3 May 2020, 19:46

Congress of Workers' Councils meets in Strasbourg; 'People's Courts' formed in several major cities

The recently declared Congress of Workers' Councils is now in session, meeting at the Palace of the Republic in Strasbourg. On its agenda are the following:

  • collectivization
  • delegates to the provisional legislature
  • the new economic paradigm
  • the rule of law

Given that the workers' councils now control the vast majority - about 85% at the time of writing - of the country, whatever is decided will immediately go into effect. The communist nature of the councils all but assures that there will be radical reform - perhaps a more sweeping collectivization or even an entirely new system of governance that will supplant the current Union.

However, some have suggested something more radical, perhaps even sinister:

"Collectivization is the least of it," says Mathilde Comtois, former European Councillor and now-representative for the Mulhouse Workers' Council. "This Congress, the people's Congress, will forever change the state of the world. What has already come to pass; you will not call it a revolution after this."

Given that the councils will soon play a role in the reconstruction of the state, it is certainly possible that these possible radical programs will become an integral part of our country.

In other news, several major workers' councils throughout the country, including those in Lille, Brussels, Bremen, Aalborg and the Hague, have declared the formation of "People's Courts," which shall serve as the judicial branch in these times. Some - including one in Kiel, the capital - are already in session, trying those that have been arrested in these times, many of whom are business owners, landlords, and, most disturbingly of all, 'counterrevolutionaries.' Whether they are to be tried fairly is unknown at this time; however, given the agenda of the Congress, it is not an impossibility.