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October 2, 2019 05:04 pm PDT

The complicated, nuanced story of how racialized French people fought to save their local McDonald's

On NPR's always-excellent Rough Translation podcast comes an incredibly complex and nuanced story (MP3, transcript) about marginalized, racialized people in public housing in Marseille who found an accepting haven in a local McDonald's franchise, and who banded together to save it -- and other nearby McD's -- in a series of direct actions ranging from occupation to threats of self-immolation.

The story is complex in part because the McDonald's restaurant becomes a symbol for the things the French left normally fights for -- inclusion, work with dignity, worker's rights -- while the primary villain of the story is another racialized French person who became rich by working his way up from poverty and discrimination in French public housing through McDonald's, and who wants to shut down the heroes' franchise because he resents their conception of the restaurant as a place that they have a legitimate claim over, rather than as a place where they go to take orders and collect a paycheck.

And while McDonald's corporate is painted in a good light for its acceptance of people who face systematic discrimination in French society, it is also totally unwilling to take the side of workers who believe that their labor entitles them to a say in the business's future, with corporate going so far as to support the closure of profitable restaurants in order to shed empowered workers.

It's beautifully told, dramatic, and nuanced -- a delightful tale and a parable about the complex moment we're all living through at the moment. Read the rest


Original Link: http://feeds.boingboing.net/~r/boingboing/iBag/~3/WVMjkWuwTvA/kamel-guemari.html

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