

Happy Birthday, Renaud Camus
Camus rejects the idea that le grand remplacement is a conspiracy. It’s not a conspiracy; it’s an observation.
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.
Zemmour, reacting to President Macron’s proposal to reroute newly arrived foreigners to the French countryside, argued it evinced the head of state accepts the Great Replacement and wishes to facilitate its outcomes.
The owner of the newspaper anchors himself in the past of the Occitan region which, according to him, “has always had links with Al-Andalus.”
France’s Leftist Coalition, led by Jean-Luc Mélenchon—who garnered nearly 70% of the Muslim vote in the first round of presidential elections—is expected to collect an overwhelming majority of the Muslim vote in legislative elections in June.
“I could have remained a journalist and a writer, but I felt that my duty was to save France from the Great Replacement,” Zemmour said.
Despite dismissing Éric Zemmour’s idea of a ‘Great Replacement’ as “too radical,” one of France’s eminent left-wing philosophers has argued that it takes a “fanatical denial of reality” to discount the “obvious” demographic replacement presently taking place across the European continent.
During last week’s debate between a group of presidential hopefuls from France’s center-right Les Republicains, MP Éric Ciotti parted ways with other candidates by endorsing “the Great Replacement” theory, which describes the phenomenon of ethnic Europeans being demographically replaced by non-Western foreigners.