home bbs files messages ]

Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"

   soc.retirement      For seniors: retirement, aging, geronto      157,025 messages   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]

   Message 156,589 of 157,025   
   Illegal Aliens Caused This to All   
   Re: French oil refineries blockaded as w   
   07 Mar 23 20:30:42   
   
   XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.socialism.democratic, sac.politics   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns   
   From: illegal.alien.freeloaders@gmail.com   
      
   On 26 Jan 2022, Trump Mentally Disabled  posted some   
   news:sss73u$mnqj$122@news.freedyn.de:   
      
   > Looks like it was all a big scam by socialists   
   >   
   > Send the illegal aliens back home to fend for themselves.   
   >   
      
   Paris/London   
   CNN   
    —   
   Oil refineries across France were blockaded Tuesday by workers taking part   
   in a sixth mass protest this year against government plans to raise the   
   retirement age.   
      
   Schools, airports and trains were also disrupted by strikes as the   
   country’s biggest union CGT urged people to “bring France to a halt.”   
   Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets.   
      
   Paris is expected to bear the brunt of the protests, with most lines on   
   the metro running only at the busiest times, according to the city’s   
   transport agency RATP. The main education trade union FSU said Sunday that   
   120 schools would close for the day and 60% of primary school teachers   
   would be on strike in the French capital.   
      
   France’s civil aviation authority, meanwhile, asked airlines to reduce   
   scheduled flights by 20% and 30% at Charles de Gaulle and Orly airports in   
   Paris respectively. Air France said about 20% of short-haul flights would   
   be canceled, but long-haul services would be maintained. The airline   
   cautioned, however, that “last-minute delays and cancellations cannot be   
   ruled out.”   
      
   EasyJet and British Airways also canceled flights.   
      
   National railway operator SNCF said very few regional trains would operate   
   and that four out of five trains on the TGV, France’s intercity high-speed   
   rail service, would be canceled. Services will remain “heavily disrupted”   
   Wednesday, it added.   
      
   Cancellations are already affecting Eurostar trains connecting major   
   European capitals, including between London and Paris, and London and   
   Amsterdam, with disruption due to extend into Wednesday.   
      
   Fuel deliveries to gas stations could also be affected. Eric Sellini of   
   CGT-Chimie, the main oil industry union, told CNN that workers were   
   preventing shipments from leaving oil refineries across the country. At   
   some refineries the blockade will continue until the end of the week,   
   Sellini said.   
      
   Total (TOT)Energies confirmed that shipments from its refineries were   
   blocked Tuesday, but said stocks at gas stations were at high levels. “Our   
   teams are mobilized to meet a demand that could be stronger than usual and   
   we have additional logistical resources if necessary,” the company said in   
   a statement.   
      
   More than 40% of workers at French energy company EDF were on strike   
   Tuesday, according to a spokesperson.   
      
   Strikes ‘moving up a gear’   
   Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators will gather in more than 260   
   locations across France later on Tuesday, according to BFMTV. In   
   Marseille, 245,000 people took to the streets.   
      
   Philippe Martinez, CGT secretary general, said in an interview with Le   
   Journal du Dimanche Sunday that unions “are moving up a gear” and he   
   expected “that the mobilizations will continue and grow until the   
   government listens to workers.”   
      
   France has endured a series of strikes this year, as workers rail against   
   President Emmanuel Macron’s planned pension reforms. The reforms will   
   gradually increase the age at which most French citizens can draw a state   
   pension to 64, from 62.   
      
   A record 1.3 million people took part in demonstrations on January 19,   
   which brought the country to a standstill and shuttered the Eiffel Tower   
   to visitors.   
      
   The government has said the pension legislation is necessary to tackle a   
   funding deficit, but the reforms have angered workers at a time when   
   living costs are rising.   
      
   The legislation is currently before French lawmakers, with a vote on the   
   final version of the text expected later this month.   
      
   -— Joseph Ataman and Oliver Briscoe contributed reporting.   
      
      
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]


(c) 1994,  bbs@darkrealms.ca