Now that more and more horrifying news and pictures have been coming from France for days, Laurent Obertone's book Guerrilla I. - The Last Days of France immediately came to mind in connection with the events. What the author wrote as fiction in 2016 can now become a bitter reality: France's collapse and total chaos in just three days.
Although the apocalyptic conclusion of the novel has not yet occurred in reality, the root cause is eerily identical to what is written in the book:
"...a police action in a Parisian suburb ends in tragedy.
One of the trapped policemen loses his cool and opens fire indiscriminately. The Islamist ghetto goes up in flames, and the whole country gets involved. The fire continues to spread from city to city, falling into pieces of the Republic. Policemen, criminals, terrorists, state leaders, journalists and ordinary citizens alike are buried under the chaos. Electricity and water services are quickly cut off, food supplies are depleted, there is no more public order, communication, transportation and medical care. Chaos reaches the countryside, society falls apart, and cities fall prey to violence, looting, and massive fires.” (from the synopsis of the work)
So we only had to wait a few years, and the events described in Guerrilla, which were not only the product of the writer's imagination, but were based on interceptions, reconnaissance and predictions of French intelligence, became a terrifying reality. France has drifted to the brink of civil war, and if this specific event can be managed and kept under control at all, there is no satisfactory solution to the situation.
Such an accidental spark can set fire to any state in Western Europe at any time, where Muslim immigrants are pouring in unaccountably and uncontrollably, building parallel societies in no-go zones.
Even the law enforcement agencies do not dare to set foot in these parts of the city, because the immigrants live according to their own laws, i.e. ex lex - outside the laws, and the Europeans are only seen as enemies to be destroyed.
However, the most shocking parallel is not between the events that just happened and the blood-curdling scenes of the novel, but as Mór Bán writes in his recommendation:
"However, the most chilling scenes in the novel are not the evocations of violence and destruction, but rather the representation of the thinking of representatives of the liberal brainwashed society, antifa, rights defenders, migrant-smoothers, and extreme leftists. These people are unable to comprehend what they have done to Europe even as the final destruction rages before their eyes…”
They really can't grasp it.
Paris and France are in flames, but Brussels bureaucrats and Western politicians have brought up the idea of a mandatory migrant quota again.
We must fight for the survival of our country and Europe with all our strength, knowledge, ingenuity and cooperation!
P.S
Summer is here... let's at least read in the shelter of our safe country! Let's read Guerrilla I.-II. volume, but before these perhaps first the book Behódolás by Goncourt Prize-winning French writer Michel Houellebecq!
Author: Ködszürkáló
Cover image: A car set on fire by protesters due to the death of a shot teenager burns in the Nanterre suburb of Paris on June 29, 2023.
Two days earlier, a 17-year-old youth was shot dead in the city by a French police officer performing a road inspection. The policeman who took the young man's life was placed in pre-trial detention after questioning him, because according to the prosecutor's office, the use of a weapon was not justified when the boy driving a car in the bus lane was given a license. MTI/EPA/Yoan Valat