French Socialist Report A Blueprint For National Destruction
By: Rachel Marsden
A new report commissioned by the French Socialist government to make recommendations on how France can better integrate its residents of foreign origin has been described by former French Defense Minister Gerard Longuet as "organizing apartheid by inciting each community to affirm its difference," according to the French newspaper Le Figaro.I figured that had to be gross exaggeration -- until I read through the
hundreds of pages myself. As a native Canadian, I couldn't help but notice that
the French experts who compiled the report referred to the separatism-plagued
French-Canadian province of Quebec as a "country" unto itself -- as in, "other
countries, like Quebec." Why endeavor to import to France the kind of separatist
turbulence that Canada has historically struggled to overcome? The agenda of
social division permeating the report is something to behold.
The irony is that French President Francois Hollande is trying to assist
balkanized countries like Mali and now the Central African Republic, while at
the same time having to distance himself from those within his own party who
suggest that the solution to France's integration problems is simply increased
division under the guise of cultural plurality. That a report meant to help
foster integration ended up recommending division exemplifies the utter insanity
of socialist thinking.
Hollande's biggest handicap is that he's a pragmatist stuck with the socialist
label and the ideological base that goes with it. France didn't want to elect a
socialist; it wanted to elect someone who wasn't hyperactive and flashy like
former center-right President Nicolas Sarkozy. But just try explaining that to
the socialists in power.
In France right now, there is a significant difference between the big "S"
Socialist party name -- a large ideological tent -- and the small "s" socialist
ideology that it's supposed to incarnate. Hollande is caught between those two
entities. Maybe the Socialist Party should address the divisions within its own
ranks before tackling divisions within French society at large.
So what kind of solutions for improved integration did France's
government-convened experts generate? Well, one of the few things on which all
French parties seem to agree is the ban on Muslim headscarves in schools. The
report recommends overturning the ban -- even though Socialist Prime Minister
Jean-Marc Ayrault, who commissioned this taxpayer-funded exercise in political
masochism, voted in favor of the ban on headscarves himself.
The report also suggests adopting the very best aspect -- and by "best," I mean
worst -- of the American judicial system, by introducing class-action,
anti-discrimination lawsuits into the French system and "significantly
reinforcing" the damages paid to plaintiffs in anti-discrimination cases.
It also contends that "France should assume the 'Arab-Oriental' dimension of its
identity and drop its post-colonial attitude." The report recommends that France
"develop Arab education ... by introducing it in the best schools across the
entire country." Further, it recommends college-level education of African
language -- in one of the dominant tongues, such as Bambara, Dioula, Lingala or
Swahili. The rationale is that "we forget that immigrants, who we expect to
'speak French well,' often already speak several languages." Right, and so they
should speak decent French -- because they're moving to France. A
nationalization of mass foreign-language learning should be driven by some kind
of pragmatic impetus that extends beyond mere historic guilt. It's hard to
imagine how prioritizing African languages over those that dominate the business
world would ultimately benefit France.
Later in the same report, "Creole" is recommended as yet another language to be
widely taught. Which variation of Creole? All of them, I guess. Or maybe just
the French Creoles -- of which there are about 17. It's enough of a challenge
for kids to express themselves in a single language besides text-messaging and
emoticons.
The experts call for a shift in language to underpin a new policy, suggesting
that "the term 'integration' isn't appropriate to represent this public policy."
You don't say! How unfortunate that your rather straightforward task was to
actually make integration recommendations. Here's hoping that your paycheck
fails to integrate into your bank account.
Not to belittle months of worth of work by a reported 250 people to produce five
sections ranging from 32 to 93 pages each, at what was no doubt a massive cost
in human capital. But as an immigrant to France myself, fitting in really isn't
rocket science; it's an individual responsibility. The real challenge is
convincing socialists to stop using immigration and integration as a pretext for
shredding the fabric of their own country.
COPYRIGHT 2013 RACHEL MARSDEN