The anti-utopian development is described in French writer Michel Houellebecq’s brilliant – and full of bitterness at parting with historical France – novella “Obedience” or “Submission”. This is also the subject of publicist Eric Zemmour’s passionately polemical book Le destin francais (The French Destiny).
History has its own hard laws. As noted by Oswald Spengler, “world history always takes the side of power and race”. And a world nation called Islam in Europe looks much stronger and more resolute than an insecure, liberal-driven Western society. Spengler is little quoted in the West these days: it is not politically correct. But that doesn’t mean he was wrong. Incidentally, Houellebecq says the same thing, only in different words.
Alexey Pushkov