We must dare to talk about anti-Quebec racism

Jean-François Lisée published Saturday in the pages of Duty a text that caused a stir.

He spoke about the development, in Montreal schools, of what he called an anti-Quebec identity.

Basically, there are many, very many young people from diverse backgrounds who viscerally reject Quebecers (they don’t take the trouble to distinguish between French-speaking Quebecers and Quebecers; for them, the two terms are interchangeable).

  • Listen to the meeting Mathieu Bock-Côté and Richard Martineau via QUB :
Kebs

They also call them “Kebs”. It’s the new way of saying “pea soup” or “frogs.” And calling French-speaking Quebecers racist is the new way of saying “speak white.”

Lisée is right on target. But this phenomenon is not new. It has been visible for quite a while now. But strangely, it did not break through in the media, as if the great story of happy diversity and living together had to be maintained at all costs. As if we had to lie to Quebecers at all costs by explaining to them that everything is fine.

We are paying the price for the defeat of independence in 1995. We are paying the price for crazy immigration thresholds. We are paying the price for Canadian multiculturalism. We are paying the price of anti-white racism, which is authorized racism. We are paying the price for wokism, revenge against the West and the theory of systemic racism.

The political dimension is obvious. As always, Canada is banking on mass immigration to put an end to us. This time he might succeed. We are experiencing a tipping point in our history. Like a new conquest.

Archive photo, QMI Agency

Conquest

We wanted to become masters of our own home. There are now too many of us at home.

When we resist, we are accused of ethnic supremacism. This stupid accusation has the function of paralyzing us mentally.

There is anti-Quebec racism in Quebec today. We must fight it.


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