Recent weeks have brought a wave of farmer protests across Europe, with France and Belgium at the forefront. These protests were sparked by a range of issues, from unfair competition conditions to tightening environmental regulations. The crazy climateism professed in the European Union is causing anxiety and dissatisfaction in society, and farmers have expressed this opposition by gaining serious public support for their protests.
In France, the government of Prime Minister Gabriel Attal was forced to mobilize 15,000 police and gendarmes to deal with the announced "siege" of Paris by farmers. The protests, which are the result of growing dissatisfaction over low wages, complicated bureaucratic regulations and tightening environmental regulations, have led to road and highway blockades. Farmers are demanding a change in the government's approach to agriculture, including relaxing environmental regulations and the use of chemical products that are banned in France but still allowed in other countries such as Italy.
In Belgium, farmers also took direct action, blocking key road junctions with tractors. Belgian farmers, like their French colleagues, are expressing their dissatisfaction and frustration with burdensome regulations and falling incomes. They announce a complete blockade of Brussels. These protests reflect growing tensions in farming communities across Europe that face similar problems.
This phenomenon is not limited to France and Belgium. In other European countries, such as the Netherlands and Germany, farmers are also taking to the streets to protest against tightening environmental regulations, reductions in fuel subsidies and unfair market conditions. Dutch farmers, responsible for about half of the country's nitrogen emissions, protested against government regulations aimed at curbing them, which they considered unfair and disproportionate.
Farmers' protests have therefore become a symbol of a broader crisis in European agriculture. They require governments and European Union institutions to find a solution that will allow the development of the agricultural sector in the face of contemporary environmental and economic challenges. In turn, farmers demand more fair treatment and understanding of the specificity of their work, as well as support in the form of subsidies and tax breaks that will enable them to continue conducting agricultural activities as normal.
As farmers rightly point out, without them we will be naked, hungry and sober, because without the products of their work many goods will become unavailable. Unfortunately, it is hard to believe that the liquidation of agriculture in the European Union is a phenomenon that was not planned. It is not without reason that the EU signs agreements with South America and Ukraine on the import of agricultural production. This suggests a planned replacement of local production with imports. Farmers are slowly realizing that they were receiving subsidies just like miners in unprofitable mines, and now the time is coming to liquidate their activities, just as the unexpected end of hard coal mining in Poland, which is the coal Kuwait...
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