Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Is France The Beginning Of A Widespread Revolt Against Multicultural Globalist Project?



France: A Revolt against Europe's Elites?
by 




  • Maybe this is it -- the start of the Western European public's pushback against the elites' disastrous multicultural and globalist project.




For years, those of us who write and worry about the rise of Islam in Western Europe have known that eventually, if the governments of these countries did not change course dramatically, something had to give. So far, the natives had, for the most part, been remarkably tame. They had swallowed a lot. Their leaders had filled their countries with huge numbers of immigrants from the Middle East and North Africa, a disproportionate number of whom were making it clear that they had no intention of fully joining or contributing to their host societies but, rather, were content to take, to harm, to damage, and to destroy, and were determined, in the long run, to conquer and rule.

No one had ever asked the citizens of Western Europe whether they wanted their countries radically transformed in this manner. This transformation, moreover, was intensifying by the year. At some point, surely, the native peoples of Western Europe would react.

But what form would it take? Those of us who are professionally preoccupied with these topics spent untold hours pondering this question. We asked one another: what do you think will happen? Some prophesied Balkanization. Already there were no-go zones – enclaves in and around major cities where "infidels" were unwelcome and where police and fire personnel were routinely pelted with rocks if they dared to intrude. 

It was easy enough to imagine those areas expanding, their de facto sovereignty under sharia law officially recognized and some kind of relatively stability established. 

Other observers forecast riots by natives -- not the elites whose personal lives were minimally affected by the Muslim presence in their countries, but the less privileged types whose neighborhoods and schools had become danger zones, whose taxes had been raised repeatedly to bankroll massive payouts to immigrant-group members, and whose doctors and hospitals had been so overburdened by the newcomers that vital treatments were increasingly rationed and waiting times increasingly long.


In 2016, the British shocked the world by voting for Brexit, and later the same year Americans pulled off an even bigger stunner by electing Donald Trump to the presidency. Some commentators expected that elections in France, Sweden, and the Netherlands would also yield sensational results, but although there were advances for parties that favor immigration controls, such as Marine Le Pen's National Rally (formerly National Front), the Sweden Democrats, and Geert Wilders's Freedom Party and Thierry Baudet's Forum for Democracy, both in the Netherlands, those gains were smaller than expected. On the other hand, last year the Austrians elected as their Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, a vocal opponent of EU-imposed asylum quotas, and this year the Italian premiership went to Giuseppe Conte, who takes a strong stance against illegal immigrants and has barred migrant ships from Italian ports.

The most important news on this front, however, has not been at the ballot box. This year Brits expressed growing outrage over Theresa May's bungled Brexit and, during the summer, took to the streets to protest the illegitimate incarceration of Tommy Robinson, who in that country had become the very face of resistance to Islamization. 

Furthermore, in recent weeks, citizens of France from across the political spectrum, and mostly hailing from small towns and rural areas, have been engaged not just in standard-issue public protests -- that perennial Gallic recreational activity -- but have been rioting and committing acts of vandalism in Paris and other major cities, despoiling iconic locations such as the Champs-Elysées, forcing the Eiffel Tower and Louvre to close, and even causing damage to the Arc de Triomphe.

 In an interview the other day, the French philosopher Alain Finkielkraut attributed the riots to economic and cultural insecurity on the part of the ethnically French lower and middle classes -- people who have been driven out of the major city centers by rising rents, who have seen their jobs and small businesses destroyed by "green" taxes and regulations, who feel they have lost a power struggle with Muslim immigrants, and who sense that their ruling classes have more sympathy for immigrants than for them.

Now the riots have spread to Belgium and the Netherlands.


There, too, the rioters' goals can be elusive. The Associated Press quoted one older Dutch women's complaint about high taxes, the housing shortage, and the loss of welfare benefits: "The social welfare net we grew up with is gone," she said. "The government is not there for the people. It is there to protect its own interests." Of course, those "interests" include prioritizing freebies for immigrants at the expense of Dutch people who have put in a lifetime of work. Even today, however, for many Western European natives, it can be easier to be an insurrectionist than to speak honestly about Islam and immigration.

So maybe these French riots will spread across Western Europe. Maybe this is it -- the start of the Western European public's pushback against the elites' disastrous multicultural and globalist project. Or maybe it is just one more step that is bringing us closer to the continent's day of reckoning. We shall soon find out soon enough.



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