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Negroes Burn France While Chirac Fiddles

Thread ID: 20938 | Posts: 18 | Started: 2005-11-08

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confederate_commando [OP]

2005-11-08 00:42 | User Profile

Negroes Burn France While Chirac Fiddles

How long will the mainstream media be able to portray the Paris riots as an Islamic phenomenon, as distinct from (but not exclusive of) a race problem? For here’s the unmentionable truth: these “Islamists” are largely Negro (admittedly with some Arabs). It’s the ugly fact that no one is mentioning, especially in the American press -and in the wake of the racially non-diverse explosion of violence, rape, and theft in New Orleans, an embarrassment the media struggled mightily to suppress at first, and then later, when such tactics failed, to “spin” as the failure of white America to adequately provide for its “at risk” citizens -its failure to lift, by force of will, the black man out of his perpetual, self-inflicted poverty and degradation. But the blackout curtains (pun intended) are slipping a bit, as even the amalgamationist Newsweek admits that,

"Decades of French policies intended to force the integration of immigrants and their children -and children’s children- into French society had failed, and no Plan B was apparent." Did we just catch Newsweek admitting that, in fact, this problem with “Islamism” is simultaneously a problem of racial integration, as the rioters are Negro Islamics from former French colonies like Cote D’Ivoir and Niger? Perhaps. Remarkable that nowhere present in the national and international media are pictures of the rioters, even though police are receiving fire from organized mobs. It is a virtual certainty that if these rioters were largely Arab, we would be seeing scores of pictures of the “jihadists” terrorizing what is now 300-odd French cites. Matt Drudge disingenuously ruminates on the question of whether this is the “Beginning of Jihad in Europe?.” But what does one expect from a neoconservative Jew? I’ll tell you: prevarications on the race question, that’s what. Immigration is the most important issue of our time, but you wouldn’t know it by the headlines. But let us also take note that the racial assimilation problems in France are not at all new. Negro violence erupted in both the decades of the 80’s and 90’s, prompting French officials to deal with the problem in the only way a good French liberal knows how: to dowse the fire with money. But the paper palliative burns and further fuels the conflagration -the inevitable result when you reward inassimilable “rioters” with government improvement grants. The aliens know it for what it is, protection money in a race-based shakedown. But there is little sign of French officials addressing the underlying causes. In fact, an unaccountable sense of guilt and culpability seems to be spreading. After the riots of the 90’s had been quelled, laments a French politician, the country did not do enough to soothe the enflamed passions of the mobs:

"We haven’t paid attention for such a long time, there is a sense of abandonment,” says French Sen. Dominique Voynet, who represents the main conflict zone. First reaction of a white man is to blame his race for not doing enough. But who is calling for accountability from the politicians who convinced the French people that Negro and Arab immigration posed no threat to the cohesion of their society? No one in the French government has yet released a statement that has been reported in the American media that indicates any sensitivity to the absurdity of forcing the integration of inassimilable aliens and then using white tax receipts to fund their indolence -and it IS indolence. At some point and on some level, a people has a responsibility to create economic activity of their own. Entrepreneurship, job creation, hiring their own and feeding their own. Here in the US, a tour of the Negro neighborhoods in any city you can name will reveal not a thriving minority community as in Irish, Italian and Chinese ethnic enclaves, but street after street of plywood-boarded windows, refuse, and fire gutted buildings, with the able-bodied, both young and old, idling ‘round fires in oil-barrels, or plying motorists with red charity buckets and sad stories.

Let’s look at some statistics: Average unemployment is 21 percent in these troubled Negro-Islamic neighborhoods in France, more than twice the national average, and rising. Among men under 25, the rate jumps to 36 percent. Discrimination? It makes one chuckle a bit. But let’s concede the point. Perhaps there is discrimination. But what would one expect when you own government pursues a reckless immigration policy for it’s own benefit that floods your country with hundreds of thousands, of cultural-ethnic-racial aliens who have neither the ability nor the disposition to take a place in French society? And it is no wonder. Aren’t the blessings of French society and economy, such as they are, to benefit Frenchmen? What is a Frenchman, you may ask? Let me ask you a question in response. Is a Frenchman someone who eats baguettes, pastries and smokes like a chimney? Is a Frenchman someone who happens to be in France by virtue of whatever disastrous immigration policy the Socialist-globalist, White-hating government of Jacques Chirac and his predecessors cares to impose? To be sure, much of the blame is to be laid at the feet of the white French themselves, with their oh-so-civilized (i.e. suicidal) attitudes about race. But perhaps a sea change in the racial attitudes of the average Frenchman is coming as Paris, and hundreds of other cities such as St. Etienne, fill with the noxious smoke of burning tires, and French chauvinism begins to rise once again, as it should.

The French people are noted for their warm acceptance of black entertainers. Louis Armstrong, Josephine Baker, etc. They congratulate themselves on their sophistication, their worldliness. But worldliness should also carry with it a measure of pragmatism and common sense, should it not? Josephine Baker wiggling her posterior is a bit different from mobs of petulant, self-entitling Negroes using cell phones that they could not and did not invent to coordinate the incineration of automobiles and warehouses.

In a recent study the French government counted 751 neighborhoods deemed “sensitive urban zones.” That is the French way of saying tinderboxes ready to explode with race hate against the whites who have ignored their “needs”. And every franc spent in those neighborhoods is a franc spent in subsidizing hatred toward white, nominally Catholic Frenchmen, and a futile exercise in mollification of race hatred by bribery -resulting only in the fueling of insatiable demands.

Newsweek, in typical “newspeak” tries its best to engender sympathy for the plight of these “poor outcasts”, saying, “Disconnected from their past in the Muslim world and uncertain about their future in Europe, they’ve come to see themselves as citizens of nothing but “Neuf-trois,” 93, the postal code for the outer edges of the Paris urban area.”

That is post-modern Europe for you, to be sure. No God, and a postal code for an identity. But this is a race issue as much or more than a religious-cultural issue, and we’re not buying what Newsweek is selling, because the issue is not what the poor outcast feels. This issue is only this: why are they there, and what will be done about it? We can only hope that Nationalist parties will be able to make use of this outrage to shore up their support in the Parliaments of Europe by warning their populations, “Do you want THAT to happen here?”

[url]http://www.markgodfrey.com/exen/index.php/weblog/[/url]


Gregz

2005-11-08 01:04 | User Profile

[B]‘It’s like a war zone here’[/B]

Paris Riots 60-year-old becomes first fatality, cops fired at

GRIGNY, NOVEMBER 7 : Rioters shot and wounded police and torched 1,400 vehicles in the worst violence since unrest erupted in France's poor suburbs 11 days ago, and a man beaten by a youth became the first fatality on Monday.

Hospital officials and an Interior Ministry spokesman said 60-year-old Jean-Jacques Le Chenadec died after being beaten in another riot-hit suburb on Friday.

France’s worst violence in decades defied a vow by President Jacques Chirac to defeat the troublemakers and has grown worse daily since erupting in a Paris suburb on October 27.

One of France’s largest Muslim organisations, reacting to official suggestions that Islamist militants might be orchestrating some of the protests, issued a fatwa against the unrest, but violence reached new levels overnight.

In the most serious incident, youths at a housing estate in Grigny, south of Paris, ambushed police with rocks, petrol bombs and guns. Two policemen were seriously hurt by pellets shot into their neck and legs.

[B]“This is real, serious violence. It’s not like the previous nights,”[/B] said Bernard Franio, head of police for the Essonne area south of Paris, after about 200 youths attacked his colleagues.

“There were burnt cars all over the place and helicopters circling overhead,” said Yvonne Roland, who has lived in Grigny for 25 years. “It made you feel like you were in a war zone.”

The government has struggled to formulate a response that could halt the riots, sparked by frustration among ethnic minorities over racism, unemployment and harsh treatment by police. Chirac, in his first public comments on the unrest, said late on Sunday that the state was determined “to be stronger than those who want to sow violence or fear”.

The police union Action Police CFTC urged the government to impose a curfew on riot-hit areas and call in the army to control the youths, many of whom are French-born citizens of Arab or African origin complaining of racism. [B]“Nothing seems to be able to stop the civil war that spreads a bit more every day across the whole country,”[/B] the CFTC said in a statement. [B]“The events we’re living through now are without precedent since the end of the Second World War.”[/B]

Five cars torched in Berlin copycat attack

BERLIN: Five cars were set alight in a working-class area of the German capital Berlin, with police saying it was a possible attempt to copy the violence currently sweeping French cities. The cars were spread over five different streets of the Moabit area of Berlin and were torched in the early morning on Monday. Several cars and a disused building were also set on fire overnight Saturday in the northern German port city of Bremen. AFP/PTI


Gregz

2005-11-08 01:46 | User Profile

French mayor declares curfew as rioting spreads By Anne Penketh in Paris Published: 08 November 2005

A curfew was in force last night in a riot-hit town north of Paris as Dominique de Villepin, the Prime Minister, warned that such a radical measure could become widespread as part of a crackdown against rioters across France.

Amid fears that the violence was spiralling out of control, French authorities announced that a record number of 1,408 cars had been set on fire across France * including 426 in Paris * on the 11th consecutive night of rioting on Sunday. The first fatality of the riots was also reported. Jean-Jacques Le Chenadec, 61, from the Paris suburb of Stains, had been in a coma since being beaten by youths on Friday as he and a companion were putting out a fire in a rubbish bin outside their block of flats.

As further unrest was reported in the south-western city of Toulouse, where a bus and 20 cars were burned, police said a school had been set alight and petrol bombs hurled at a hospital in suburbs on the outskirts of Paris. Petrol bombs were also thrown at a primary school in the eastern city of Strasbourg, but no injuries were reported in any of the attacks.

M. de Villepin announced police reinforcements to deal with the unrest in suburbs inhabited mainly by African immigrants. A total of 9,500 police and paramilitary officers will now be patrolling the country's hotspots. The Prime Minister said he would seek cabinet approval today for prefects to introduce curfews to curb violence.

"Wherever it is necessary, prefects will be able to put in place a curfew under the authority of the Interior Minister, if they think it will be useful to permit a return to calm and ensure the protection of residents. That is our number one responsibility," he said in a television interview. He said he was acting under a 1955 law invoked to declare a state of emergency during the Algerian war.

The Socialist mayor of Noisy-le Grand, Michel Pajon, called for the army to be brought in. "I am sounding the alarm," he said. "You can't let things get as bad as this." He said he recognised that for a Socialist to ask for military intervention was "an absolutely unimaginable admission of failure". M. de Villepin said he did not plan to bring in the military at this stage.

The scale of the problem France faces was highlighted by a police report which revealed that in the first 10 months of this year 28,000 cars were set on fire across France. Residents of Strasbourg, Lyons and other cities with banlieues chaudes (hot suburbs) have become used to the Saturday night fever. But the rioting that has struck the Paris suburbs since 27 October has led to fears of another May 1968 or of a French "intifada".

It was triggered by the electrocution of two teenagers who took refuge in an electricity substation believing police were chasing them. A third youth who was badly burnt, Muhittin Altun, called for an end to the violence in a statement from hospital last night.

French authorities said that on Sunday night, 36 police were injured and 395 people detained. In addition to Paris, where schools, car dealerships and carpet factories in the north-eastern suburbs were razed, serious unrest was reported near Marseilles and Toulouse.

The flames have spread to almost all corners of France: Noel Mamère, the mayor of Bègles outside Bordeaux, said there had been small-scale attacks in his town since Friday night.

Laurent Fabius, a former prime minister and a Socialist party leader, said that in his town of Grand-Quevilly, several cars had been set on fire.

M. Fabius said the government appeared to have been "overwhelmed". He criticised as inadequate a statement by President Jacques Chirac, who had appeared at the side of M. de Villepin on Sunday, in which the head of state pledged that "the last word must be with the law". M. Fabius said the President, who has kept a low profile, had the appearance of a man who had just "seen the light". The Justice Minister, Michel Clement, promised a tough response, saying 83 people had been jailed.

The crisis has been playing itself out against a heightened rivalry for the presidency, with M. de Villepin and Nicolas Sarkozy, the Interior Minister, jockeying to replace the ailing M. Chirac in 2007.

M. Sarkozy provoked universal criticism for warning that the racaille (" scum") on the estates should be "hosed down", in remarks seen as contributing to the violence. M. de Villepin, asked last night what he thought about the remark, said "every word counts" and that at this time "we should be rallying together".

The Union of Islamic Organisations of France said: "It is strictly forbidden for any Muslim ... to take part in any action that strikes blindly at private or public property or that could threaten the lives of others."

In apparent copycat attacks, five cars were set on fire outside the main railway station in Brussels.

A curfew was in force last night in a riot-hit town north of Paris as Dominique de Villepin, the Prime Minister, warned that such a radical measure could become widespread as part of a crackdown against rioters across France.

Amid fears that the violence was spiralling out of control, French authorities announced that a record number of 1,408 cars had been set on fire across France * including 426 in Paris * on the 11th consecutive night of rioting on Sunday. The first fatality of the riots was also reported. Jean-Jacques Le Chenadec, 61, from the Paris suburb of Stains, had been in a coma since being beaten by youths on Friday as he and a companion were putting out a fire in a rubbish bin outside their block of flats.

As further unrest was reported in the south-western city of Toulouse, where a bus and 20 cars were burned, police said a school had been set alight and petrol bombs hurled at a hospital in suburbs on the outskirts of Paris. Petrol bombs were also thrown at a primary school in the eastern city of Strasbourg, but no injuries were reported in any of the attacks.

M. de Villepin announced police reinforcements to deal with the unrest in suburbs inhabited mainly by African immigrants. A total of 9,500 police and paramilitary officers will now be patrolling the country's hotspots. The Prime Minister said he would seek cabinet approval today for prefects to introduce curfews to curb violence.

"Wherever it is necessary, prefects will be able to put in place a curfew under the authority of the Interior Minister, if they think it will be useful to permit a return to calm and ensure the protection of residents. That is our number one responsibility," he said in a television interview. He said he was acting under a 1955 law invoked to declare a state of emergency during the Algerian war.

The Socialist mayor of Noisy-le Grand, Michel Pajon, called for the army to be brought in. "I am sounding the alarm," he said. "You can't let things get as bad as this." He said he recognised that for a Socialist to ask for military intervention was "an absolutely unimaginable admission of failure". M. de Villepin said he did not plan to bring in the military at this stage.

The scale of the problem France faces was highlighted by a police report which revealed that in the first 10 months of this year 28,000 cars were set on fire across France. Residents of Strasbourg, Lyons and other cities with banlieues chaudes (hot suburbs) have become used to the Saturday night fever. But the rioting that has struck the Paris suburbs since 27 October has led to fears of another May 1968 or of a French "intifada".

It was triggered by the electrocution of two teenagers who took refuge in an electricity substation believing police were chasing them. A third youth who was badly burnt, Muhittin Altun, called for an end to the violence in a statement from hospital last night.

French authorities said that on Sunday night, 36 police were injured and 395 people detained. In addition to Paris, where schools, car dealerships and carpet factories in the north-eastern suburbs were razed, serious unrest was reported near Marseilles and Toulouse.

The flames have spread to almost all corners of France: Noel Mamère, the mayor of Bègles outside Bordeaux, said there had been small-scale attacks in his town since Friday night.

Laurent Fabius, a former prime minister and a Socialist party leader, said that in his town of Grand-Quevilly, several cars had been set on fire.

M. Fabius said the government appeared to have been "overwhelmed". He criticised as inadequate a statement by President Jacques Chirac, who had appeared at the side of M. de Villepin on Sunday, in which the head of state pledged that "the last word must be with the law". M. Fabius said the President, who has kept a low profile, had the appearance of a man who had just "seen the light". The Justice Minister, Michel Clement, promised a tough response, saying 83 people had been jailed.

The crisis has been playing itself out against a heightened rivalry for the presidency, with M. de Villepin and Nicolas Sarkozy, the Interior Minister, jockeying to replace the ailing M. Chirac in 2007.

M. Sarkozy provoked universal criticism for warning that the racaille (" scum") on the estates should be "hosed down", in remarks seen as contributing to the violence. M. de Villepin, asked last night what he thought about the remark, said "every word counts" and that at this time "we should be rallying together".

The Union of Islamic Organisations of France said: "It is strictly forbidden for any Muslim ... to take part in any action that strikes blindly at private or public property or that could threaten the lives of others."

In apparent copycat attacks, five cars were set on fire outside the main railway station in Brussels.


BlueBonnet

2005-11-08 02:52 | User Profile

[URL="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/11/08/wfran08.xml&sSheet=/portal/2005/11/08/ixportaltop.html"]http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/11/08/wfran08.xml&sSheet=/portal/2005/11/08/ixportaltop.html[/URL] [IMG]http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/graphics/2005/11/08/wfran08big.gif[/IMG]

This isn't just in Paris, it's all over.


Ponce

2005-11-08 03:09 | User Profile

We are lucky in that what is going on in France will not happen in the US because all "our" illegals do have jobs......in the other hand the whites don't have jobs soooooooooo, who knows.

By the way, in India the job head hunters are actually going out in the street looking for jobs aplicants because every day they need more and more people, even if they have no experience.

Meanwhile more and more people in the US are out on the streets looking for work.......so now you know where all ours jobs went to.


skemper

2005-11-08 14:57 | User Profile

BB,

That map is worth a thousand words. If that is not a war, I don't know what is. The extensiveness of the attacks suggests organization and not random rioting planned by some disguntled youths. I wonder what motive that the French government has for letting this go on.


Sertorius

2005-11-08 15:29 | User Profile

It [U]almost[/U] looks like the old pre-aerial bombardment plan from the Normandy invasion.


madrussian

2005-11-08 16:14 | User Profile

A real Civil War, where enemy is exterminated, would be a blessing to the French. This is not a war, this is a one-sided affair.


xmetalhead

2005-11-08 16:21 | User Profile

[QUOTE]Newsweek, in typical “newspeak” tries its best to engender sympathy for the plight of these “poor outcasts”, saying, “Disconnected from their past in the Muslim world and uncertain about their future in Europe, they’ve come to see themselves as citizens of nothing but “Neuf-trois,” 93, the postal code for the outer edges of the Paris urban area.”

That is post-modern Europe for you, to be sure. No God, and a postal code for an identity. But this is a race issue as much or more than a religious-cultural issue, and we’re not buying what Newsweek is selling, because the issue is not what the poor outcast feels. This issue is only this: why are they there, and what will be done about it? We can only hope that Nationalist parties will be able to make use of this outrage to shore up their support in the Parliaments of Europe by warning their populations, “Do you want THAT to happen here?”[/QUOTE]

Good points. I surely hope the French won't give into the guilt and start giving away the house to these animals, but elect Nationalists who believe that France is for WHITES only. If the Seneglese and the Algerian don't like it, THEY are the ones who should leave the country. I hate to say this, but I really hope for a war to bring back the old order. Sadly, it's probably the only way back at this point. Otherwise, we'll be hearing about more riots and destruction next year. And the year after and the year after that and so on and so forth.


Sertorius

2005-11-08 17:04 | User Profile

XM,

It's time for Europe to get over the world wars once and for all.


Petr

2005-11-08 17:28 | User Profile

A new St. Bartholomew's Night ahead?

Petr


Sertorius

2005-11-08 17:39 | User Profile

"Devil's Night", as in Detroit.


xmetalhead

2005-11-08 17:58 | User Profile

There's going to be a Front National Rally/Protest (manifestation) in Paris on Monday November 14 according to the FN website. [url]http://www.frontnational.com/accueil.php[/url]

[QUOTE]GRANDE MANIFESTATION En présence de Jean-Marie LE PEN LUNDI 14 NOVEMBRE 2005 - 18h30 Place du Palais Royal 75001 Paris

« Immigration, émeutes, explosions des banlieues : ASSEZ ! » [/QUOTE]

"Immigration, riots, explosion of the suburbs: ENOUGH!"

Here's to LePen for trying to do something. He's been called "racist" and "fascist" for decades for only speaking the truth. I'll be rooting for them. I hope thousands of French show up.....it's for their own good to do so.


OPERA96

2005-11-08 20:08 | User Profile

If this is indeed a war, you may rest assured that the French will soon surrender and that the former nation of France will [I]poste haste[/I] become the nation of Islamia. Don't go too hard on the French though, the Germans, the English and the Italians are right behind them. This is what happens when nations lose their sense of racial/ethnic identity and subsequently cut their own balls off in order to mollify the invading third world hordes. In modern White society, men have given up their masculinity in favor of cringing subservience to a "New World Order" in which pride in ones White race and ethnicity is considered evil and not to be permitted. Those of other races are exempted from this rule and, in fact, their racial pride is funded by the dollars kicked in by White taxpayers.


Petr

2005-11-09 00:55 | User Profile

[QUOTE=OPERA96]If this is indeed a war, you may rest assured that the French will soon surrender and that the former nation of France will [I]poste haste[/I] become the nation of Islamia. Don't go too hard on the French though, the Germans, the English and the Italians are right behind them.[/QUOTE]

And here's another guy preaching hapless defeatism. Actually it's this Islamic rabble that would be annihilated [I]post haste[/I] just as soon as[B] real [/B]fighting would begin.

Quit believing in every single neocon-spread stereotype about European "surrender monkeys".

Petr


Bardamu

2005-11-09 01:02 | User Profile

It's not a war it's a bitch slap. :thumbd:


BlueBonnet

2005-11-09 02:15 | User Profile

I saw an interview this evening with some French "neo con" type, he was saying that it was France's fault for not allowing affirmative action. What are these guys smoking? The problem is allowing idiots run the country.


Bardamu

2005-11-09 02:34 | User Profile

I like it when they start talking about how the French "model" is wrong, and how they need to imitate the so-called American model, i.e. "positive discrimination". Wrong. The model that is wrong is the white-people-dieing out-being-replaced-by-towel-head model. May Mohammed rot in hell surrounded by 10,000 dead pigs. :tank: