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>> No.23010414 [View]
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23010414

>>23008085
The french article for Great replacement is a good example on how formulation completely changes the impact is has on the reader

>Earliest version from 2014
"The Great Replacement is a political neologism introduced by the French far-right writer Renaud Camus in 2010. It primarily refers to the idea that European populations are being replaced by populations of Maghrebi and Sub-Saharan origin, as a result of both legal and illegal immigration. Subsequently, it also encompasses all the ensuing consequences on the political, cultural, and spiritual levels, namely the replacement of European civilization with that of the migrants."
https://fr.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Grand_remplacement&oldid=104797075


>Now
""The Great Replacement is a far-right conspiracy theory introduced in 2010 by the French writer Renaud Camus. It is based more on impressions than on actual demographic data and is biased by xenophobic and racist mistrust. The theory claims that there is a process in France and Europe of substituting the French and European population with a non-European population, primarily from Sub-Saharan Africa and the Maghreb. This process would lead to a change in civilization, allegedly supported or even organized by a political, intellectual, and media elite labeled as 'replacist'. This elite is accused of maintaining a conspiracy of silence on this matter and is supposedly motivated by ideology or economic interest.

Such discourses have their roots in antisemitism during the Third Republic and pre-war nationalism, which targeted Jews, Armenians, Italians, and Maghrebians, among other communities. These discourses continue to this day through neo-Nazism, and have come to specifically target Muslims with the conspiracy theory of Eurabia introduced in 2005 by the British essayist Bat Ye'or, which prefigures the theses put forward five years later by Renaud Camus in his various works."

>Put a bunch of buzz words
>Some fact-checking
>Obligatory mentions of le hekkin antisemitism

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