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Title: Events in France
Author: Freedom Press
Date: June 1, 1889
Language: en
Topics: Freedom Press
Source: Freedom: A Journal of Anarchist Socialism, Vol. 3 -- No. 31, retrieved on September 5, 2019, from http://www.revoltlib.com/?id=2987.
Notes: (From our Paris correspondent), Freedom Press, London

Freedom Press

Events in France

THERE is little- change to record in the general situation. The opening

of the Exhibition has been brilliant, it is true, but it is only the

last glimmer of a lamp soon about to be extinguished altogether, for

everything goes to show that the end of the year will be tumultuous. in

spite of the appeals of the government and of the middle-class press,

the people have shown little real warmth. Certainly the streets of Paris

have displayed plenty of flags and illuminations-the shopkeepers

especially, those eternal friends of order and property, have

distinguished themselves by their zeal-but at heart it is felt to be

only an artificial gaiety, an intoxication succeeding drunkenness. The

laughter has a false ring.

A certain Perrin, formerly a warehouse keeper in the colonies, a victim

of injustice-he having, although a civil employee, been sentenced to EL

military punishment of 75 days' imprisonment-fired a blank shot at the

President of the Republic on the occasion or the fetes in order to

attract attention to his grievances. Thus it appears that under a

Republic which commemorates the centenary of the Great Revolution, it is

necessary to pretend to assassinate in order to get justice 1 Perrin was

immediately arrested. He wrote to Laguerre asking him to defend his

case, but the friend of Boulanger declined.

There is little doing among the politicians. All the parties seem to

have entered into a truce. They are keeping their strength for the great

battle which will take place at the time of the general elections.

Unfortunate will the parliamentary Socialists be whose ignorance of the

danger or ambition to secure a legislative mandate urges them into the

electoral arena 1 Crushed between the two powerful currents of

Boulangism and anti-Boulangism, their efforts are certainly doomed to

utter failure, and the politicians will be able to say to the mass who

measure the value of an idea by the number of its adherents, "You see

Socialism does not count."

In fact what happened at the time of the election of the 27th of

January, when a number of Blanquists voted for Boulanger and the mass of

the Possibilists for Jacques, will happen again over a greater the more

moderate at the general elections. For fear of Cesarism Socialists will

support the government which they formerly opposed; through hatred of

opportunism others will rally to the Boulangist candidate. Under such

conditions the defeat of the parliamentary Socialists will be pitiful.

The Anarchists alone will remain irreproachable. Faithful to their line

of conduct, untarnished by any shameful compromise, they will never

cease to cry to the people "Refuse to ratify the present slavery and to

sanction all the iniquities committed in your name, by your vote.

Universal suffrage is a bait, all these politicians who seek your votes,

willing to do anything to get into power, ready to do anything to keep

in Power, are your enemies, under whatever name they disguise their

pretensions. In this cruel society which oppresses and starves you, in

this political organization which proclaims you sovereign and loads you

with chains, you have only one duty, one imprescriptable right and one

resource-Revolution!"