Plus de Pavillons au Folkfest

Rebel News;

A video depicting a massive brawl between gangs of Egyptian and Algerian nationals in France has garnered hundreds of thousands of views on social media. There are numerous commentators describing the violence as a consequence of French President Emmanuel Macron’s immigration policies.

The video, which was published by Reconquête political candidate Cécile Scheffen, shows two massive groups of armed men, some of whom have rebars and spiked bats beating one another as onlookers look upon the scenes in stunned disbelief.

28 Replies to “Plus de Pavillons au Folkfest”

    1. Some of my wife’s friends (who happen to be white french women) do that ululation thing at moments of celebration. I always feel a huge urge to smash them in the face when they do it. It has to be the single most irritating noise a human can make.

    1. “Diversity is our strength!” “We are being culturally enriched!”

      Or, as the old Frank used to put it: “I slam, you slam, we all slam for Islam.”

  1. common they are simply enriching our culture !!!

    don t you know diversity is our greatest strenght?

    and dont you know white supremacists are the biggest threat the universe has ever seen?

    if you did not know that, you need to watch more Main Stream Media !!!

    stop resisting the brainwash !

  2. you import the people, you import the culture

    giving them a cell phone and a pair of Nikes does not erase their violent DNA and turn those people into civilized rocket scientists.

    by the end of this century the west will be a sh*t hole of poverty and violence.

    future generations will hate what liberals have done to Western Civilization, will wonder why we did not stop this.

    1. History is written by the victors. In the dystopian future, there will be no knowledge of the times we lived through and nothing against which to compare their situation.

  3. Immigration is not the central problem, as I believe most readers and our hostess can trace their Canadian origins to an act of immigration. The f@&(ing problem is assimilation. The stupid ideology of multiculturalism is a lie. Diversity can be a strength if properly assimilated. Atomized culture, on the other hand, is like Aerosolizing:, it works for the virus, and the virus is no friend!

    1. Yes, after changing our society to accommodate the cultural differences of immigrants, and instituting huge “safety net” programs that they could be a part of, immigration became such a different thing from that of our ancestors that using the same word for it is purposefully misleading.

  4. I’ve never traveled to my mother country of France, putting that treat off to retirement … when I could linger in the country and absorb my peoples culture. It appears as though I am about 20 years too late.

      1. Kenji, ac,
        I was born in England, 70 years ago. I consider myself lucky that I caught it before the rot really set in. 40 years ago, I moved to France. I loved the country and the people. The rot was *just* starting, but it was fine. 30 years ago I moved to the US, and caught the tail end of the good times here.

        I consider myself really lucky to have seen three of the old countries of the civilized times. All three have been badly damaged by stupidity. I wonder if there is enough left to ever recover, or if they will all degenerate into something worse than the most backwards and violent African country.

        1. I was born in England 75 years ago and came to Canada nearly 45 years ago. Have had a successful life and career here and was fully settled, until Blackie came upon us.

          Getting restless, with no idea where to escape. I get a bit nostalgic about dear old Blighty, but now it appears blighted. I was last there 32 years ago and enjoyed it. Somehow I doubt I could ever be really happy there again.

          1. Gentlemen … I still consider myself lucky having been born in 1955 in CA … when it was still a Golden State. When the wilderness areas were still free from cartel marijuana grow plots … and the
            Population was 1/3 of what it is now. And the homeless were housed by the YMCA and Salvation Army. That’s all gone now, and CA is a shithole … unless you live MOST of your life behind the 12ft. walls of a 3-acre Atherton Estate.

    1. I’ve often been asked why I’ve never been back to my birthplace of Berlin. I haven’t had any reason to. I still have rellies on my father’s side there, but we’d be complete strangers.

      One of my mother’s sisters still lives there and even she’s glad to get out of that city once in a while. Spain’s been her getaway destination and she liked it so much she bought part interest in a vineyard there. (I think she’s sold it a while ago.)

  5. The conflict took place in St. Denis where there are many “no-go” zones. The only reason to go to St. Denis is to visit the Pere LaChaise Cemetery where Jim Morrison, Edith Piaf, Oscar Wilde and so many other truly famous people are buried.

    I also loved the comment “Tout Va Bien” which I translate as “All goes well” – yes, I hope they killed one another and did not go after the bystanders.

  6. On my first visit to France and Paris, I finally understood how people from the US could fall in love with the place. It was a reaction to the people of France being such totally self-centered asses. On my final visit, the French people’s place had been taken by the muzzies. It’s extremely hard to take a people seriously when they believe the creator of the universe is an Egyptian moon god spawned by satan.

  7. I wonder what caused the riot this time – Algeria’s soccer team defeated Egypt’s again?

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