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BREAKPOINT with Charles Colson
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Is Paris Burning Yet?
France's Homegrown Muslim Problem
November 14, 2005
Commentators have been busily trying to explain the weeks of violence that
have
turned French cities into war zones. Some say it's a result of high rates of
unemployment among youth. Others suggested it is France's fault for failing
to
assimilate the children of its mostly Islamic immigrants. Now, while true in
part, these are only symptoms of a much deeper problem: France's loss of
moral
and cultural vitality.
The unemployment rate among young immigrant men is 40 percent, as nearly
every
report notes. But no one asks why there is such joblessness. The answer is
the
economic system that, as writer Elizabeth Eaves puts it, "is eating
[France's]
young."
For the majority of the French, the system is a dream: 35-hour work weeks,
six
weeks of paid vacation, and a near-impossibility of being fired. The price
for
this welfare utopia, however, is paid by those at the bottom of the economic
ladder. Job creation in France has ground to a virtual halt.
And there's little chance of changing the system. As Eaves notes, the
majority
"would choose to keep paying themselves benefits until . . . the rioters
have
reached the Arc de Triomphe."
This shortsighted approach has helped to create a permanent class of idle
young
men. And as any criminologist will tell you, communities filled with idle
young
men can expect trouble on their streets. Many of the rioters cited "boredom"
as
one of the reasons they took to burning cars.
If France's economic policies are self-destructive and shortsighted, its
attempts to assimilate immigrants are little more than outright
capitulation.
I'm not talking about reasonable accommodations to their religious and
ethnic
heritages, as in the United States. I'm talking about the failure to
actively
oppose practices that trap newcomers and their children in Islamic ghettos
and
increase the power and influence of Islamic extremists. As one native of the
ghettoes told CBS, "it's not France here."
The most grotesque manifestation of this Islamic stranglehold is the abuse
directed at young women who don't conform to Islamo-fascist expectations:
They
are often gang-raped. Samira Bellil, the granddaughter of Algerian
immigrants,
was raped three times by young thugs. Not only did no one come to her aid,
her
parents threw her out after learning about the rapes.
Bellil's experience is not unique. Last year, a 17-year-old girl was burned
to
death by one of these thugs. No wonder so many Muslim girls veil themselves
rather than risk a similar fate.
While the most sensational of the atrocities are prosecuted, most go
unpunished,
and there's little will to end this reign of terror in French ghettoes. The
goal
seems to be, well, look the other way and blissfully enjoy the Parisian
nightlife. But time and demographics are on the extremist's side. The French
are
not reproducing themselves to replace those who are dying. And Islamists are
reproducing and immigrating. France, as we know it, will soon disappear.
The real problem with France, like the rest of post-Christian Europe, is a
flawed, rigidly secular worldview. France has renounced its Christian
heritage,
refuses to reform its welfare state, and has no compelling moral vision --
as we
see in its sanctimonious rejection of British and American morally driven
foreign policy. Without a vision, the people perish -- which is why France
may
be doomed to "eat its young" and, in turn, watch as they bite back.
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