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by
Guy Millière • August 3, 2019 at 5:00 am
- President
Macron never says he is sorry for those who have lost an eye or
a hand... from extreme police brutality. Instead, he asked the
French parliament to pass a law that almost completely abolishes
the right to protest and the presumption of innocence, and that
allows the arrest of anyone, anywhere, even without cause. The
law was passed.
- In
June, the French parliament passed another law, severely
punishing anyone who says or writes something that might contain
"hate speech". The law is so vague that an American
legal scholar, Jonathan Turley, felt compelled to react.
"France", he wrote, "has now become one of the
biggest international threats to freedom of speech".
- The
main concern of Macron and the French government seems not to be
the risk of riots, the public's discontent, the disappearance of
Christianity, the disastrous economic situation, or Islamization
and its consequences. Instead, it is climate change.
- "The
West no longer knows what it is, because it does not know and
does not want to know what shaped it, what constituted it, what
it was and what it is. (...) This self-asphyxiation leads
naturally to a decadence that opens the way to new barbaric
civilizations." — Cardinal Robert Sarah, in Le soir
approche et déjà le jour baisse ("The Evening Comes,
and already the Light Darkens").

French
President Emmanuel Macron never says he is sorry for those who have
lost an eye or a hand from extreme police brutality. Instead, he
asked the French parliament to pass a law that almost completely
abolishes the right to protest and the presumption of innocence, and
that allows the arrest of anyone, anywhere, even without cause. The
law was passed. (Photo by Kiyoshi Ota - Pool/Getty Images)
Paris, Champs-Élysées. July 14. Bastille Day. Just
before the military parade begins, President Emmanuel Macron comes
down the avenue in an official car to greet the crowd. Thousands of
people gathered along the avenue shout "Macron resign", boo
and hurl insults.
At the end of the parade, a few dozen people release
yellow balloons into the sky and distribute leaflets saying "The
yellow vests are not dead." The police disperse them, quickly
and firmly. Moments later, hundreds of "Antifa" anarchists
arrive, throw security barriers on the roadway to erect barricades,
start fires and smash the storefronts of several shops. The police
have a rough time mastering the situation, but early in the evening,
after a few hours, they restore the calm.
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