“Man is not a replaceable and interchangeable consumer product”: An Interview with Renaud Camus
A wide-ranging discussion about migration, politics, the media, and being silenced with the author of The Great Replacement.
A wide-ranging discussion about migration, politics, the media, and being silenced with the author of The Great Replacement.
“Since the Great Replacement is by far the most important phenomenon of contemporary Western societies, and also the most obvious, it is precisely that which one must under no circumstances name. Those who venture to do so must be silenced by any means necessary.”
We are facing the possible tragedy of Europe’s demographic transformation into little more than the northernmost outpost of Islam—a tragedy which Pope Francis seems all too happy to embrace.
Portugal is being transformed by mass immigration—in all likelihood, irreversibly.
Media-friendly illegal immigrants [are] quick to make a practice of blaming France and the French should anything unfortunate befall them. …. One thinks of burglars who sue a landlord because they break a leg in his poorly lit stairwell.
In stark contrast to the way Camus has been mis-portrayed by others, readers will encounter a heroic “committed opponent of conspiratorial thinking of all kinds.”
If the most dramatic change brought by mass migration is seen in European ethno-cultural identity, the most concrete, immediate, and undeniable consequence is the rise in violence and crime.
Camus rejects the idea that le grand remplacement is a conspiracy. It’s not a conspiracy; it’s an observation.
Michel Houellebecq’s controversial statements came during a far-reaching discussion with highly-prolific French philosopher and author Michel Onfray.
Little respite is given to Filip Dewinter. For the Flemish nationalist, speaking on taboo subjects—such as the ‘Great Replacement’—means resisting an onslaught of would-be censors.
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