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France, the Sick Man of Europe


7-9 minutes

  _____  

By:Srdja Trifkovic | January 02, 2019 

 

France’s ambassador to Poland Pierre Levy has said he was “surprised, even
shocked <https://euobserver.com/justice/143803> ,” by the Polish foreign
minister, Jacek Czaputowicz, declaring that “something’s not right” with
France, and that was “sad because France is the sick man of Europe, dragging
Europe down.” M. Levy went on to make an astonishing statement which only
confirmed that the Pole was right.

Talking to the media shortly before Christmas, Mr. Czaputowicz said that the
protests in recent weeks and the Strasbourg Christmas market attack by a
Muslim reflected France’s overall decrepitude. His reference to the jihadist
attack was particularly significant—and irksome to the French
ambassador—because it clearly alluded to Poland’s refusal to accept any
Muslim refugees from Greece and Italy under EU quotas. That position is
shared by the other three members of the Visegrad Group
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visegr%C3%A1d_Group> , Hungary, Slovakia, and
the Czech Republic.

Levy warned that populism and “fringe forces” threatened European interests.
As for the Strasbourg attack, he said that “the investigation into its roots
and causes had not yet been completed.” Levy further asserted that most of
the perpetrators of past attacks were motivated by the same forces of
economic inequality that gave rise to the yellow vest riots: “The attacks
were acts of . . . people who, for various reasons, found themselves on the
margins [of society], and who adopted the badge of Islamic radicals, even
though, in reality, they weren’t radicals at all.”

This is reminiscent of any number of old jokes where, by trying to establish
his rationality, the patient confirms that he is utterly insane.

Writing in these pages three years ago
<https://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/defeating-domestic-jihad-a-program-of-ac
tion> , I diagnosed the disorder which is on such blatant display in Pierre
Levy’s statement: members of the elite class “treat the jihadist mindset as
a pathology that can and should be treated by treating causes external to
Islam itself.”

But M. Levy’s task is to represent his country’s government, which in
France’s case primarily means President Emanuel Macron. As it happens,
Macron is a paradigmatic pastiche—almost a caricature—of Europe’s
postmodern, transnational elite. He is an Islamophile open-borders
globalist. Two years ago he told the Süddeutsche Zeitung that critics of
Angela Merkel’s open-door migration policy were guilty of “disgraceful
oversimplification.” By allowing over a million aliens into the country,
“Merkel and German society as a whole exemplified our common European
values. They saved our collective dignity by accepting, accommodating and
educating distressed refugees.” He subsequently lampooned Donald Trump’s
promise to protect America’s southern border by promising never to build a
wall of any kind.

According to Macron, French security policy has unfairly targeted Muslims in
the past, and “secularism should not be brandished to as a weapon to fight
Islam.” “No religion is a problem in France today,” Macron said during the
campaign. Parroting Obama, he assured his followers that the Islamic State
was not at all “Islamic”: “What poses a problem is not Islam, but certain
behaviors that are said to be religious and then imposed on persons who
practice that religion.”

Macron is an evil cretin, and Pierre Levy is his worthy representative. The
refusal of the Parisian elite class to protect France from Islam reflects a
global problem that is the synthesis of all others. Macron and his
ambassador both belong to the same class: rootless, arrogant, and
irrevocably jihad-friendly. They will “fight” terrorism without even
allowing for the possibility that the killers’ motive may have something to
do with Islam’s core teaching, rather than social marginalization, or
injustice, discrimination, intolerance etc. They embody France’s loss of the
will to define and defend one’s native land and culture and people.

France is the Sick Man of Europe indeed, but unfortunately France is not
alone. Ambassador Levy’s assertion that Europe’s jihadist murderers are but
marginalized, misguided and confused youths, “who adopted the badge of
Islamic radicals, even though, in reality, they weren’t radicals at all,” is
idiotic and criminal in equal measure; but it would not be seen as in any
way remarkable among the bien pensants of London, Berlin, or Madrid.

The rot is at least two decades old, and Britain is a major culprit. In the
aftermath of 9-11 then-Prime Minister Tony Blair declared that “what
happened in America was not the work of Islamic terrorists, it was not the
work of Muslim terrorists . . . It was the work of terrorists, pure and
simple.” They must not be honored “with any misguided religious
justification,” because they “contravened all the tenets of Islam”:  “Islam
is a peace-loving, tolerant, religion . . . We share the same values, and
the same respect for the sanctity of human life . . . We know of no specific
threat in relation to this country, and it is important that we are not
alarmist about it.”

Less than four years later, on July 7, 2005, London’s turn came. The suicide
bombers were four young British citizens, Muslim by religion, three of them
Pakistani by parentage, born and bred in England, educated in British state
schools. They hated England and its people with such intensity that they
were prepared to sacrifice their own lives in order to kill 52 of them and
injure over 200. Mohammad Sidique Khan, the lead suicide bomber, recorded a
video in which he declared, “We are at war and I am a solider.”

The British establishment remained adamant that the perpetrators were by
definition not Muslim. When asked if the bombings were the work of Islamic
terrorists, the deputy chief of London’s Metropolitan Police, Brian Paddick,
responded that the culprits “certainly were not Islamic terrorists, because
Islam and terrorism simply don’t go together.” He repeated Blair’s
assurances on the subject given four years earlier.

In November 2005, Blair himself traveled to Leeds to meet with young Muslims
in an attempt to understand how these “born-and-bred Yorkshire lads” could
turn on their fellow citizens in such a murderous manner. His reference to
the self-described jihadist soldiers as “lads”—an English term of endearment
for the youthful male person, derived from Middle English ladde—was as sure
a sign of criminal insanity as M. Levy’s assurances that jihadist murderers,
“in reality, weren’t radicals at all.”

Monsieur l’Ambassadeur en Varsovie, il n’est pas seul. He’s got allies in
every European government cabinet, editorial office, TV studio, and lecture
hall. Pierre Levy belongs to a rich and well-established cultural and
political ideology and practice. “In reality,” to paraphrase him, both must
be broken and eradicated if Europe is to live.


[Image via Wikipedia Commons
<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Emmanuel_Macron_-_November_2018_(15
41938960).jpg> ]


 

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