Vachss Truth and Knowledge: Some groups are going to bleed a lot - TopicsExpress



          

Vachss Truth and Knowledge: Some groups are going to bleed a lot of mileage out of the terrorist attacks in France. Not so-called “radical Islamists,” but foul profiteers ... home-grown Nazis who’ve been impatiently waiting for White Night to descend, now armed with fears of “immigration-as-invasion” politics. tinyurl/l526vbq “That book [The Turner Dairies] it didn’t really get much attention until they found a copy on the guy who blew up that federal building in Oklahoma City.” “When did it come out? The book, I mean.” “I don’t know–the 70’s, sometime in there.” “Before that, there was this book, ‘Les Camp des Saints’ over in France. All about how immigrants take over the French Rivera and spread out from there ... all the way over here, until they’re ready to rule the world. The American book, it sounds like the same theme, just put in different words.” “All this to say ... what?” “This is a strange place. When the French book came out, it was translated into English. A lot of ... ‘commentators,’ maybe ... said it was racist and all that, but worthy of what the French call l’art de la discussion. I don’t read all this ‘critique’ stuff, but I remember hearing people–in France, I’m saying–they thought the book was about how letting immigrants come in was the ticket to Hell. “Bridgette Bardot was on that team. Les intellectuels had a good laugh at that. Plenty of French people support blocking immigration from anyone, Arabs especially. They even have a whole political party with that for a platform. And all you have to do is look at how quick the French army was dispatched to restore democracy in Mali–they say Al-Qaeda overthrew that government–then look at a map and see how Mali borders on Algeria.... You can do the math.” “You know a lot about France.” “Not so much,” I said, confident I had given nothing away–it would be no secret to anyone Dolly trusted that she was fluent in French, or that she’d served with Médecins Sans Frontières. They probably assumed that she’d met me someplace in France. You can’t rely on much from people, but you’ll most likely be on the safe side if you float a vague story out there and let everyone fill in the blanks for themselves.
Posted on: Sat, 10 Jan 2015 20:22:28 +0000

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