Riots in France may not be entirely about old age pension reform

Originally from the blog, Le Figaro translated by Bear

What the intefata revealed to the French by Ivan Rioufol Oct 20th 2010

Not all high-schoolers are trouble makers. But the trouble makers in the last few days, and still, this Wednesday morning in the centre of Lyon are indeed highschoolers. These come from, in the majority, city ghettos. They are hooded, do not parade to defend the retirement at 60, and not even the system for social protection that could have attracted their parents or grandparents.

They are there to un-stitch the republic, it’s culture and symbols. The most visible being the police and schools. This is how a college was set on fire. The scenes of urban guerrillas that are being reproduced much resemble the images of intefatas of young Palestinians fighting Israeli forces.

In comparison there is no reason, but in these ethnic insurrections from a youth culture, and often Muslim, the state is being rejected and being viewed as an oppressor  and colonizer. The savages, each time more intrepid and organized, remind us of the failure of their integration.

This destruction counteracts the nursery rhymes that assures that France masters the immigration of its population. “Integration functions” we are assured. For example, the ancient writings of Jean Pierre Raffarin in Matignon, and Hakim Al-Karoui (Le Monde Oct 10 and 11.) There are of course, many successes that should be more celebrated. But France is, even if it displeases the ‘happy thinkers’, the only country in Europe to know such a fracture of identity, that from now on splits the youth and drives more and more in civil confrontations. Germany, which has recently acknowledged its failure in it’s multicultural approach, is not faced with these explosions of hate, and in fact, to anti-French racism. It is urgent to open our eyes to this reality, that many want to deny the more it becomes visible. What is observed in these truants, is a refusal to integrate within a society that they reject culturally. It is this challenge that the republic must deal with.

About Eeyore

Canadian artist and counter-jihad and freedom of speech activist as well as devout Schrödinger's catholic

One Reply to “Riots in France may not be entirely about old age pension reform”

  1. All children start out as savages, it is the responsibility of the parents to civilize them, in way too many places this is not happening to a large number of kids. And then you get the Moslems teaching the kids to be martyrs for their religion. A savage 7th Century religion teaching its kids to commit suicide in the name of religion, and the left is supporting them. Now you know the first enemy civilization is facing in this century. Pray we win or we will enter a long hard and nasty Dark Age, assuming we aren’t already in the opening decades of one.