Search
This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian News

Time's Up for Naughty Nathan ... Recommendation that horrible NSW solicitor be derolled ... Misuse of online funding campaigns ... Spraying ripe and abusive language ... Trolling Robert Beech-Jones ... So unfit and improper as to be beyond reeducation ... Anthony Kanaan reports ... Read more >>

Politics Media Law Society


Sex, Bribes, and Club Fed ... Ms Maxwell comes out … Sex offender gets Bryan … The merry-go-round of sleaze … Protection rackets and shake-downs … Flashing orange light for Moloch … Thank God for rigged figures … Morpheus awake ... Read on >> 

Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

Wither the Republic ...Twenty years of Roger Fitch ... He says this is his last column from Washington ... A brief history of American law and governance since Bush II ... The Roberts' court and reshaping the Constitution ... Hollowing out the Bill of Rights ... Murdoch's malign influence ... Shakedowns and bribes ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian's Bloggers

Postcard from London ... Summertime - And the living' is easy ... Votes for 16-year olds ... Paralegal's theft by pen ... Spy helping British intelligence from his job at Border Force ... Super-injunction comes out of the shadows ... Feed them strawberries and cream ... Floyd Alexander-Hunt files from Blighty ... Read more >> 

"I've stopped six wars in the last - I'm averaging about a war a month. But the last three were very close together. India and Pakistan, and a lot of them. Congo was just and Rwanda was just done, but you probably know I won't go into it very much, because I don't know the final numbers yet. I don't know. Numerous people were killed, and I was dealing with two countries that we get along with very well, very different countries from certain standpoints. They've been fighting for 500 years, intermittently, and we solved that war. You probably saw it just came out over the wire, so we solved it ..."

President Donald Trump at a meeting in Scotland with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer ... July 28, 2025 ... Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

Schmoozing and Betrayal ... Judge Water Softener rides into Integrityville mounted high on his horse ... Judicial review of corruption finding ... Unprecedented assistance to morals monitor ... Plenty to think about ... Court reporter Ginger Snatch files ... Read more >> 

 

 

Justinian's archive

Abolish silks ... Sydney SC writes to the editor calling for abolition of the silk system ... Appointments are anachronistic ... It's not a matter of ability, only notability ... Secret blackballing ... "Corrupt" process ... Confessions from an insider who played the game ... From Justinian's Archive, October 24, 2002 ... Read more >> 


 

 

« Unclean Bill of Health | Main | Lunar event »
Tuesday
Feb072023

Postcard from Paris

Strikes, protests and disruption ... The revolutionary spirit persists over planned new retirement age for French workers ... Wine spilt in the 4th ... Country could run out of pension money as contributions dwindle ... Sir Withnail on the latest manifestations 

I was attempting, in peace, to enjoy a well-buttered entrecôte in the 4th Arrondissement when suddenly I heard drums and shabby chanting. Had the Frogs not already lost the World Cup? What are they whining about now? 

Ah yes; the strikes. As French as the Haut-Médoc currently picketing my palette. 

At the age of 62, the French have the lowest retirement age in Europe - and now has decided to pull its pants up. The Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne last year initiated the parliamentary mechanism to raise the retirement age to 64. 

The strikes, in turn, were set; perfectly timed for my trip to Paris.

It was under the Présidence of François Mitterrand in 1981 that the legal age of retirement was reduced from 65 to 60. It has been a source of pride for the French Left, even today. For successive governments, an almost immovable bollard.  

Unsurprisingly, this generous system in the face of an ageing population has problems. The famous 1991 White Paper presented by Michel Rocard, the then Prime Minister, presented the issue starkly: the deficit created by a dwindling number of contributors relative to a growing number of retirees could become so perilous as to bankrupt the entire system. 

Although the problem is acknowledged across all political parties, there remains a dilemma: should a government further increase worker's contributions or reduce the system's generosity? 

As Rocard declared in the same year his paper was published: "with the reform of retirement, there is enough to blow up multiple governments".

Under Nicholas Sarkozy in 2010, an increase of the retirement age to 62 was proposed, prompting 1.23 million people to take to the streets across the country. 

Like today, the SNCF trains were down and oil refineries were closed. Yet, the 2010 reforms still went through, just as it appears to be the case with the current proposal.  

Will the drum beating and shouting make much difference? 

Protests remain a "natural tool" in the demonstration of unified political force. It has not been since 2006 that a project has been withdrawn as a result of public manifestations in France. 

These days work strikes are less common in the Republic as the country continues to deal with high unemployment - seven percent in November 2022 - and the fragmented organisation of the unions. 

However, large demonstrations might manifest a political movement that can be leveraged by unions in negotiations. Macron's 2021 election promise had been a retirement age of 65, and this has been watered down to 64 in the current proposal. 

The Antipodeans are exemplary in their own relative silence. Their laws might certainly have played their part. 

In Tasmania, the Police Offences Amendment (Workplace Protection) Act was passed last year. A protestor who obstructs access to a workplace as part of a protest could face 12 months in prison. Even an organisation supporting citizens to protest could be fined over $45,000.

Last April, NSW saw new legislation proving for big fines and a maximum of two years in pokey for protesting on public roads, rail lines, tunnels, bridges and industrial estates. 

In the UK, Rishi Sunak recently announced amendments through the Public Order Bill to broaden the definition of "public disruption". Police officers will not need to wait until "disruption" takes place. It can be shut down in expectation of chaos erupting. 

If any climato-marxists dare repeat their shenanigans in the streets of London, they will be switfly removed and installed into the more biodiverse environment of a prison cell.

As the PM put it: "A balance must be struck between the rights of individuals and the rights of the hard-working majority to go about their day-to-day business." 

Hear, Hear. Let me go about my business in peace. And don't scratch my Jaguar on the way. 

The Parisian brouhaha outside continues. 

Monsieur le Président Emmanuel Macron had the good sense to visit Spain throughout the duration of the protests. Instead, the Prime Minister and the government remained on the receiving end of the raucous. I should have had Macron's good sense; no one complains during siesta. 

I'll have to finish my little letter. The Eurostar out of Europe is calling me. 

Sir Withnail - Gare du Nord


Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Member Account Required
You must have a member account on this website in order to post comments. Log in to your account to enable posting.