Jean-Marie Le Pen in memoriam

magnapolonia.org 5 months ago

Jean-Marie Le Pen in memoriam

“Jean-Marie Le Pen [...] is dangerous for the full political scene due to the fact that he is the only 1 honest. He says out loud what many people think in their soul and what politicians refrain from saying due to the fact that they are either besides demagogue or besides cowardly. Le Pen, with all his flaws and qualities, is most likely the only individual who thinks of France's interests beyond his own interests" — Alain Delon

“[Le Pen] I'm certain he's a small adventurer and a small thug, which makes him an interesting guy. With his oratorial talent and impetuous temperament he reminded me of Danton” — Eduard Limonov

On the anniversary of the massacre on Acca Larentia, we received another sad news – at the age of 96, Jean-Marie Le Pen – the founder of the National Front, an unbreakable nationalist and 1 of the most crucial nationalist politicians of post-war Europe – left the Lord's house.

Born in 1928 in Trinité-sur-Mer, Bretonia, he attended the Jesuit College of Saint-François-Xavier in Vannes, studying law and political discipline at the University of Paris. In the 1950s, he joined the abroad Legion – he served in Indochina and then returned to the country and won a mandate in the election, but rapidly resigned from it and as a peculiar services officer took part in the war in Algeria. On October 5, 1972, he established the National Front and headed it. In 1998, his eldest daughter Marie Caroline betrayed him, leaving the organization and breaking contact with him. 7 times he earned a mandate for the European Parliament, 5 times moving for president, best score in 2002 (16.86% and second place, 18% in the second round) At least six times he was punished for propagated ideas. In May 2015, his younger daughter Marine besides betrayed him, disfellowshipping from the organization and depriving him of his position as Honorary president (finally after winning the court conflict he retained that position). Despite this, he never cut off from her and tried to support her candidacy in the election.

It is hard to overestimate his legacy, he is widely regarded as the man who resurrected nationalism on the postwar French political scene. It is besides hard to overestimate his courage to strike political correctness – despite the ongoing decade of ostracism and run of hatred against him and his family, he was not afraid to spread his views on immigration, historical issues, in peculiar on II.

Le Pen paved the routes of the modern right and nationalists on immigration – as he wrote in his book K.Kit “Le Pen [...] will enroll in the past of France primarily as Cassandra, which predicted for decades that the mass settlement of immigrants outside Europe would lead to cultural tensions and would pose an existential threat to the French people” He was the first to postulate the popular thought of remigration today, as he said: “parents and children should not be separated, they should be deported together”, which sparked considerable controversy. He was 1 of the first to inform against the large Change that is happening before our eyes: “There will be no more European culture if there are no Europeans. If we become a number in our own country and another civilization becomes a majority, then European civilization will disappear" Le Pen, was besides close to the thought of ethnoplurism erstwhile he was accused of hatred and chauvinism replied, “When St. Joan of Arc was asked why as a Christian she did not love the British, she replied that she loved them, but in their country. Similarly, we do not feel hatred for the Turks, we love them, but in their country”

Betrayed by his own family, hated by almost all politicians, journalists and public opinion, he fought almost to the end as long as wellness allowed. Although the inevitable has come, and he is no longer with us, there is no uncertainty that his legacy lives, he is doing large and will continue.
Jean-Marie Le Pen – PRESENTE!

Oskar Jastrzębski

Text comes from the Telegram channel New Dawn

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