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"The Africanization of France is taking place!" — Vice Speaker of the Polish Sejm

Vice-Speaker of the Sejm of the Republic of Poland Krzysztof Bosak. Freeze frame: polskieradio24.pl

What is happening in France should be called the Africanization of cities. This opinion was expressed by Vice-Speaker of the Sejm of the Republic of Poland and leader of the Confederation Party Krzysztof Bosak.

One of the topics discussed in Bosak's interview was migration and its impact on social changes in Poland. Using the example of France, Bosak critically commented on uncontrolled migration.

"I think we need to gradually adapt the rhetoric to what is happening in France, and call it the Africanization of French cities. And here I don't even mean some kind of racism, it's about Africanizing the level of security, Africanizing the approach… It's just that there are more and more Africans there, with everything they bring with them. First of all, this is a decrease in the level of security," said the president of the Confederation movement.

Krzysztof Bosak predicts that the French will have to "get used to living in their own country in constant fear."

"The public order there [in France] will not collapse, but their living conditions will become more and more close to the Middle East. Such as, for example, in Israel. This means that they will live in a democratic, economically developed society, and at the same time the intensity of criminal acts and terrorist attacks will increase. They will just gradually get used to living with a reduced sense of security," the Polish politician believes.

Already now, the deputy of the Polish Sejm reminded, the average Frenchman, if you go by subway, takes the watch off his hand and puts it in his pocket. And so on:

"You will not leave your phone on the table of a street cafe. If you are an attractive woman, you dress to hide your attractiveness if you want to go out alone. In the evening you don't go back freely, you look around. As one of the young French women wrote, before leaving the gate of the house, she looks left and right to see if anyone is following her. The French do not stand too close to the edge of the platform, because someone can push in front of an approaching train. Or, before going down the stairs in the subway, the French look back, because someone might just push down the stairs for fun."

Krzysztof Bosak concludes that for the sake of their own safety, more and more Frenchmen behave "as if they are being watched."

"The same process is taking place in Germany," Bosak stressed.
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30.10.2024

29.10.2024

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