago

      “dissolving parliament” means they’ve announced a general election. Parliament won’t meet any more, and all the existing members of parliament will go home and begin campaigning

      • @mercano
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        106 months ago

        The UK is going through the same thing. The Prime Minister dissolved Parliament about two weeks ago, and elections are going to be held of July 4th. (An odd choice, but apparently elections are always on a Thursday in the UK.)

    • VeganPizza69 Ⓥ
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      16 months ago

      Can anyone EILI5?

      Sure. A lot of people voted for bullies who can talk themselves out of consequences.

    • @ZK686
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      -346 months ago

      The Far Right movement is gaining momentum because many of their own people are getting tired of the “immigrants are more important” mindset their country is creating. Many of France’s own people are getting ignored, so that the political parties in charge can focus on helping poor immigrants from other countries. Well, France’s own citizens are getting tired of this, and have started to vote in more people who have a “French People First” mentality (similar to what Trump wanted to do, and everyone called him a racist for being “America First”). So, the party RN (National Rally) wins and now their going to get rid of all the current members in Parliament, and have a new vote to get people in. I think that’s what it means?

      • @mumblerfish
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        446 months ago

        These takes are always so dumb. “It’s immigration”. Then why do these parties also want to get rid of public access television and radio? Why are they trying to limit investigative journalism? Why are they limiting independent research at universities? Why are the against public welfare systems? Social institutions? Juridicial safety? Democratic protections? It’s almost like it is something more…

        • FaceDeer
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          146 months ago

          There’s a difference between what the right-wing voters are wanting and what the right-wing politicians are doing. You run into the same problems with left-wing voters and politicians too. Not to say that they’re “both the same”, just that you can’t treat them all as one big hive mind.

          • @mumblerfish
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            16 months ago

            There is a difference. But what you are saying is not true, bacause it was tested in Sweden. All parties in parliament, except three parties at like 18% votes in total, said the far-right party have always been correct when it comes to immigration (“always” including when they were an explicit nazi party), and switched to their line. If the voters understood and did not want all that other shit, they should have switched. They did not.

            But there is a difference. The people who run the party today, who joined it when it was an explicit nazi party, probably have a certain goal in their mind where they need all these steps. The voters, in general, are just rationalizing why they vote for the steps.

            • FaceDeer
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              16 months ago

              But what you are saying is not true, bacause it was tested in Sweden.

              I’m saying that the voters and the politicians they vote for are not one big hive mind. You’re saying that they are one big hive mind? And your example is that voters didn’t switch their support when their parties changed the positions? I’m not sure you’ve interpreted what I said correctly.

              • @mumblerfish
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                26 months ago

                What are you talking about? I just agreed that there is a difference between voters and politicians, and then I elaborated on one such difference. In the same comment I also tried to highlight that this still means that it is not the “immigration” question they are voting for.

                • FaceDeer
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                  16 months ago

                  Ah. The problem is that you told me “But what you are saying is not true” and then basically agreed with what I’d said.

        • TechGuy
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          16 months ago

          @mumblerfish @ZK686

          Not sure if people voting far-right parties want dictatorships policy. Maybe they want only more order and protection as citizens of that nation, with rights before the immigrants

          • @mumblerfish
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            26 months ago

            Sorry, several things here.

            “Rights before immigrants”, so “just” a higher standing than people of different origins? I’m sure we have a word for this.

            And this is what I’m saying. Yes, they do not only want “no immigration”. There must be “order” too. There is no “order” if we do not give police the means to achieve it. There is no “order” if you allow scientists to tell you that these are not effective ways to achieve order. There is no “order” if the people trying to achieve the “order” are being critiqued.

            Then in many cases it is not about “want”. “Want”? What does it matter? “I voted for the totally-not-nazis-anymore-party, because I read their pamphlet and they just wrote good things there. I’m a good guy and thought they were best. Oh, these guys on the telly says that one of the things I thought was a good thing was really fucked up. That makes me feel bad and stupid. But I’m a good guy. Did I do something wrong? The totally-not-a-nazi-anymore-guy says it is not fucked up, but good actually. That makes me feel comfortable. I’ll adopt that view instead. I’m a good guy.” Lucky us! This guy did not “want” free speech to be forbidden in universities, or which ever.

        • @eatthecake
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          16 months ago

          I don’t think the average person gives a toss about any of those things or sees them as adding any value to their lives. They believe that journalists are lying propagandists, universities are elitist and out of touch, welfare serves lazy immigrants and social and democratic systems have failed them. Noone really beleives in society anymore, the right would like to create a new one where they fit in.

      • @[email protected]
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        6 months ago

        It’s right wing governments pushing immigration to keep wages low, housing costs high, and replacing boomers in the workforce

        Left wingers just want to make life better for their citizens

      • @[email protected]
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        46 months ago

        Yup, but people are dumb. We already have an example of what happens with no immigration, it’s Japan. It’s been economical stagnant for thirty years, and has lost even more quality of life than most countries.

  • Nimo
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    736 months ago

    An unprecedented move which could backfire as it did for Chirac in 1997. Macron is playing a dangerous gamble with the Fifth Republic… 🗳️🇫🇷

    • @Dop
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      196 months ago

      Comparing it to Chirac’s situation is downplaying how crazy te move is right now. Can you imagine how fucked up this is? Like “oh, the far right has more than twice as many votes as we got, it must be some sort of big misclick situation, lets check it out !”

      • @[email protected]
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        206 months ago

        I think it’s more that the situation is only going to get worse the longer we wait so he’s pulling the trigger now for the best conditions he’s ever going to get. Not great

        • @Dop
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          26 months ago

          The conditions he spent years building? Yeah, I’m not falling for that.

      • Nimo
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        26 months ago

        Like I said: a dangerous gamble with the Fifth Republic…

        • @Dop
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          26 months ago

          We all know how the far right has a hard time letting go of it’s grip on power, that’s for sure. But this ils no ‘gamble’, like he’d be cornered to do this, he led us here. He is deliberately playing with the french like they’re just paws in his self-centered game.

    • Nimo
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      15 months ago

      And by the looks of things it seems like I was right it has (so far) spectacularly backfired. Obviously we have to wait for the second round but…

  • Lad
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    6 months ago

    Russia is the biggest winner when far-right sentiment increases

    • Andromxda 🇺🇦🇵🇸🇹🇼
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      5 months ago

      That’s why they are funding and supporting far-right parties in almost any Western country. The AfD in Germany is a good example, their MPs were literally caught receiving money from the RuSSians. Their MEPs also work for the Chinese intelligence service btw

  • @Bye
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    626 months ago

    Why is the right becoming more popular? What changed?

    • @[email protected]
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      796 months ago

      2008, the global financial crash, the subsequent shift of trillions of all the currencies towards the already-rich, then Covid hammering the final nail in the coffin of proving that governments care about the people only inasmuch as they provide value.

      We’ve had sixteen years of people getting poorer and poorer, shit getting more expensive, and the news outlets they read pointing towards immigrants/gays/leftists as the problem.

      The right take those messages and amplify them. They tell people that only they can speak truth to power, when the reality is far more nuanced than that. But people don’t want nuance, they just want to be able to pay their bills. The people aren’t stupid though, they know that the windbags can’t really change anything, but the status quo hasn’t done shit to help them, so fuck it, we’ll vote for the other guy.

      “They’re all the same anyway”

      • @[email protected]
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        6 months ago

        2008, the global financial crash, the subsequent shift of trillions of all the currencies towards the already-rich, then Covid hammering the final nail in the coffin of proving that governments care about the people only inasmuch as they provide value.

        I get the frustration, but where is the evidence the far right would care an iota more about people? Specially during covid almost every far right government did worse, in terms of actual dead people, than any left one

        • Redex
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          256 months ago

          Sometimes people don’t vote by logic. They see stuf going to shit, hear grand promises of how “we’ll fix everything, the establishment is incompetent/evil”, and hope they’ll deliver.

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          That’s not the criteria, the criteria is whoever is the loudest in criticizing the status quo. And the far right is the loudest

          The far right would make everyone poorer but wouldn’t change the class structure, so they are allowed to exist while the left gets suppressed. See for example how many of the titans of industry in west germany who supported the Nazis got off scot free (or with much commuted sentences) and got to keep their assets. The system works :)

        • @andrewta
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          46 months ago

          I’d say we are right on top of one

          • TechGuy
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            06 months ago

            @andrewta so I’d say it’s deflating, right?

            Central Bank rates are reducing in EU. In USA not yet or maybe growing. China is still in the crisis with signals of recovery more and more delayed

        • @Bye
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          36 months ago

          No. In the US at least, wages are up for blue collar work, and that’s where the economy was most vulnerable. Inflation has been bad but it’s coming back under control and wages can outpace it in the next couple years, median wage growth already has (yes I have a hard time believing this too, but that’s the numbers).

          The last financial crisis had a flagrant cause in default-prone loans. There isn’t such a problem right now.

          The largest crisis we are running into is a crisis of propaganda, where people are being told “everything is terrible” when in fact the numbers show that everything is pretty great… except for white collar tech workers (me!).

          I think the tech market will rebound the second that the fed lowers rates again, because tech is fundamentally capital intensive and speculative. So you need cheap money to fuel tech. Video games deflated/corrected a bit but that’s fine, those people can work on other things.

          • @CaptainSpaceman
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            46 months ago

            Ridiculous assessment.

            Everyone is being told its all fine, but the insane CPI massaging has gotten beyond out of hand. There are very little gains for the proletariat masses RN, mostly losses.

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      This is more of a general answer as fascism seems to be gaining more ground globally. A book published in 1997 “The Fourth Turning: An American Prophecy” theorized roughly every 80 years (or about a human life span) we face a crisis related to a critical mass of people losing the knowledge and shared values from the previous generations. Imagine the perspective of a Revolutionary War veteran who fought under General Washington to help forge the United States, who would be understandably upset to hear any mention of a Civil War between states, which didn’t start until 82 years later.

      We are losing that collective memory now both in the U.S. and abroad; the remaining World War II veterans are in no position to punch these fascists when they see a swastika flown at a rally. Unless we vote in numbers large enough to throw the MAGA movement into the dustbin of history, in the future we can expect younger Trump acolytes to take root in the same vacuum of thought.

      From a recent article

      ”With these words Biden addressed the bitter irony that haunted the commemoration ceremonies. While D-Day occurred eight decades ago, America is now just five months from an election that could bring to power a man and a movement who embody and celebrate the twisted authoritarian values of the enemies we sought to defeat so long ago. Fascism has not gone away. The tactics of the Nazis to employ racism and demagoguery to divide society and enable their seizure of power and their gutting of democratic institutions currently are the playbook of Donald Trump and the MAGA movement.”

    • FLeX
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      266 months ago

      All the major media outlets have been bought by a few far-right billionaires. For some years now, propaganda has been omnipresent, 24 hours a day.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          Powerful American people/groups spreading disinformation or funding political extremism is very different from the government doing it.

          • @Hamartia
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            6 months ago

            Money is power. Just because that shower have the sense to sit outside of the spotlight of political scrutiny does not mean that they are apolitical nor does it make the influence they cast not strongly American in flavour.

    • circuscritic
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      There’s too many factors to name in a brief comment, but here’s an interesting statistic:

      In all recent European elections, all center-left parties that have tried to swing to the right on immigration to try and woo right-wing voters, have lost seats. No exceptions.

      Edit: Clarified the swing on immigration was to the right.

      • @Bye
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        186 months ago

        Is this because they waited too long, or because the answer is something other than anti-immigrant sentiment?

        For example, there’s this statistic that almost everyone dies shortly after having CPR performed on them. Paradoxically, that doesn’t mean CPR is bad: it absolutely saves lives. It’s just that they do it too late on a lot of people (and also perform it on a bunch of people who are going to die no matter what but that’s not the point of this anecdote).

    • Cowbee [he/him]
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      6 months ago

      Everything is in motion, nothing is static. As Capitalism declines and the material conditions of Europe decline, reactionary elements longing for “the good old days” rise. It’s generally what happens when Social Democracy turns Nationalist, and is deeply terrifying.

      This can be opposed only through strong antifascist organization, not just sitting home and hoping things get better. They won’t, with that attitude.

      Edit: to add, the reason Social Democracy specifically was mentioned is because both Social Democracy and Fascism are based on the idea of Class Colaboration, only the aims and results are obviously very different. Adding the Nationalist element to an existing Social Democracy can quickly end up changing to outright fascism.

      Immigration policies in particular have been a hot topic in Europe, so Nationalism has been rising with anti-immigrant rhetoric.

    • VeganPizza69 Ⓥ
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      easy emotional messaging × a lot of funding from rich assholes of all types × great means of communication that can target audiences even in isolation.

    • @Jarix
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      26 months ago

      Technology

    • @John_McMurray
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      -26 months ago

      The left is fucking the dog, is what.

  • Avid Amoeba
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    6 months ago

    WTF, why would he do that… This gives me David Cameron / Brexit referendum vibes.

    • @Rayspekt
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      206 months ago

      Maybe he hopes that left-leaning voters will get mobilised by the election outcome today.

      • RubberDuck
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        86 months ago

        It’s a bold strategy, let’s see if it pans out.

        • @Jarix
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          36 months ago

          Fantastic use for this

      • @[email protected]
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        56 months ago

        He called during his televised speech to get rid of the “ruckus causers”, separately from the far right.

        The current largest leftist party had (until last night) close to a third of Parliament, and have a reputation of loudly contesting shit they don’t stand for.

        I really don’t think Macron’s intention is to give them a chance at more votes. If anything, he’s hoping this forces leftist voters to move towards the center, seeing as how his own party barely cleared 14% (the largest far right party did over 30, and a smaller splinter party got around 7% on its own).

        • @Rayspekt
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          26 months ago

          Thanks for the insight. I didn’t know about the leftist party, we only read about Le Pen here.

    • @[email protected]
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      06 months ago

      My cynical take: he wants to let the far right win the legislative elections while he still has close to 3 years left in his term.

      He thinks this will “show” their electorate that voting far right doesn’t get you what you want.

      At the same time, he can take advantage of the media bashing the leftist party has been getting for their vocal opposition to Israel’s actions since October 7 2023, and run them out of Parliament. At least, it’s a gamble he’s willing to make.

      He is just as much of a clueless, egotistical liberal as David Cameron was, so your analogy is sadly pretty accurate.

    • @Noedel
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      246 months ago

      Lol, have you been following the news much?

  • katy ✨
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    -116 months ago

    france try not to be racist and xenophobic for one hour challenge

  • @ZK686
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    -1066 months ago

    The reason the “far right” is gaining momentum around the world because of immigration issues. It has nothing to do with “racism” and “bigotry”, like people on Lemmy and Reddit claim. The Left and Liberals are too concern with helping everyone else, and not their own. Countries are abandoning traditional goals and support for their own citizens, and focusing on helping poor immigrants from all over the place. Sooner or later, your own citizens are going to get fed up.

      • a lil bee 🐝
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        246 months ago

        I agree with you, and yet… It’s winning them elections. We can be upset about it all we want, but it’s increasingly clear that bigotry and xenophobia are winning arguments in this era. We’re fucked if we don’t adjust. I’m not proposing we abandon migrants, but the one thing myself and the person you replied to likely agree on is that the left is increasingly losing sight of home and the average citizen, not in terms of rhetoric but in effect. We’re about to lose the EU and possibly lose support for Ukraine, see even more immigration restrictions, and see an empowered global far-right. The voters are telling us they have different priorities, which we need to focus on in a more altruistic way than the right. We have to be introspective here if we ever want to accomplish our goals.

        • @Eatspancakes84
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          -66 months ago

          Yeah blame the left which is in power in…. Oh right, nowhere. Essentially the voter has tried out all (somewhat) reasonable right politicians and since nothing works they now decided to try the crazy right wingers.

          • a lil bee 🐝
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            176 months ago

            … or don’t introspect, blame the voters, and lose forever. It could not matter less what is true, it’s only what the populace believes. That’s politics. If our ideology can’t stand up to this, it must adjust or it deserves to fail.

            • FaceDeer
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              186 months ago

              … or don’t introspect, blame the voters, and lose forever.

              This is what frustrates me most about a lot of the left-leaning parties and voters I’ve encountered over the years. They think that “well obviously we should be winning, we’re the good guys and they’re the bad guys. People who vote against our position are either ignorant or evil. So we shouldn’t change anything about it and we should ignore the people arguing against it.”

              Whether that’s true or not isn’t the point. The point is that you’re not going to gain any more voters with that strategy. A lot of the people voting against the left have very real and tangible concerns, and you’re not going to get them to vote for you by either telling them they’re wrong to have those concerns or that they aren’t even real in the first place. The left needs to provide them with real solutions to those problems.

              • a lil bee 🐝
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                66 months ago

                Completely agreed. It’s the difference between your political views being an excuse for you to feel morally validated or being a mechanism to improve lives. If it’s the latter, it’s time to get to work. We’re failing and thus losing our ability to do what we stated. If it’s people being idiots, educate them. If it’s people being lied to, reach them. Regardless, we live in a democracy and the entire point is that the people get to choose and the people are rejecting us. We cannot fail to heed those cries.

                We must create an inspiring vision that resonates with voters and alleviates their concerns. The stats clearly show people are concerned about immigration and the economy. The right has a cruel, but effective approach in just stopping immigration entirely and many, many people think that is a good idea right now. What is our better answer? I’m no expert and I don’t know, but that is in and of itself a serious problem. Why do I not have a Meloni I can point to as the beacon of my ideology, that has at least some of the answers?

      • Fushuan [he/him]
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        66 months ago

        And xenophobia is apparently a subset of racism, since it’s discrimination based on place of origin, and regardless of what the name implies, racism also accounts for place of origin alongside ethnicity so… Yeah, it’s racism.

      • @feedum_sneedson
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        16 months ago

        It’s called poverty, I don’t know how you’re missing that.

    • @Eatspancakes84
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      356 months ago

      This is just such a false narrative. The issue is not a lack of funds to help our own citizens and refugees. The issue is that those funds are concentrated among very few very wealthy people. Those wealthy people would very much like us to blame the refugees.

    • Nougat
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      156 months ago

      It has nothing to do with “racism” and “bigotry”, … too concern with helping everyone else, and not their own.

      Tell me you’re racist without saying you’re racist.

    • @[email protected]
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      116 months ago

      I’d say that’s close but more like they’ve concerned themselves with helping the wealthy and need to import more workers due to low fertility and as a way to suppress wages.

      So now there isn’t enough housing and everyone starts struggling more because social programs have been underfunded for years and strain to the brink due to the greater load.

      • @[email protected]
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        46 months ago

        And what housing there is was bought up by investment firms during 2020/21 when people were losing their jobs, or having hours cut, and now more people than ever are paying well over the odds to rent a home because they can’t get a mortgage that would likely cost 2/3 what they’re paying in rent.

        But no right leaning/conservative government is going to do a fucking thing about that because too many of them are either landlords, or have funds in those investment firms. So their tame papers run stories about an immigrant family being given a seven bedroom house in a fancy part of town.

    • Neato
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      66 months ago

      ^Nationalism. AKA racism and xenophobia.

    • FuglyDuck
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      56 months ago

      The reason the “far right” is gaining momentum around the world because of immigration issues. It has nothing to do with “racism” and “bigotry”,

      That’s… were you trying to be ironic? As mentioned elsewhere it’s xenophobia, which is almost certainly rooted in racism and bigotry.

      The entire idea that we should “help ourselves” and not help “others” is racist.

      • FaceDeer
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        16 months ago

        It isn’t necessarily racist. “Ourselves” and “others” can be simply defined by citizenship.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          But it isn’t in this case. Look for example their deranged longing for “remigration”.

        • Doom
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          16 months ago

          France is one of the biggest offenders of imperialism in the past and continuing it today.

          France owes it to help others especially the people they’ve hurt. Countries don’t have functional governments because of France

        • FuglyDuck
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          -26 months ago

          It’s not.

          At least, not here. And it would still be bigotry regardless.

    • @shalafi
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      LMAO at the hate on this comment.

      We can talk about immigration drivers, all night long, but the fact is that the host country is always resentful of immigrants. It doesn’t matter if that resentment is fair or true or justified, it exists.

      Buncha children in here crying, “Racism bad!” Yeah. We know. Some of us grew up on Sesame Street and Mr. Rogers. That doesn’t change countries seeing a bunch of poor people flooding in and taking their resources. And whether they’re actually sucking resources doesn’t fucking matter. It looks like they are.

      And for all the whiners, how about you take in a poor immigrant family and take care of them yourself? Put your money where your mouth is?

      “Uh no. The government should do that for free, somehow, and I don’t want to actually see or deal with it. Or I’ll leave a stern downvote!”

      (And for the inbound haters, my wife is a brown immigrant, not even a citizen. Trying to get her youngest moved here.)

      • @[email protected]
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        126 months ago

        You completely fell for it. The problem is not being resources sucked away by immigrants, and there not being enough left for the regular folk.

        The problem is the rich not having the same burden as the poor due to wealth not being taxed. It’s called having a shitty quality of life and high costs of living.

        • @ZK686
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          -46 months ago

          This argument is old and tiresome. It’s the same shit they try and say in the US. “hey, who cares about the immigrant problem, let’s go after the rich!” This isn’t about the rich, this is about who’s the problem for the average, middle class citizen NOW. This is about, why are things different NOW, and what can I do to change them? Many countries are bringing in immigrants as a curtisoy, to help those in need…but it’s effecting a class of citizens differently, and now those citizens are voicing concern. The rich will always be here, and that issue will always go in circles because the rich are helping many countries sustain an economy (we always want to attack the rich in the US, but in the end, what would happen if the rich stopped paying anything, and just left?). The argument of “it’s the rich people’s fault!” has been a battling call from the Left for 100’s of years…and they will always default to this, even when it’s clear that immigration is causing problems…

          • @[email protected]
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            26 months ago

            You are wrong and short-sighted, and I will tell you why:

            1. income disparity between rich and regular folks: if you look at graphs from studies on wealth inequality, it will show you how the rich get richer, while the poor get (especially relative to their cost of living) poorer. And by poor I mean the average folk.
            2. Immigrants have always been there: both the US and Canada have been built on the backs of immigrants, and are also kept afloat by them. Should we slow down a bit? Perhaps. Should we focus more on the regular folks that already live there? Definitely. But immigration and better social services for those already there are not mutually exclusive. Assuming there are funds for it
            3. The rich are lobbying the governments to do their bidding: The few hold all the power again, just like in feudalism. And they don’t want to give that up at any cost. This creates a perpetual cycle where they make money to gain power to make more money to gain more power to make… you get the ghist.
            4. The rich has a lower burden in taxes: A regular folk will get taxed on their income and purchases for a cumulative burden of around 45%. However someone rich will live off of their wealth creating more wealth instead, while foregoing income and thus income tax. Additionally when it comes to cost of living, even if a rich person would pay equal percentage in taxes to a regular folk, that 45% in cumulative taxes will leave the regular folk with say $5.5k to budget for everything on a 10k/mo salary, while a rich individual will have $55k to budget on a 100k/mo salary.
            5. Immigrants are not taking anyone’s job: In reality new immigrants work all the shitty jobs that no one else wants to or can take anyway. They are either low wage service workers or gig workers, or are actual skilled worker immigrants that are in high demand. Either way they are likely exploited in the low wage position or as the new hire.

            Let me know if I should continue. Or maybe someone else will chime in.

            • @ZK686
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              -56 months ago

              So, what do you suggest countries do? Allow anyone and everyone to come in, and government should instead spend all their time and resources going after the wealthy? Are you saying, that if the rich stopped having money, and just…disappeared, everyone would be better off?