It's not just banks that are threatened with bankruptcy these days.
The Assembly is overheated, the street energized;
Elisabeth Borne's rating threatens to collapse, the President of the Republic has squandered all his capital.
The majority deputies are groggy, Aurélien Pradié and his friends are spinning like tops, Jean-Luc Mélenchon is seized with revolutionary fever and Marine Le Pen is quietly waiting to redeem everything downwards.
French politics is on the verge of a crash.
At the end of its legislative journey, the pension reform is more contested than on the first day.
It aggregates, in spite of itself, the thousand reasons for anger - inflation, standards, downgrading - which cross the social body.
Like a magnet with a fatal attraction, everything akin to anti-Macronism sticks to it.
Anti-capitalist rage and the fed up of working people coexist in the same whirlwind.
Everyone urgently needs to come to their senses.
Force first must remain with the law.
AT…
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