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Since June 27th, France has been immersed in absolute chaos, the result of a revolt that has caused an authentic social explosion. Over six nights from Tuesday till Sunday, hundreds of people have been arrested - some days the figure has approached a thousand - anarchy has taken over in several cities with shops being looted from Paris to Marseille, a curfew has been imposed in some towns, public transport throughout the country has been halted nightly at 9pm and more than 45,000 officers are being deployed on French streets.

Only a decision to send in the troops, a step which has already been called for by some political parties and mayors, is left as a measure still pending in the large-scale deployment carried out by the authorities, which, at the time of writing, had produced little result. A local mayor from the southern suburbs of Paris, Vincent Jeambrum, of L'Haÿ-les-Roses denounced an attack on his home by a car in the small hours of Sunday morning. His wife and son were in the house, while the mayor himself was at the town hall coordinating the police response to the protesters. The police are investigating the events as attempted murder.

Although the grandmother of Nahel M., the 17-year-old killed by a policeman in Nanterre whose death was the origin of the street revolt, has called for an end to the rioting that is shaking the whole of France, there is nothing to make one think that this will all settle down in the short term. The tension generated has very deep roots and the young people who live on the outskirts of the large cities feel helpless and without any decent future to look forward to. That was not the case of their parents, who did find a better future by fleeing Africa decades ago.

Today's young people feel condemned for the rest of their lives to be second-class French. No possibility of access to an acceptable standard of living. And, faced with this, the state's response is permanently insufficient to appease the anger, despair, unemployment and misery in which such turmoil tends to develop. A breeding ground for Marine Le Pen's Front National, which has already climbed to first choice position in polls asking if elections were held now or in the run-up to next year's elections to the European Parliament.

Macron, a mediocre politician who is far removed from having statesmanship, lacks the agility and the appropriate political preparation to turn around the situation, beyond applying police measures to lower the tension in the streets. An outlook that is too bleak, right at our borders and all this in a Europe that is going from one convulsion to another: war in Ukraine or the recent mutiny against Vladimir Putin.