Saturday, May 24, 2025

Fuck Your National Identity

 

80% of French women now want the army deployed them in French cities to protect them from... oh who knows who they need protection from, let's not bicker and argue about oo's rapin' oo.

Due to France's drug trafficking crisis, a large majority of French are in favor of the army being deployed into disadvantaged neighborhoods in problematic neighborhoods in France, including 80 percent of women.

According to a CSA poll conducted for CNews, Europe 1 and JDD, 76 percent of French people overall want the army called in to battle drug trafficking in "disadvantaged neighborhoods."

In fact, women are more supportive of troops being deployed than men, with 80 percent of women saying yes to the question: "Should the army be called in to combat drug trafficking in troubled neighborhoods?" In turn, only 72 percent of men supported such an action.

This may have to do with the fact that French women feel increasingly unsafe in their own country. As Remix News has reported, France has seen an incredible 86 percent increase in sexual violence in the last 10 years, with mass immigration fueling this trend.

In Britain, 44% say they feel like "strangers in their own country."

That was the plan all along.

A new poll reveals that 44% of British residents feel like "strangers" in their own country--an eye-opening statistic that appears to validate a position long championed by Nigel Farage's Reform UK party.

Key Details:

44% of respondents said they sometimes feel like strangers in their own country; 73% of Reform UK voters felt this way.

A strong majority (73%) believe more needs to be done to integrate people from different ethnic and cultural backgrounds.

The poll precedes Starmer's warning that the UK risks becoming an "island of strangers" due to collapsing community cohesion.

Diving Deeper:

A new poll from the research firm More in Common finds that nearly half of British residents--44%--report sometimes feeling like "strangers" in their own country. The findings come just days after Labour Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer took a dramatic rhetorical pivot on immigration, echoing warnings long voiced by Nigel Farage and his populist Reform UK party.

Starmer's blunt remarks last week--declaring that mass migration offers no real economic benefit to Britain's working class and risks making the UK an "island of strangers"--drew fierce criticism from the liberal political and media class. But according to this latest survey of 13,000 people, his warning struck a nerve.

While the survey did not directly tie the feeling of alienation to immigration, several responses suggest it plays a significant role. A commanding 73% of respondents believe more must be done to integrate people from various cultural and ethnic backgrounds, with 77% saying this is a collective responsibility.

GRTWT.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

How about more being done to deport immigrants with no legal standing?