INTL German Farmers Begin 8 Day Massive Protest Against Increased Government Taxation and Alarmist Climate Agenda

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
The people who produce what elitists like
are the ones the stupid elitists want to kill.
How dumb can you get?
The upper classes will have all the wealth,
but nothing to buy. And, shortly after the billions
Of people they want to kill die, they will discover
They CANNOT STAY ALIVE very long with only 500 million
People in the world! ( the wrong people die)
The super rich DONT WORK.
 

Knoxville's Joker

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The people who produce what elitists like
are the ones the stupid elitists want to kill.
How dumb can you get?
The upper classes will have all the wealth,
but nothing to buy. And, shortly after the billions
Of people they want to kill die, they will discover
They CANNOT STAY ALIVE very long with only 500 million
People in the world! ( the wrong people die)
The super rich DONT WORK.
Theu think ai and robots can make up for it. At civillian accessible tech levels not much will work. Even the skunk works 20+ years advanced stuff is iffy at this point. Full on human replacement as it stands is 50 years out maybe.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Hard work and too many statistics: An EU farmer’s frustration grows with every click of the mouse​


RAF CASERT
Updated 5:17 AM EST, February 15, 2024
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LEDEGEM, Belgium (AP) — On a farm in northern Belgium, not far from the hundreds of tractors blocking Europe’s second-biggest port to demand more respect for farmers, Bart Dochy was switching on his computer, waiting for a government program to load with maps of his land next to empty digital boxes demanding to be filled with statistics on fertilizer, pesticides, production and harvesting.

“They also supervise us with satellite images and even with drones,” Dochy said. His frustration highlights the yawning gap in trust and understanding that has opened up between European farmers and what they increasingly see as a nanny state looking into every nook and cranny of their barns, analyzing how every drop of liquid manure is spread.

From Greece to Ireland, from the Baltics to Spain, tens of thousands of farmers and their supporters joined protests across Europe in recent weeks. It was enough to put the farmers’ plight on front pages all over the continent, setting it up as a key theme for the June 6-9 parliamentary elections in the 27-nation European Union.

Farmers have always lived by the whim of nature. Fickle regulation, though, they cannot accept. “That is what is creating this level of distrust. It’s like living in Russia or China,” he said, instead of the fertile flatlands of Flanders in northwestern Belgium.

Farmers have many complaints — from insufficiently regulated cheap imports to overbearing environmental rules — but the reams of red tape set everyone off almost instantly. The EU however, is also the hand that feeds them, with some $50 billion (euros) going into a vast network of programs that touch on agriculture in various ways every year.

In return, farmers must account for their spending — in ways they find increasingly onerous.

At 51, Dochy is far from an embittered, extremist farmer setting bales of hay on fire or spraying manure into government buildings. In his office, as essential as a barn in the life of a current-day EU farmer, hangs the warning “God Watches — No Cursing Here.” He comes from old-time farming stock, generations of conservative Christian Democrats that have traditionally provided the backbone of European agriculture.

Once Dochy finishes dealing with 900 pigs and some 30 hectares (74 acres) of corn or potatoes, he exchanges his blue overalls and rubber boots for a three-piece suit. He’s also the mayor of this farming community, Ledegem, 120 kilometers (70 miles) west of Brussels where much of the detested EU farm bureaucracy comes from.

Over morning coffee, his father, Frans Dochy, 82, remembers how, in his youth, he would harvest beets out of the cold, thick earth by hand for hours. Yet, he says, 2024 bookkeeping “would have driven me off the farm long ago.”

He sees how his son has to register the arrival of any artificial manure within seven days. “And it has to be done even at the busiest times on the field, of course,” said Bart Dochy. “Then it has to be registered exactly how it is spread on every single little plot of land — how many kilos and how it is distributed,” he explained, going through some of the thick folders in his office.

“And with the smallest error, there are fines.”

Dochy said he often heard from dozens of the farmers in his town how the fines can amount to hundreds of euros, simply with a wrong click of the mouse. The same stories come up at every farmers’ protest — be they Italian, French, Dutch or Spanish.

On Tuesday, farmers blocked roads around the Belgian port of Antwerp, the second-largest in Europe, most of the day. The disruption followed earlier protests at the port, 60 kilometers (40 miles) north of Ledegem, and around the country which cost tens of millions of euros in transport delays and spoilt goods.

What really gets Dochy is when bureaucratic deadlines are imposed on him, for example if certain crops or green fertilizers need to be sown by Sep. 1.

“If the last week of August is unbelievably rainy, you will not be able to sow this properly. But you are nevertheless obliged to sow. Otherwise, you may be faced with a fine,” he said.

“A farmer actually lives in conflict between the government, which wants to be in charge, and nature, which is still in charge. And you can’t actually change anything about nature,” Dochy said.

Because the rules also change so fast, Dochy said, it becomes harder and harder to invest wisely. In northern Belgium such issues have coalesced around nitrate pollution from farming and rules to contain it.

Years of political bickering and court challenges have left no clear view of what the future could hold.

EU officials, though, point to the need for strict regulation after decades of lax enforcement. Soil pollution was once widespread from the dumping of excess manure in gutters and rivers. Such was the stench hanging over parts of Dochy’s province that, several decades ago, it was popularly renamed Mest (Manure) Flanders instead of West Flanders.

Farms had to be thoroughly checked to make sure they were spending subsidies correctly.

Now, though, the pendulum has swung the other way. After years of piling on ever more intricate rules, politicians realize they might have gone too far.

“Our farmers continue to face huge challenges,” EU Commission Vice President Maros Sefcovic told EU parliamentarians this week, making sure to mention “administrative requirements.”

“We hear our farmers – loud and clear. We acknowledge your hardship. And politicians need to do better!” Sefcovic said.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

EU Demands Hungary, Poland, & Slovakia Open Their Borders To Cheap, Poor-Quality Ukrainian Grain​


BY TYLER DURDEN
FRIDAY, FEB 16, 2024 - 02:00 AM
Authored by Denes Albert via ReMix News,
The European Commission insists on extending the duty-free and quota-free access of Ukrainian agricultural products and foodstuffs to EU markets for another year. EU trade commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis recently called on Hungary, Poland and Slovakia to immediately lift the ban on imports of Ukrainian products, which was introduced under national jurisdiction last September.


He noted that trade policy is an EU competence, so unilateral action by member states could lead to infringement proceedings against the three member states, and the World Trade Organization (WTO) could also take action.

The European Commission is pushing for “solidarity” despite the fact that not only Eastern European farmers but also Western European farmers are now facing serious competitive disadvantages due to the influx of poor-quality food from Ukraine. As a result, Ukraine has become a major factor driving farmer protests across the bloc, from France to Poland.

Ukraine’s agricultural products are depressing prices on the EU market, as the costs for large agribusinesses in Ukraine are significantly below those of EU producers. This is because Ukraine has much more permissive rules on production conditions and animal welfare.

Ukraine no longer needs help but benefits from the EU’s open market​

Both farmers and countries in Central Europe opposing Ukrainian agricultural imports point out that Ukraine no longer has any problem shipping its agricultural products.

According to Hungarian news outlet Mandiner, It has recently emerged that Ukrainian Infrastructure Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov has said that “in January, Ukrainian grain exports reached pre-war levels, with 14.3 million tons shipped by sea from the port of Odessa, which had previously been blockaded by the Russian army.” He added that more than 650 ships had left the port in recent months, carrying Ukrainian goods to 32 countries around the world.

Before the war, Ukraine used sea routes for the bulk of its agricultural exports, and the infrastructure was built on this form of transport. Previously, these sea routes were blockaded by the Russian army several times during the Russo-Ukrainian war, and they could not be replaced by land transport because the rail infrastructure is not up-to-date to transport large volumes of goods, and the EU and Ukrainian rail gauges are different. However, the immediate danger has subsided, as more and more ships make their way safely to Ukrainian ports and successfully transport agricultural products.


Ever since Brussels decided to temporarily suspend tariffs and quantitative quotas limiting EU imports of agricultural goods and processed food from the war-torn country, Hungary, Poland, and other Central European countries have protested the move. Although the loosening of restrictions on Ukraine’s agricultural products was initially done to support Ukrainian agriculture and ensure agricultural shipments to Africa and the Middle East, multinational corporations have benefited greatly, and much of the grain has remained on European markets instead of being shipped to poorer countries.

This temporary concession was already extended last year by Brussels, and now it has resubmitted its proposal to the European Parliament and the Council, which will be voted on by decision-makers shortly.

(Red bolding is mine. Videos at the link.) PJ
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
What the EU government is using to govern
Is FASCISM!
Younger people do not remember or know, but we older folks DO know what that REALLY is! They are told its all about how HITLER treated the Jews.
No, it is NOT!

The real definition of Fascism is ,
UNLIKE Communism where the govt owns everything,
in Fascism, you "Own" your business and stuff, taking all the risk, work, expenses and losses but the government
Completely CONTROLS every aspect of your busness taking a healthy chunk of your profits, if you can manage to make any. THAT idea is what we fought and died in
WW2 to stop, it was not that way before WW2!

We got it anyway! "Free" Goverments everywhere saw Fascism as a way to exercise total power over its citizenry.
 
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Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

https://apnews.com/article/czech-farmers-protest-eu-agriculture-748913fe7cce0a09137b02b1238a7e33#

Czech farmers take tractors to Prague in a protest over EU agriculture policies​

Farmers with tractors stand on a street in the centre of the Czech capital during a demonstration to draw attention to the poor situation of Czech agriculture in Prague, Monday, Feb. 19, 2024. Some Czech farmers rallied in the capital on Monday to protest the European Union policies on in agriculture and unfair conditions for doing their business. Hundreds of tractors and other vehicles blocked one line on a major road in downtown Prague but traffic was not halted. Anticipating a possible collapse of traffic, City Hall warned people not to drive to Prague on Monday. (Ondrej Deml/CTK via AP)

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Farmers with tractors stand on a street in the centre of the Czech capital during a demonstration to draw attention to the poor situation of Czech agriculture in Prague, Monday, Feb. 19, 2024. Some Czech farmers rallied in the capital on Monday to protest the European Union policies on in agriculture and unfair conditions for doing their business. Hundreds of tractors and other vehicles blocked one line on a major road in downtown Prague but traffic was not halted. Anticipating a possible collapse of traffic, City Hall warned people not to drive to Prague on Monday. (Ondrej Deml/CTK via AP)
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Farmers with tractors stand on a street in the centre of the Czech capital during a demonstration to draw attention to the poor situation of Czech agriculture in Prague, Monday, Feb. 19, 2024. Some Czech farmers rallied in the capital on Monday to protest the European Union policies on in agriculture and unfair conditions for doing their business. Hundreds of tractors and other vehicles blocked one line on a major road in downtown Prague but traffic was not halted. Anticipating a possible collapse of traffic, City Hall warned people not to drive to Prague on Monday. (Ondrej Deml/CTK via AP)

2 of 2 |
Farmers with tractors stand on a street in the centre of the Czech capital during a demonstration to draw attention to the poor situation of Czech agriculture in Prague, Monday, Feb. 19, 2024. Some Czech farmers rallied in the capital on Monday to protest the European Union policies on in agriculture and unfair conditions for doing their business. Hundreds of tractors and other vehicles blocked one line on a major road in downtown Prague but traffic was not halted. Anticipating a possible collapse of traffic, City Hall warned people not to drive to Prague on Monday. (Ondrej Deml/CTK via AP)
Read More

Updated 5:48 AM EST, February 19, 2024
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PRAGUE (AP) — Hundreds of tractors blocked a lane in downtown Prague in a farmers protest Monday over European Union agriculture policies and what they said were unfair practises.
Major organizations representing Czech farmers didn’t participate and distanced themselves from the rally after it turned out some organizers were behind recent pro-Russian demonstrations.
Traffic was not halted but City Hall warned people not to drive to Prague on Monday.


The protesters were planning to hand Agriculture Minister Marek Vyborny a letter with their demands. They particularly target the EU’s Green Deal, which calls for limits on the use of chemicals and on greenhouse gas emissions and want the country out of it. Some demanded the government’s resignation.

Other farmers groups said they planned separate demonstrations on Thursday with counterparts from neighboring and other countries.

Similar protests have taken place across the bloc in recent weeks. Farmers complain that the 27-nation EU’s policies on the environment and other matters are a financial burden and make their products more expensive than non-EU imports.

The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, has made some concessions over the last few weeks, including shelving plans to halve the use of pesticides and other dangerous substances. Nonetheless, the protests have spread.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Thousands of farmers advance on Madrid for a major tractor protest over EU policies​


BY ALICIA LEÓN
Updated 7:28 AM EST, February 21, 2024
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MADRID (AP) — Hundreds of farmers drove their tractors into central Madrid on Wednesday as part of ongoing protests against European Union and local farming policies and to demand measures to alleviate production cost hikes.

The protest, the biggest to take place in the Spanish capital after more than two weeks of daily protests across the country, will include a rally outside the Agriculture Ministry headquarters.
Many of the tractors flew Spanish flags and some farmers carried banners reading, “There is no life without farming,” and “Farmers in Extinction.”

“It is impossible to live from the rural industry, which is what we want, to live from our work. That is all we ask for,” Silvia Ruiz, 46, a livestock farmer from the north-central area of Burgos told The Associated Press.

The Union of Unions organizing group said they were bringing 500 tractors and many more farmers on buses. Many of the tractors may have to stay outside of the city because of government restrictions.



Similar protests have taken place across the bloc in recent weeks. Farmers complain that the 27-nation EU’s policies on the environment and other matters are a financial burden and make their products more expensive than non-EU imports.

Spain and the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, have made some concessions in recent weeks but farmers say they are insufficient.

Besides EU policies, Spanish farmers maintain that a law aimed at guaranteeing that wholesale major supermarket buyers pay fair prices for their goods isn’t being enforced while consumer prices soar.


In neighboring France, the EU’s largest agricultural producer, the government of President Emmanuel Macron is also under intense pressure from angry farmers who held major demonstrations last month and have since continued with more scattered protests to push for better pay and other assistance.

Macron is expected to attend the opening of France’s major annual agricultural fair this weekend in Paris. Ahead of that test, Prime Minister Gabriel Attal sought Wednesday to convince the agricultural sector that he is speeding ahead with promised efforts to make farming more lucrative and simpler.

“In recent weeks, across Europe, farmers have made themselves heard with a cry of anger, a cry that comes from deep down,” he said. “Behind this cry is, most of all, a call for action.”

Attal promised draft legislation by the summer to strengthen the hand of French farmers in commercial negotiations with distributors over prices for their produce. He also promised measures to make it easier and cheaper for farmers to hire seasonal workers, including from abroad.

Attal also said his government is working to protect French farmers against imports from Ukraine of chicken, eggs, sugar and cereals.

“Solidarity with Ukraine is obviously essential, but it cannot be to the detriment of our farmers,” the prime minister said.

____​

Associated Press writer John Leicester in Paris contributed to this report.
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
We are tired of being "milked like human livestock "
Under supposedly "free", "Democratic" , but actually FASCIST rulers who CONTROL EVERY aspect of our supposed "ownership" of businesses amd all our property and means of income!
That's what Fascism REALLY IS.
You "own" it but the govrenment tightly controls every aspect of all your property , life and income.
 
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Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

https://apnews.com/article/poland-russia-farmers-putin-ukraine-war-4f9bd4c4392c780863cf4a577acba11b#

Zelenskyy invites Poland’s leaders to border to resolve farmers’ protest affecting flow of weapons​

Polish farmers, angry at EU agrarian policy and cheap Ukraine produce imports which, they say, are undercutting their livelihoods, drive their heavy-duty tractors in protest outside the office of the regional governor, in Poznan, western Poland, Friday Feb. 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

Polish farmers, angry at EU agrarian policy and cheap Ukraine produce imports which, they say, are undercutting their livelihoods, drive their heavy-duty tractors in protest outside the office of the regional governor, in Poznan, western Poland, Friday Feb. 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)
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BY VANESSA GERA
Updated 12:24 PM EST, February 21, 2024
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WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Ukraine’s president on Wednesday invited Polish leaders to meet him at their shared border to resolve a blockade by Polish farmers protesting Ukrainian food imports, saying it’s hampering the shipment of weapons to Ukrainian soldiers.

Meanwhile, Polish authorities voiced concern after slogans appeared at the protests praising Russian President Vladimir Putin and his war against Ukraine.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on social media he hoped the proposed border meeting for him, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk and a European Union representative could happen before the two-year anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Saturday.

“This is national security,” Zelenskyy said. “I am ready to be at the border with our government.”

There was no immediate reaction from the Polish government.


Poland, a member of NATO and the European Union, has been a staunch supporter of Ukraine since Russia launched its full-scale invasion on Feb. 24, 2022, accepting unlimited numbers of refugees and providing Ukraine with weaponry.

Poles, with past oppression by Moscow rooted deeply in generational memory, are largely supportive of Ukraine. But tensions have been growing as Polish farmers blame imports of Ukrainian grain and other food for pushing down prices and harming their livelihoods.

Polish farmers are among farmers across Europe who have protesting competition from Ukraine as well as EU environmental policies, which they say will increase their production costs.

Earlier Wednesday, Poland’s Foreign Ministry said it believed that extreme groups were trying to take over the protest movement “perhaps under the influence of Russian agents.” It noted “with the greatest concern the appearance of anti-Ukrainian slogans and slogans praising Vladimir Putin and the war he is waging.”

On Tuesday, a tractor at a protest in the southern Polish region of Silesia carried a Soviet flag and a banner that said: “Putin, put things in order with Ukraine, Brussels, and our rulers.” A photograph was published by the Gazeta Wyborcza daily.

Interior Minister Marcin Kierwinski called the banner “scandalous” and said it was immediately secured by police, and prosecutors were investigating.

“There will be no consent to such criminal activities,” he said.
The public promotion of a totalitarian system can be punished with up to three years in prison under Polish law.

The Foreign Ministry called on protest organizers “to identify and eliminate from their movement” the initiators, arguing it was necessary for Poland’s interest.

“The current situation of Polish farmers is the result of Vladimir Putin’s aggression against Ukraine and the disruption of the global economy, not because Ukrainians are defending themselves against the aggression,” the ministry said.

On Tuesday some protesting farmers at the border spilled Ukrainian grain.

Zelenskky called it “grain that our farmers grow with great difficulty despite all the difficulties associated with ruthless Russian aggression.”

 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Indian farmers reject government offer and say they will carry on marching to New Delhi​


Updated 3:07 AM EST, February 20, 2024
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NEW DELHI (AP) — Indian farmers who have been protesting for a week to demand guaranteed crop prices have rejected a proposal from the government, and say they will continue their march to the capital New Delhi.

The protesting farmers began their march last week, but their efforts to reach the city have been blocked by authorities, who have barricaded highways into the capital with cement blocks, metal containers, barbed wire and iron spikes to barricade highways to the capital to avoid a repeat of the 2021 farmers’ protests, during which they camped in the city’s outskirts for over a year.

The farmers are seeking a law that would guarantee minimum prices for 23 crops. Late Monday night, farm leaders said they refused the government’s offer of a five-year contract for guaranteed prices for five crops, including pulses, maize and cotton.

The government’s proposal made Sunday was “not in the interest of farmers,” Jagjit Singh Dallewal, one of the leaders of the protest, told the Press Trust of India news agency.

He added that the farmers — tens of thousands of whom have been camping out some 200 kilometers (120 miles) from the capital as they waited for the government offer — will resume their march to New Delhi on Wednesday.

“We appeal to the government to either resolve our issues or remove barricades and allow us to proceed to Delhi to protest peacefully,” Dallewal said.

The protests renewed a movement that began over two years ago, in which tens of thousands of farmers hunkered down on the edges of New Delhi for over a year against agriculture laws which the government ended up repealing.

This time, farmers who rode on tractors from neighboring Haryana and Punjab states say the government has failed to make progress on other key demands from the previous protests.

At the heart of the latest protests is the demand for a law that would guarantee minimum prices for their produce.

The government protects agricultural producers against sharp falls in farm prices by setting a minimum purchase price for certain essential crops, a system that was introduced in the 1960s to help shore up food reserves and prevent shortages. The system can apply to 23 crops, but the government usually offers the minimum price only for rice and wheat.

The farmers say guaranteed minimum support price for all 23 crops would stabilize their incomes. They are also pressing the government to follow through on promises to double their income, waive loans and withdraw legal cases brought against them during the earlier 2021 protests.

Several meetings between farm leaders and the government have failed to end the deadlock. Piyush Goyal, one of the ministers negotiating with the farmers, told PTI that some of the demands of the farmers were “deep and policy-driven,” which made it more difficult to find a resolution.

The protests come at a crucial time for India, where national elections are expected in the coming months and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s party is widely expected to secure a third successive term.

Farmers are particularly important to Modi’s base. Northern Haryana and a few other states with substantial farmer populations are ruled by his Bharatiya Janata Party.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Angry French farmers with tractors are back on the streets of Paris for another protest​


SYLVIE CORBET
Updated 1:39 PM EST, February 23, 2024
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PARIS (AP) — Angry farmers were back in Paris on their tractors in a new protest Friday demanding more government support and simpler regulations, on the eve of a major agricultural fair in the French capital.

Dozens of tractors drove peacefully into Paris carrying flags from Rural Coordination, the farmers’ union that staged the protest. The protesters then posed with their tractors on a bridge over the Seine River with the Eiffel Tower in the background, before heading towards the Vauban plaza in central Paris, where they all gathered for the demonstration.

The latest protest comes three weeks after farmers lifted roadblocks around Paris and elsewhere in the country after the government offered over 400 million euros ($433 million) to address their grievances over low earnings, heavy regulation and what they describe as unfair competition from abroad.

“Save our agriculture,” the Rural Coordination said on X, formerly Twitter. One tractor was carrying a poster reading: “Death is in the field.”

The convoy temporarily slowed traffic on the A4 highway, east of the capital, and on the Paris ring-road earlier on Friday morning.



French farmers’ actions are part of a broader protest movement in Europe against EU agriculture policies, bureaucracy and overall business conditions.

Farmers complain that the 27-nation bloc’s environmental policies, such as the Green Deal, which calls for limits on the use of chemicals and on greenhouse gas emissions, limit their business and make their products more expensive than non-EU imports.

Other protests are being staged across France as farmers seek to put pressure on the government to implement its promises.

Government officials have held a series of meetings with farmers unions in recent weeks to discuss a new bill meant to defend France’s “agricultural sovereignty,” and which will be debated in parliament this spring.

The government’s plan also includes hundreds of millions of euros in aid, tax breaks and a promise not to ban pesticides in France that are allowed elsewhere in Europe. French farmers say such bans put them at an unfair disadvantage.

Cyril Hoffman, a cereal producer in the Burgundy region and a member of the Rural Coordination, said farmers now want the government to “take action.”

He said his union is advocating for exempting the farming industry from free trade agreements.

“They can make free trade agreements but agriculture should not be part of them, so we can remain sovereign regarding our food,” Hoffman said. “Only in France do we let our farming disappear.”

French President Emmanuel Macron planned to visit the Paris Agricultural Fair on Saturday, though his office appeared to have removed his agenda a previously scheduled “big debate” with farmers and members of environmental groups at the event.

The president will meet with farmers’ unions before the fair’s opening, his office said late Friday.

Yet France’s major farmer’s union, the FNSEA, said Friday its board decided not to participate in the debate because “conditions for a peaceful dialogue are not met.” The FNSEA staged another protest in Paris, near the site of the fair, on Friday afternoon.

The Paris Agricultural Fair is one of the world’s largest farm fairs, drawing crowds every year.

—-

Oleg Cetinic contributed to the story.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
Polish farmers are now blocking border roads from Germany.


Polish Farmers To Block Critical Border Road As Tusk Government Faces First Serious Challenge​


BY TYLER DURDEN
SATURDAY, FEB 24, 2024 - 08:45 AM
Polish Farmers are planning to block a key frontier road into Germany as part of a growing protest over Europe's green agenda and cheaper imports - primarily from Ukraine.
Farmers say they have been especially hit by increased taxes and other rules./ Photo: AFP
Protesters will block the main A2 highway from Warsaw to Berlin on Sunday for 24 hours, TRTWorld reports.

According to Dariusz Wrobel, a spokesman for the farmers' protest movement, the EU's so-called Green Deal on energy, transportation and taxation in a bid to reduce greenhouse emissions "is unacceptable in its current form."

The farmers also oppose imports of agriculture products from countries outside the EU "that do not conform to European norms", Wrobel said.
The highway protest at the German border would start at 1200 GMT on Sunday and would be just a warning.
"We expect results and we are ready to launch a much wider movement," Wrobel said.
The farmers had planned a 25-day blockade but reduced it after talks with local authorities and business leaders. -TRTWorld
Meanwhile, as Remix News, sums it up - this is a major test for the Tusk government.



There is an old fable about succession. An old ruler leaves two envelopes for his successor and tells him to open the first one when a crisis arrives. The new ruler does just that and sees the advice, “Just blame everything on me,” with a footnote: “When the next crisis arrives, open the next envelope.” He follows the advice that gets him through the first crisis, but a second one eventually comes along, so he opens the second letter which reads, “Sit down right now, write two letters, and put them in envelopes.”

The Tusk administration has already opened up the first envelope in its response to the farmers’ protests by saying that their cause is just and that it was all the fault of the previous PiS government.

There is an element of truth in that claim. It was the PiS government that opened up the border in a gesture of solidarity that was in Poland’s self-interest, but it failed to stop the opening of the EU market to Ukrainian food and only introduced an embargo on Ukrainian grain when the horse had bolted and was roaming the fields.


It was also the PiS government that in 2019 had agreed to the EU’s “Fit for 55” climate policy, which contained the very measures farmers are currently protesting against. If it believed that it was trading EU funds in return for the policy, the EU establishment didn’t honor its side of the bargain.

But just blaming PiS will not be enough for the Tusk government. Farmers don’t want PR stunts involving ministers saying they support the protests, they want concrete measures to deal with the situation.

The problem is that the Tusk government cannot deliver these because the demands farmers are making are unacceptable to Brussels as they run counter to the climate dogma, the dogma that PiS does not agree with but failed to counter. Unfortunately for the farmers, the new government was supported by Brussels and is therefore hitched to it.

Tusk’s government also cannot introduce a blanket embargo on Ukrainian food products because that is an EU decision and also because of its political commitment to supporting Ukraine.

Read the rest here...
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Macron booed by French farmers who blame him for not doing enough to support agriculture​

BY SYLVIE CORBET
Updated 10:18 AM EST, February 24, 2024
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PARIS (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron was greeted with boos and whistles at the opening of the Paris Agricultural Fair on Saturday by angry farmers who blame him for not doing enough to support them.

Macron was scheduled to visit the event, which draws crowds of visitors every year. But before the official opening, several dozen protesters forced their way through security barriers and entered the site as the president was arriving.

Farmers have been protesting for months across France, including Paris, to demand better living conditions, simpler regulations and better protection against foreign competition they see as unfair.

Police in full riot gear were deployed at the Paris Agricultural Fair to prevent them from getting close to Macron, who had a planned meeting with the heads of France’s main farmers’ unions.

Meanwhile, protesters chanted slogans calling for Macron to “resign” and blew into whistles to show their anger.



“We won’t be able to respond to the farming crisis in a few hours,” Macron said. “It has taken months, years of work for those who came here to present their cattle, their work … This fair must go well and calmly.”

Three weeks ago, farmers lifted roadblocks around Paris and elsewhere around the country after the government offered more than 400 million euros ($433 million) in aid and tax breaks.

“Anger can be expressed,” Macron said, warning against any “violence.”

The French president decided to meet with groups of protesters in a separate room. He promised “floor prices” will be established for each product to “guarantee farmers’ income.” He also said an emergency plan to financially relieve the most struggling farms will start being implemented on Monday.

Macron said a meeting will be held at the Elysee presidential palace in March to build “a plan for the future of farming” with farmers’ unions and other key players in the food industry.

One farmer asked the president to say “in front the cameras you are going to give oxygen to the farmers ... Do that and I guarantee you will calm everyone down.”

Macron answered: “You have grievances. You do not have a government that’s completely deaf ... It’s not true that nothing’s been done.”


He later officially inaugurated the fair, an opening delayed by several hours because of the protest.


Macron then mingled with farmers presenting their cattle and products, starting with Normandy cows and camembert cheese — while protesters could still sporadically be heard loudly whistling.

The move come as farmers across Europe are protesting against EU agriculture policies, bureaucracy and overall business conditions.

Farmers complain that the 27-nation bloc’s environmental policies, such as the Green Deal, which calls for limits on the use of chemicals and on greenhouse gas emissions, limit their business and make their products more expensive than non-European Union imports.

On Friday, farmers on their tractors staged a demonstration in the streets of Paris before the Agricultural Fair.

Jeffrey Schaeffer contributed to this report
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Farmers converge on the European Union’s headquarters in a fresh show of force​

BY SYLVAIN PLAZY
Updated 3:27 AM EST, February 26, 2024
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BRUSSELS (AP) — Concrete barriers and barbed wire surrounded the European Union’s headquarters on Monday as farmers angry at red tape and competition from cheap imports drove their tractors into Brussels in a fresh show of force as the bloc’s agriculture ministers met.

Police carrying riot gear patrolled near barricades set up at the main entry points to the European Council building, where the 27-nation bloc’s agriculture ministers were gathering. Scores of tractors adorned with flags and banners were ranked in lines, snarling city traffic.

Some lamented what they see as the slow death of working the land. “Agriculture. As a child you dream of it, as an adult you die of it,” said one.


Farmers dumped a trailer load of tires a few hundred meters (yards) from the European Council building, and police brought in water cannons before the piles of rubber were set alight.

At the start of the month, a similar demonstration turned violent as farmers torched hay bales and threw eggs and firecrackers at police near a summit of EU leaders.

“We are getting ignored,” Marieke Van De Vivere, a farmer from the Ghent region in northern Belgium told The Associated Press.

She invited the ministers “to be reasonable to us, to come with us on a day to work on the field, or with the horses or with the animals, to see that it is not very easy … because of the rules they put on us.”

The protests are the latest in a series of rallies and demonstrations by farmers across Europe.

On Saturday, French President Emmanuel Macron was greeted with boos and whistles at the opening of the Paris Agricultural Fair by farmers who claim that he’s not doing enough to support them. Spain, the Netherlands and Bulgaria have been hit by protests in recent weeks.

The movement has gathered pace as political parties campaign for Europe-wide elections on June 6-9. It’s already had results. Earlier this month, the EU’s executive branch shelved an anti-pesticide proposal in a concession to the farmers, which make up an important voting constituency.

___​

Lorne Cook in Brussels contributed to this report.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

"Like A Warzone": Farmers Surround EU Headquarters Building​


BY TYLER DURDEN
MONDAY, FEB 26, 2024 - 08:55 AM
The mephitis of manure, melting tires and malodorous teargas pervaded downtown Brussels this Monday morning as angry farmers encircled the European Union's headquarters. This protest coincides with a meeting of the bloc's agriculture ministers. The farmers are expressing their anger over the EU's disastrous green policies.

View: https://twitter.com/RMXnews/status/1762103742516588547?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1762103742516588547%7Ctwgr%5E7efb71f6a23d5452bf657a7739de506453f58d81%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.zerohedge.com%2Fpolitical%2Fthings-are-heating-farmers-surround-eu-headquarters-building


View: https://twitter.com/stillgray/status/1762068583818150296?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1762068583818150296%7Ctwgr%5E7efb71f6a23d5452bf657a7739de506453f58d81%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.zerohedge.com%2Fpolitical%2Fthings-are-heating-farmers-surround-eu-headquarters-building


According to Bloomberg, farmers are angry about bureaucratic hurdles, trade deals, climate-related rules, and efforts to help Ukraine dump cheap grain onto markets.

"There is a clear problem with the reduction of the import tariffs for Ukraine and massive imports of grain and poultry which depresses the prices," said Guillaume Van Binst, secretary general of the Federation of Young Farmers.


Guillaume added: "The measures proposed by the commission are very weak and it is more passing the hot potato to member states."

Today's protest is the latest in a series of demonstrations by farmers across several EU countries, including France, Italy, and Spain. Blue-collar folks are also furious about imploding incomes and elevated inflation.

Meanwhile, EU leaders are scrambling to defuse this ticking timebomb of social unrest spreading across the bloc. They are taking steps to reduce red tape and delay some green rules.

"It can always go more quickly, But we're already working faster than usually." David Clarinval, Belgium's agriculture minister, told reporters Monday.

Clarinval said, "One can understand the anger of the farmers. One can also understand that some are in a difficult situation. But aggression has never been a source of solutions."

What a mess Europe has become.

(Lots more tweets at the link.)
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I know it was the person on Twitter X who said this was "hilarious," not the person who posted it. My comment to the Twitter Twerk is that it may look hilarious now, but it may not be all that funny if an enraged mob tired of being ignored breaks into the building. I think normalcy bias may be clouding the minds of both the folks inside the HQ and many of the farmers themselves. At this point, it does look like a little boy with his Tonka Truck in the sandbox, but
I've seen enraged crowds take on a mind of their own, and things can get out of control quickly.

Things may be fine. They may break in and settle for scaring the daylights out of the delegates by chanting, singing, and sitting in the lobby to block anyone coming or going until they feel like leaving.

Or, they could get completely out of hand, and that is when people on all sides can get badly hurt or worse.

I do understand how and why the farmers are generally angry and agree with them. I am only getting concerned because a serious physical uprising may be cathartic for the people involved, but the backlash will be epic. And I'm not sure the peasants are ready for a revolt that is quite that serious and permanent yet. On the other hand, I may be wrong. Many furious people are out there, starting with the ones that produce most of the food.
 
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night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
These folks are looking at big AG vehicles and not seeing them for what they ARE.
These big rigs are engineered to do BIG WORK. NOTHING in their design says they won't be used to CLEAR the fields of impediments. Impediments like riot police, tear gas and pepper spray and simple cops. A large AG rig has LOTS of uses, and the Good Brusselers in Brussels are in the process of learning this.
 
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energy_wave

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The people who produce what elitists like
are the ones the stupid elitists want to kill.
How dumb can you get?
The upper classes will have all the wealth,
but nothing to buy. And, shortly after the billions
Of people they want to kill die, they will discover
They CANNOT STAY ALIVE very long with only 500 million
People in the world! ( the wrong people die)
The super rich DONT WORK.
Robot work force and maybe help from a few ET's, they'll get by just fine without useless eaters.
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
Robot work force and maybe help from a few ET's, they'll get by just fine without useless eaters.
To reduce" the world population to the EXTREME LOW the elites want and get rid of "Useless eaters" in the elite's Demented minds, that they don't understand", "dont need" are not only the unemployed and elderly, but will HAVE TO INCLUDE farmers, and welders, masons,and plumbers,electricians, and clergy, and all religious workers, all autoworkers, and industrial manufacturing employees, all professors, and Educational workers, all mathematicians, all military, all politicians, all painters, all scientists and researchers, all artists of any kind , and musicians, all fashion industry employees, all involved in clothing and shoemaking, all sports workers and athletes, all cops and security workers, all EMT's and PARAMEDIC's, all morticians, dead body workers, all "entertainment" even celebrity dancers,singers actors,comedians,
ALL white collar workers, retailors and their employees, all "pets" would have to be killed then the veteranarians and pet workers, all small business owners and their employees , all but a very few doctors, and nurses, all electric power and water workers, all garbage workers and fruit and vegetable pickers, all government employees,all truckers and taxi drivers, all nuclear power plant workers, all WHO, RED CROSS, United Nation, and NGO's, Charity workers have to go, all Corporate big wigs will find themselves AND their corporations and Banks targeted for death, millionaires will be shocked to be included in the kill ( there's too many of them in the world)

But Here's what's REALLY stupid. The methods (biowarfare and plagues) the elites have chosen to kill off the people are not selective!
They won't kill off the retarded and mentally ill and disabled, elderly and criminals, social "free riders". "undesirables" and corrupt people! To kill off all but a very few people, with an indiscriminate bioweapon, they are gonna kill off the people any survivors NEED. And even those elites who think they are safe
from their weapons against the living people of the world, may not be. And may cause an extinction event,
because nobody any longer has the skills, knowledge, and physical hardiness to survive like primitive men did 3000 years ago. They think they will take themselves back to 1865 but will find themselves little better off than cave men!
 
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Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Polish Truckers To Rejoin Farmers In Border Crossing Blockades​


BY TYLER DURDEN
WEDNESDAY, FEB 28, 2024 - 02:45 AM
By Salon24.PL via Remix News
Polish truckers are to resume their border blockade protest on March 1 after having previously suspended their protest actions at the turn of the year. Truckers are demonstrating once again because they are not satisfied with what has been done to stop Ukrainian trucking companies from creating unfair competition in the Polish transport market.



The ongoing farmer protests are also about trade relations with Ukraine, with the farmers protesting about the European Commission’s decision to extend the trade agreement with Ukraine, allowing Ukrainian agricultural products to flow into the EU despite these products failing to adhere to EU standards.

View: https://twitter.com/RMXnews/status/1759961630610219282?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1759961630610219282%7Ctwgr%5Ee2c9e81bba7fcff778052b3f5243d5f804c40f47%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.zerohedge.com%2Feconomics%2Fpolish-truckers-rejoin-farmers-border-crossing-blockades



Farmers are also up in arms about EU climate policies, which affect energy costs and livestock farming. On Tuesday, Feb. 27, the farmers are to stage a mass protest in Poland’s capital city of Warsaw.

The truckers action on March 1 will mark the resumption of action which began on Nov. 6. They had been promised government action to tighten controls on Ukrainian haulage firms, but these promises have not been kept. The truckers are demanding the reintroduction of licensing for Ukrainian truckers.

Former Polish Conservative (PiS) Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki took to X on Monday to support the protesting farmers. He called on the government to introduce an embargo on Ukrainian agricultural products.


View: https://twitter.com/RMXnews/status/1762076521571774581?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1762076521571774581%7Ctwgr%5Ee2c9e81bba7fcff778052b3f5243d5f804c40f47%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.zerohedge.com%2Feconomics%2Fpolish-truckers-rejoin-farmers-border-crossing-blockades
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Farmers rally around Welsh capital in latest protest over proposed environmental rules​


Updated 1:57 PM EST, February 28, 2024
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LONDON (AP) — Tractors lined a road in the Welsh capital Wednesday as thousands of farmers and their supporters thronged the parliament to protest proposed environmental protections that would be required to receive subsidies.

Protesters held signs reading, “No Farmers, No Food,” and “We Will Not Be Mooooved!” as leaders said some 5,500 farmworkers would lose their livelihoods if regulations are passed that would require them to plant trees on 10% of their land and create wildlife habitat on another 10%.

“I’ve got a two-year-old son sitting at home who loves every minute of being on the farm, and I am fighting for his future on that farm,” said Ioan Humphreys, a fifth-generation farmer. “Where do the people thinking up these schemes think their food is going to come from?”

The Cardiff demonstration was the latest to roil a European capital as farmers from as far afield as Athens, Warsaw, Madrid and Brussels have turned out by the thousands to protest everything from agricultural rules proposed by the European Union to Ukrainain food imports to Poland.

Other protests have taken place across Wales but the event Wednesday was the largest with an estimated 3,000 joining forces to oppose proposals by the Welsh Labour Government to set land aside for environmental protection and to fight climate change.



Last week U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak told farmers gathered outside the Welsh Conservative conference that “we’ve got your back.”

A Welsh Government spokesperson said it was consulting with farmers and no decisions had been made on how rules will be rolled out.

“Farming is very important to Wales and our economy and we want a successful future for Welsh farming,” the spokesperson said. “We have had a seven-year conversation with farmers to design future farming support and we are committed to continuing to work with farmers to develop the sustainable farming scheme.”
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Farmers march in Poland’s capital, cut off roads in Spain to protest Ukraine imports and EU policies​


BY VANESSA GERA
Updated 9:28 PM EST, February 27, 2024
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WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Thousands of farmers marched in Poland’s capital and Spanish farmers cut off traffic on highways near the French border on Tuesday in the latest protests against food imports from Ukraine and the European Union’s agricultural policies.

The actions follow similar protests across Europe in recent weeks, and come as the West is experience growing fatigue in helping Ukrainians as they try to push back Russia’s invasion.

Farmers and their supporters blew horns and burned smoke bombs in the white-and-red colors of the national flag in front of the Polish parliament in Warsaw before marching to the offices of Prime Minister Donald Tusk. Warsaw city hall estimated that 10,000 people took part.

Protesters want a withdrawal from the EU’s Green Deal, a plan meant to fight climate change and help the environment with measures that they say are too costly.

The protesters are also demanding a ban on the imports of Ukrainian grain and other produce and allege that poorer quality Ukrainian produce is harming the country’s food supply and putting its important agricultural sector in jeopardy. They are angry at the EU for lifting tariffs on Ukrainian food imports while Ukraine — a major food producer — sought ways get its food to global markets with war hampering transport in the Black Sea.


The swell of protests across the 27-member EU have become a major challenge for leaders, most of whom strongly support Ukraine but are forced to respond to the rising social anger.

“We want to help Ukraine,” Tusk said in Prague, where he traveled for a meeting of regional leaders on Tuesday. “But it cannot be done through actions that are lethal to whole areas of the economy.”

“Nobody has the right to believe that the Czech Republic or Poland do not support Ukraine,” he said, appearing alongside Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala.

“But at the same time, we soberly assess the negative impact of the decision on free trade with Ukraine, which has a negative impact on our economies. And we will work together in Brussels to make corrections that will protect the common European market against the negative effects of such a decision.”

Tusk also said the EU’s Green Deal has praiseworthy climate goals but that some provisions are a “burden hard to shoulder, especially for medium-size and small farm producers.”

Tusk also noted that EU food producers cannot compete with Ukrainians because “the standards that are required of European and Polish farm producers are very high. There are no procedural requirements, no standards required of Ukrainian foods.”

The mood at Warsaw’s protest had anti-Ukrainian undertones.

“Stop poisoned food from Ukraine in Polish stores,” read a sign in front of the Polish parliament, while another said: “European policies destroy farmers. No to goods from Ukraine.”


Tusk last week insisted that the Polish farmers are by and large not anti-Ukrainian, noting that many of them are the same people who have extended help to Ukrainian refugees. But Polish officials are also worried about the risk of pro-Russian elements infiltrating the farmers movement to stir up anti-Ukrainian feelings.

Among the protesters was an insurance agent, Tomasz Zrodowski, who said he took part to support the farmers. He denounced the EU’s Green Deal as an “ideology of stupidity.”

He also said he feared the Polish agricultural sector will end up as another victim of Russian President Vladmir Putin’s war.

“We support Ukraine but we can’t help Ukraine if we go bankrupt. Food is a weapon for Putin, just like oil and gas,” he said.

From Italy to Spain to Belgium and elsewhere, farmers’ protests have made their plight a key political theme ahead of June 6-9 parliamentary elections in the EU.

In Spain on Tuesday, farmers cut off traffic on highways in northeast Catalonia, on the border with France. Spanish farmers have been protesting regularly in recent weeks, and several hundred tractors rolled into Madrid last Wednesday in their largest show of force yet.

The EU Commission has already made some concessions to farmers, including postponing a cut in pesticide use until after the elections.

___ Associated Press writers Monika Scislowska in Warsaw and Joseph Wilson in Barcelona, Spain, contributed to this report.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

https://apnews.com/article/czech-farmers-eu-protest-a170bfb134c53a0c2db5e4ccaca11d7c#

Czech farmers block traffic in Prague in protest against the government and EU agriculture policies​

A convoy of tractors drives on a street during a farmers' protest in Prague, March 7, 2024. Czech farmers have blocked traffic in Prague, cramming the streets with hundreds of tractors and other vehicles as they rallied against the government and agriculture policies set by the European Union.(Katerina Sulova/CTK via AP) ** SLOVAKIA OUT **

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A convoy of tractors drives on a street during a farmers’ protest in Prague, March 7, 2024. Czech farmers have blocked traffic in Prague, cramming the streets with hundreds of tractors and other vehicles as they rallied against the government and agriculture policies set by the European Union.(Katerina Sulova/CTK via AP) ** SLOVAKIA OUT **
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Updated 8:34 AM EST, March 7, 2024
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PRAGUE (AP) — Czech farmers blocked traffic in Prague on Thursday, cramming the streets with hundreds of tractors and other vehicles as they rallied against the government and agriculture policies set by the European Union.

Public transport came to a standstill during the morning rush hour in several parts of the Czech capital. The street leading to the government office where the protesters planned to present their demands was completely blocked.

“Our goal is not to block the traffic in Prague, our goal is to present the problems in agriculture,” said Martin Pycha, the head of the Czech Agricultural Association, one of the organizers of the protest.

He apologized for the inconvenience caused to Prague commuters.
A similar protest with farmers driving their tractors was held in Prague a month ago.

Tens of thousands of farmers and their supporters have rallied across Europe in recent weeks to voice their frustration over a range of issues, from insufficiently regulated cheap imports to overbearing environmental rules and red tape.

The Czech farmers, specifically, demand the lower taxation of farmland ownership and want the subsidies they receive from the EU to be exempt from taxes. Farmers also complain about the low prices of their products and say grain and other agriculture products coming from Ukraine and other countries harm the market.

Some of the farmers held up banners on Thursday reading: “We want equal conditions,” and “Stop the liquidation of Czech agriculture.”

The government appeared eager to let the farmers have their say.
“I respect the right of anyone to protest and I’m ready for a fair discussion with the farmers,” Agriculture Minister Marek Vyborny said.

But when Vyborny addressed the farmers, they booed him and demanded his resignation.
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
They opened a can worms and did not expect this to happen and they are being instructed to smooth this over and will work on pulling off what they intended to do! Government cannot be trusted.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Polish government blames hooligans for violence at farmer protests​


Updated 11:36 AM EDT, March 7, 2024
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WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Poland’s government on Thursday blamed hooligans and provocateurs for this week’s violent clashes during farmer protests that left many police officers injured, and vowed to prosecute the offenders.

Warsaw police said that 14 officers were hurt, one of them seriously, when aggressive participants in the massive farmer protest Wednesday pelted them with pavement stones and other objects. The police used tear gas against them.

Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Thursday that those found guilty of provoking the violence “for political or other reasons” will be punished according to the law. He said the violence will not prevent him from talking to representatives of disgruntled farmers who say their livelihoods are being undercut by recent European Union decisions.

Interior Minister Marcin Kierwinski said some people took advantage of otherwise legal protests to sow unrest.

“I want to make it clear: We need to differentiate between two categories. The farmers, who were protesting in accordance with the law. But we were also dealing with a small group of hooligans and provocateurs who attacked the police,” Kierwinski said.

More than 50 participants were detained and 26 of them are under investigation, according to the police.

Farmers across Europe are angry over EU climate policies and food imports from Ukraine that they say threaten their livelihoods. Such protests have occurred across the 27-member EU in recent weeks, but the one on Wednesday in Warsaw was decidedly angrier than earlier demonstrations in this central European nation.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
Just saw a reel on FB that the EU has surrendered to european farmers demands!


Don't know if this link will work or not.

 

Southside

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Just saw a reel on FB that the EU has surrendered to european farmers demands!


Don't know if this link will work or not.

May God bless the farmers.
Do not give up your position until they are completely vanquished.
 
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