France – How the Revolution Lost Its Head Again
Somewhere in Paris, on the banks of the Seine, stands the small Statue of Liberty the French kept for themselves—before sending the big one off to New York. It stands there now, gazing out over what once was the cradle of the Enlightenment, the romance, the cheese and wine. And now: the cradle of surrender.
Yes, ladies and gentlemen — France, the country that invented the phrase “Liberté, égalité, fraternité”, has over the past decade become a social experiment called “How to destroy civilization with a small espresso.”
From Paris to Marseille — France, the Sharia Republic
There was a time when you could tell a Parisian by his beret, his thin cigarette, his disdain for anything that smelled English. Today, you can recognize him by what he says: “I don’t want to offend anyone.”
Meanwhile, in the suburbs, second- and third-generation immigrants are no longer satisfied with burned cars every few nights — they want cultural sovereignty, autonomy, and maybe even Sharia law along the way.
One suburb after another is turning into a “non-Republic zone.” The French police no longer enter those neighborhoods — because why risk your life in the Republic when you can just file a report about bad air from a cheese shop instead?
How the Revolution Lost Its Head Again
Once upon a time, in France, heads were chopped off for Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity. Today, heads are being severed in the name of “Honor of the Prophet.” This isn’t just historical irony — it’s a Western tragedy with a Disney script and ISIS-level violence.
Paris: From City of Light to City of Candles
In the 18th century, France invented the idea of humanism. In the 21st, it forgot it somewhere on a curb outside a kosher shop in Belleville.
The streets that once symbolized love, champagne, and Chanel have become obstacle courses between street prayers, burned-down police stations, and Arabic signs even De Gaulle wouldn’t decipher.
Where there was once the scent of croissants, there is now the scent of fear. Where there was romanticism on the Seine, there are Palestinian flags on bridges. The city that coined joie de vivre looks like someone forgot to leave the lights on.
How Did This Happen to Them?
The French wanted to be enlightened. So they opened their borders, abandoned their national identity, replaced Marie-Antoinette with Greenpeace, the tricolor flag with the rainbow flag, and belief in God with faith in ecology.
They won a prize: a new generation of citizens who believe very much in God — but not in the God the French originally meant.
A secular republic? Today it’s a republic of rubber slippers, where a school that refuses to allow the hijab is “Islamophobic,” and a teacher teaching free speech might find themselves without speech — or without a head.
Macron — Napoleon Without a Sword, Only an App
Emmanuel Macron, the guy with the college-play smile and the fourth-grade student’s self-confidence who somehow was elected president, is still trying to figure out how he went from leader of Great France to European household manager trying to calm 60 million angry citizens and 6 million who aren’t even sure they’re citizens.
He talks about “national unity” while on just about every other street in Paris you see more hijabs than baguettes. And judging by his recent speeches — maybe even he’s starting to think Napoleon might not have been so cruel when he used cannons against uprisings.
Mr. Macron, the man who seems born inside a mirror, has tried to appear strong against radical Islam. But between one tough speech and a photo-op with Justin Trudeau, he’s realized radical Islam in France is not just a problem — it’s a whole system.
In cities like Marseille or Saint-Denis, where people no longer speak French, this isn’t “cultural diversity” — it’s a quiet replacement of civilization.
Revolution 2.0 — This Time the Head Rolls from the Wrong Side
The French, with all their national pride, have once again managed to lose their head. This time it’s not a metaphorical loss — it’s a voluntary surrender of their identity.
Long ago, head-cutting symbolized rising up against kings. Today it symbolizes yielding to ideology that erases what the Revolution once created. Rather than resisting tyranny, the French now struggle not to offend the new tyrant.
They are not burning the Bastille — they are burning themselves in denial.
Culture War? The French Call It “Reverse Cultural Colonialism”
In schools in France, they no longer teach Voltaire — but “intercultural tolerance.” In museums, they don’t take pride in French heritage nearly as much as they apologize for it. And most importantly: you can’t even shoot a commercial of French cheese without adding an Arabic subtitle.
It’s not that France has surrendered. It has simply decided that surrender is part of its new culture — a Cabernet Sauvignon wine of guilt steeped in colonial shame.
Cancel Culture? Meet the Culture of Surrender
France has always been a champion of culture — the Louvre, Monet, Romain Rolland, Simone de Beauvoir. But now it mainly exports the culture of surrender:
- Universities silencing criticism of Islam.
- Media blaming Israel for every attack.
- A government choosing to ignore the fact that there are areas in Paris where even a policeman won’t enter without military backup.
Europe Watches, Scratching Its Head
Germany is under pressure, the Netherlands is on the edge, Belgium in practice is being run by mosque boards — but France? France was supposed to be the last stronghold.
Well, they even managed to ruin that with a policy paper, a university seminar, and an apology to some international Islamic cultural cooperation organization.
Israel Looks On — Double Espresso in Hand
From where we sit, it’s easy to smile with sadness. Because this is the same France that preached morals to Israel about “occupation” and “human rights.” Today, when it discovers what happens when you open the gates without borders, maybe it’s beginning to realize that “peaceful person” is not a real profession, and that freedom doesn’t always survive equality.
And the French Jew?
He’s already heard the message. Between attacked supermarkets and silenced synagogues, tens of thousands of Jews have left France in the past decade. France has lost its minds, lost its soul — and now even its Jews — those who gave it true culture, morality, and elegance.
The New Revolution
This time, the one who must lose the head is not the aristocracy — but blindness. Because if France keeps denying reality in the name of “pluralism,” it will find its revolution ended not in freedom, but in hijab.
And the only guillotine still waiting is the one that awaits its national identity.
In Conclusion: The Revolution Returns — But This Time Without Values
France in 2025 is not a country under occupation. It is a country that has disintegrated from within.
A revolution without vision. Democracy without backbone. Culture without pride. This is the formula for the West’s next great defeat. And to those who believed the French Revolution changed the world — wait until you see what the Islamic revolution might do in Paris.
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