France on a volcano

France on a volcano

Violent riots have been taking place in France since Wednesday.

At the time of writing these lines, we are afraid of new ones.

Brings to the surface the memory of the 2005 riots when France was torched. Today she discovers that there are more fires than 20 years ago. This is because the country’s demographic change has accelerated.

The origin of this sequence: a police arrest gone awry in which a police officer killed a 17-year-old young man, Nahel, who was unfavorably known to the police and who was trying to flee from the police. The scene was filmed and widely shared on social media.

Violence

The investigation has yet to be carried out, but all indications are that this was a tragic mistake by the police. The policeman shouldn’t have shot. And one can only mourn the death of a young man, even if it was a criminal.

The anger of the population of the “suburbs” is understandable.

But that anger quickly turned into destructive and predatory rage. Nahel’s death was exploited by those who learned to hate and reject France.

On the first night, the “young people” of the “suburbs” set fire to their neighborhoods and attacked firefighters and police officers.

From the second night on, they launched robberies against the big cities, including Paris, in order to sow terror there and, above all, to carry out looting.

A mayor and his family were also attacked at his home. A car accident shattered it.

These thugs behave like barbarians.

French elites had long since resigned themselves to certain suburbs being turned into quasi-alien enclaves and were already experiencing a kind of ethnocultural divide.

They did not expect these young people to set out to conquer cities that considered themselves protected fortresses. Especially since these young people practice a form of hilarious aggression and are more violent than ever.

Behind this lies the question of massive immigration, which in France represents the opposite of success.

Each succeeding generation is less well integrated than the previous one.

In the so-called “suburbs” there is a strange order ruled by drug dealers and Islamists.

Of course, the common people living in these neighborhoods are being held hostage by this situation. These honest people, also immigrants who dream of integration, are prisoners of the Caïds and radical imams.

Victim sociology would have us believe that this anger is the political response to a discriminatory society.

But that’s just wrong.

France’s social spending in the suburbs is astronomical.

suburbs

Secularism is not discriminatory, but rather offers those who embrace it the opportunity to become part of French culture.

If the police are particularly present in these neighborhoods, it is simply because there is greater insecurity there.

Who knows if Paris will still burn tonight?

But one thing is certain: the situation will remain tense. France sits on a volcano.

Les eaux seront plus agitees pour le Canadien lan prochain