Myth of the 20th Century: The Camp of the Saints

Written in 1973 by Jean Raspail, ‘The Camp of the Saints’ depicts a dystopian scenario where France and the West in general is overrun with third world immigrants. Called a ’Stunningly Racist French Novel’ by the urban liberal clickfarm of record, The Huffington Post, readers without any preconceived notions of the book may ask themselves, “where’s the lie, though?” If anything, Raspail understates the extent to which Western nations, from the media to the military, collectively facilitate the influx of millions of non-native Europeans into countries like France, some going so far to say he prophetically describes the way in which a combination of cowardice and a culture of Christian giving pave the way towards the burning of Notre Dame in 2019 and a general devolution of the quality of life in cities such as Paris as ‘refugees’ crowd out native citizens for public services, living space, and even representation in their own government.

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One comment

  1. This just proves that you cannot rely upon the masses to do the right thing, especially when the enemy controls the main sources of public information (propaganda), which was much more easily done in the pre-Internet days. Even without fraud, the powers-that-be, in “dumbocracies” can be relied upon to consistently pull the lever for the System candidates. Even with such controls in place, you certainly cannot say that people were not warned about the future if they took the wrong path, especially in the 1960s when the world could see the extreme social upheaval in the USA due to diversity. Such hubris of Western European nations (e.g., Sweden) to basically say, “Yes, yes, but we are superior, and will be able to achieve racial harmony where the Americans [and every racially diverse nation throughout history] could not. Surely, once they come here, and experience our great lifestyle, material wealth, friendly people, and generous benefits, they will love us and become good citizens!”

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