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The Great Replacement Chronicles: ‘You Work For Me’

AP Photo/Thibault Camus

Archiving the “strange death of Europe,” as Douglas Murray put it, at the hands of the Brussels bureaucracy (and Downing Street) and their hordes of imported “migrants.” 

Migrant to French public: ‘You work for me’

There’s an entire genre of social media videos out there featuring parasitic migrants explaining to the natives of their host country, with no sense of shame or circumspection, that they exist to provide them with the lifestyle they demand — just begging to be packed onto whatever dinghy they floated in on and sent back out to sea.

Exhibit A, translation via Grok:

The migrant says: 'No, but guys, I'll explain. I live in France off French aid. The French work for me—you wake at 6 AM while I sleep till noon. End of month, I get €600 RSA plus €300 from local mission, totaling €900. Rent's €150 after €350 APL aid, saving €600 without lifting a finger. Mission covers €1300 driver's license, €84 monthly transport, and social aid pays electricity, gas, water. I do nothing; you pay taxes for me—work even harder!'

Related: Migrants Committed Almost 70% of Violent Crimes in France Last Year

Parisian subway broadcasts Islamic calls to prayer

Having lived in Saudi Arabia very briefly in an ill-fated stint as an English teacher, which I chronicle in my crack expat memoir, Broken English Teacher: Notes From Exile, the call to prayer went out five times a day across loudspeakers placed all throughout the city.

I will admit that, juxtaposed with the desert landscape, there was something hauntingly captivating — even beautiful, in a way — to the rhythmic chanting that seems fitting for the environment.

That said, to hear it broadcast on a French subway, the chanting strikes a remarkably different tone — menacing, domineering. Everything has its place, and there is no place for this nonsense in a once-proud European capital.

Centenarian World War II vet on Remembrance Sunday: ‘The sacrifice wasn’t worth the results’

Matt Margolis covered this remarkable spectacle yesterday.

A real sweetheart of a legacy Brit, Alec Penstone, who personally reminds me of some old-timers I’ve met abroad, delivered the hard truth that only a man in his position could without engendering accusations of racism, etc. from the liberal banshees on set with him:

I can see in my mind’s eyes those rows and rows of white stones of all the hundreds of my friends… that gave their lives. For what?... The sacrifice wasn’t worth the results that it is now… What we fought for was our freedom… even now it’s a darn sight worse worse than it was when I fought for it.

Related: British PM: We Censor Anti-Migrant Protests ‘For the Children’

The saddest part of this video, in my view, is the disingenuous reaction of the two soulless news actors to the old man’s wise appraisal of modern Britain.

“I’m sorry you feel like that,” the news actress responds — HR speak for “I don’t agree with, nor do I really care, what you’re talking but have some performative empathy.”

Heaven forbid that on a news show, the news people might have had some probing follow-up questions to further examine what he meant and whether his claim that it “wasn’t worth it” had any merit. But they didn’t, because they understood that the conversation would inevitably come around to their bosses’ replacement migration program — a verboten topic on British regime television.

So instead, passing on the opportunity to broadcast some truth for once, they essentially blew him off and offered him some silly trinket as a condolence prize.

Anyway, is there really any counterargument possible?

With the obvious caveat that liberating Europe from fascism was a great feat, there is no real objective measure by which anyone can claim that modern-day Great Britain is in a better way than it was a hundred years ago. One can make the case, in fact, that it’s been so transformed for the worse that it’s not even the same country anymore.

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