Is Macron to blame?

The beheading of a French teacher by a Chechen teenager who publicly drew and displayed cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, coincided surprisingly with a series of recent events in and around France. The information campaign against the Chechen community, which was in the way of the African drug mafia, protected by corrupt authorities and law enforcement officials, the global crusade against Turkey declared by Macron from Lebanon to Greece and the Caucasus, his repeated attacks on the Muslim community in France, another provocation by «Charlie Hebdo» with new cartoons of the Prophet, may peace be upon him. And as the climax of this tragedy (during which the Chechen teenager was killed by the police). Many are asking — what was this? A provocation by special services or some forces behind the scenes, or simply a breakthrough of the hatred that has been stirred up in French society against Islam by Macron and other Islamophobes? It seems that ISIS* has been defeated, Al-Qaeda* has long since left Europe in the shadow of the «Taliban»*, which has started peace talks with the United States, and the wave of the migration crisis has passed. So who and why did they need to raise the issue of the «Islamic threat» again, inciting Islamophobic fanatics to actions that would lead to similar reactions against them? Perhaps it was those who, on the contrary, began to worry that Muslims were no longer perceived as an external threat, but as defenders of French society, like the Chechens who resisted the brazen drug mafia, or the head of the National Union of French Students, a French-Muslim woman, Mariam Pougetoux, who was elected by French students as their leader and is being targeted by Islamophobes because she wears a veil? Recently, Macron has been constantly defending France against the Islamic factor, both in foreign and domestic policy. But is this little man really defending France’s interests?
The Yellow Vests, representing tens of thousands of French people who protested against Macron’s policies not so long ago, claimed that it was not in France’s interest to get involved in every conflict in the Middle East or Africa, but to focus on domestic politics. These same people were not concerned about the idiotic cartoons that the provocateurs of «Charlie Hebdo» are entertaining themselves with, but rather about the pressing problems of the French people — the bankruptcy of small businesses and farmers, the increasing number of bankruptcies and suicides, the dictates of the financial oligarchy (to which Macron is connected) and the real mafia itself (criminal charges were recently filed against former president Nicolas Sarkozy for alleged involvement), the criminal French colonialism in Africa, resulting in an influx of refugees into France. Are any of these problems related to Islam and its values — the wearing of headscarves, which Macron opposed, or the reverential attitude towards the Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, which has once again come under attack? Obviously, no, and most French people are not concerned about these things or about events in Lebanon, Greece or the Caucasus, but rather about internal problems that, at some point, distracted them from the seemingly vanished «Islamic threat».
Therefore, whoever organized this shocking murder that has shaken France and Europe, the main responsibility lies with Macron, «Charlie Hebdo» and others who fuel fanaticism and intolerance in a country that needs dialogue and unity. While hiding behind slogans of protecting the Republic from separatism, which translates as «common cause,» they are the ones who today act as the main separatists and enemies of the unity of the Republic, not contributing to the integration of the growing (including among native French) multi-million religious community into its social life, but deliberately obstructing it by fomenting hatred and disunity.
* banned in Russia

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