A few days ago, a 17-year-old French citizen of Algerian origin was killed by a police officer as he tried to evade an identity check. The latter was immediately arrested and locked up. That should be the end of the matter, as society takes justice into its own hands. But it didn’t. Algerians living in France seized the opportunity to express their rejection of French society, giving free rein to their anti-European racism. Real riots broke out all over France, causing enormous damage to property and even human life, as a young firefighter, Dorian Damelincourt, died following an intervention on a fire caused by Algerian rioters.
And let’s face it. It’s not the young man’s death that drives them, but their legendary hatred of anything that doesn’t resemble them. A hatred distilled by the schools, the media, all under the control of the army, and the veritable propaganda factories that are the mosques.
Algerians hate. The Algerian feeds on racism against the other, the Jew, the Frenchman, the Christian, the yellow, the black and his neighbor and victim, the Kabyle.
Hatred of the French is caused by a comedy played by French governments and the Algerian Islamic junta to give the impression that it was the Arabs who fought the Algerian war, when in fact they didn’t take part in the war at all, but were waiting on the Moroccan and Tunisian borders for France to hand them the keys to independent Algeria, so they could steal victory from the Kabyle people. The riots are simply the backlash against French policy, which is helping to exterminate the Berber peoples. The people of France are paying for this policy.
Below, a photo of a Kabyle woman married to a black African, which the Algerian displays at every discussion to express his contempt for Kabyle people who are open to others. This is a screen shot of a discussion in which the Algerian says that the Kabyle are foreigners to North Africa and that their real homeland is Bulgaria. A region of Europe to which the Kabyle will one day be expelled.
A video of a breathtakingly beautiful girl from a mixed Algerian-Malian couple who explains how she spent part of her childhood and how Algerian society doesn’t hesitate to treat her like an animal.