Without exaggeration, French President Macron has appointed an education minister who hates France. In a month there will be parliamentary elections in France, and Macron is afraid of the far left.

As long as the center-right parties - in obedience to decades of ideological terror - do not enter into a coalition with the strongest opposition party, the radical right-wing Marine Le Pen, the left is united. Their leader is the anti-Semitic, communist Jean-Luc Mélenchon. This is why Macron fears the extreme left the most, which is why he appointed a socialist prime minister (for a month, until the elections) and why he gave the Ministry of Education to a Senegalese-French far-left politician. Pap Ndiaye (pictured above) has previously spoken hatefully about the society of "white straight men".

The recently deposed minister's conflict with Macron began when, in October 2020, Samuel Paty Paty's "crime" was that he showed his students caricatures of Muhammad during the free speech class, for which a radical Muslim migrant brutally beheaded him in the open street in broad daylight. But it was also Jean-Michel Blanquer who had the courage to say during the debate on the wearing of the Muslim headscarf in schools that it "has no place in French society".

The successor of Blanquier, who followed Chirac and Sarkozy, compared to his classic, Catholic studies, Pap Ndiaye, who was socialized on far-left, communist ideals, was engaged in comparing the "situation of blacks" in France and America for a long time, he built his career on this and even wrote an essay in 2008 about this topic.

He later "further developed" his ideology and concluded that France urgently needed to open its eyes to its own "structural racism". With this approach, Ndiaye did nothing but transplant one of the key concepts of decolonialism imported from America into French public discourse and society, and opened the way for, among other things, the culture of abolition and the ideas of extreme Wokism in France.

Origo's full article can be read here.

Image: AFP