“We Are Dragged Into Reality”

Collectif Némésis is an identitarian feminist organization based in Switzerland and France. Its principal focus is the danger posed by third-world migrants to native white women, which is why it has so often run afoul of mainstream feminist groups.

Below are two more videos from Collectif Némésis. (See previous videos here and here). Many thanks to HeHa for the translations and to Vlad Tepes and RAIR Foundation for the subtitling.

The first video is a report on the cultural enrichment of an historic castle in the French Alps: it seems the government plans to resettle “refugees” in the castle. This video features the reactions of local residents to their upcoming enrichment:

The second video is narrated by a hairdresser who now serves as a deputy for Rassemblement National in the National Assembly. She describes the way she was denied social benefits because she was white, native French, and didn’t have enough children:

Video transcript #1:

00:00   I am generally against it. We have moved here to feel safe, sheltered
00:06   from the chance of risks, for our children. I have a little daughter who is 11 years old.
00:10   She will need to be more careful from now on. She will not be able to do
00:14   what she usually does, probably. We haven’t settled here for all that.
00:18   In the department of Ain, the Château de Varey, a superb medieval building classified
00:22   as an historical monument is about to come back to life, in the small municipality
00:26   of Saint Jean Le Vieux. But not in the way the inhabitants of the village would imagine. In fact,
00:31   the association that owns the castle, Alfa3A,
00:34   intends to accommodate about fifty migrants in it, at the government service’s request.
00:37   To the detriment of the 350 inhabitants of the municipality, and of the mayor,
00:42   who are in total disagreement with this initiative.
00:45   Some militants from Nemesis went to meet the inhabitants,
00:48   who are concerned about their own safety, and that of their own children. Here their testimonies.
00:52   Who are you? My name’s Aymeric.
00:55   I have been living here for three years. I am a factory technician, working for the Air Force.
00:59   I have been living here for thirty years. I work in a kindergarten.
01:04   I have been living here since 2010, so for thirteen years.
01:10   I am unemployed at the moment, because of health issues. I was born here, in Varey.
01:15   I am 88 years old. How have you been informed?
01:19   We haven’t been warned at all, actually. No forewarning.
01:24   We found out via the press, by chance.
01:27   We have been informed very briefly, through the newspaper.
01:31   Thanks to my neighbor, who fortunately buys the newspaper,
01:34   otherwise we would have never found out. So we learnt of that just fifteen days ago.
01:37   There had been a town hall meeting about this issue,
01:40   and they didn’t even brief on the meeting, either, so…
01:43   We would have liked to be able to participate.
01:46   Are you for or against this reception?
01:49   It’s a sensitive question, since the castle is privately owned,
01:52   so we don’t have a say over what goes on in there.
01:55   They would be completely isolated, lost, in the midst of our houses.
01:59   We are two kilometers away from the villages. If we are speaking of reintegration,
02:06   I will respond: “No, not here”. We all work here,
02:13   so there’s nobody living for the day. So they would be completely left to themselves, lost.
02:18   I confess that I don’t really know how this will turn out.
02:21   I am generally against it. We have moved here to feel safe, sheltered
02:26   from the chance of risks for our children.
02:29   I have little daughter who is 11 years old, who usually goes for walks, through the village,
02:32   and whom I trust, right now. So I will have to tell her to be more careful, from now on.
02:37   She will not be able to do what she usually does, probably.
02:41   And that’s a pity, I think. We didn’t settle here for all that. They will swarm into Varey,
02:47   what else will they be doing in the castle yard? As the mayor said, they will not know what to do.
02:51   They will go to Saint Jean Le Vieux. There’s nothing there, there’s not even employment for others.
02:55   They will need to find another place, somewhere else. All the people of Varey are against it.
03:00   You can ask the people there, they will all tell you the same thing.
03:03   There used to be children before, it was a juvenile sanatorium. There was a summer camp.
03:07   Are they making you feel guilty for opposing this reception?
03:10   Yes, they are kind of making us feel guilty. After all,
03:13   we cannot be against that, unless we are racists. We may also be concerned
03:16   for what goes on in our country, before being concerned for what goes on somewhere else.
03:19   They may start doing that, yes.
03:23   I start to sense tensions, pressures that I had never sensed before.
03:27   How do you judge the municipality’s communication on the subject?
03:30   I think that the municipality should have been consulted, first.
03:34   I think there should have been a little bit of forewarning.
03:37   No forewarning at all. And even after that, nothing.
03:42   I wasn’t even informed of the fact that people wanted to meet to do something. I learnt about that
03:48   from the sign, once everything was already settled. Actually, we have never been forewarned
03:51   about anything. I would have liked to go, of course, if I had known about that possibility.
03:55   I would have gone, without any problem.
03:58   There was no preparation in advance, we have learnt of everything afterwards;
04:02   once it was all settled, we weren’t able to express our point of view.
04:06   They are somehow imposing something on us.
04:09   Supposedly, the mayor was against that, but I don’t know.
 

Video transcript #2:

00:00   I even had to apply for food stamps, several times,
00:04   to feed myself, and especially my son.
00:07   And I applied for a public housing accommodation.
00:10   She answered me, quote:
00:13   “Well, Mrs. Lechanteux, at the end of the day, you have no foreign-sounding surname,
00:17   you don’t have four children, so yours is not a high-priority-case”.
00:20   The political guest
00:23   Julie Lechanteux
00:26   Good morning. My name is Julie Lechanteux. I am 45 years old.
00:29   I am the mother of a grown son, who is 20.
00:32   And I have been a Deputy in the National Assembly,
00:35   within the Rassemblement National group, for almost a year.
00:38   I used to be married. And unfortunately, as it often happens nowadays,
00:42   I ended up being a single-parent family, in 2006.
00:45   My little son was two and a half years old at the time.
00:48   And I had to face all the difficulties that single-parent families often experience in any field,
00:54   whether it’s a father or a mother. Among the difficulties that I experienced
00:58   was that of housing. I had the chance to be helped by a real estate agent,
01:04   who made my case file go through, even if it didn’t align with the necessary requirements.
01:10   That is, the necessary income to obtain an accommodation.
01:14   It was just a little studio, and I used to work, I used to work a lot.
01:18   But when you are a single-parent family, you often fail
01:22   to get together the three months’ rent that you need.
01:25   I lived in this studio for three years with my son, who had no bedroom of his own.
01:29   And I applied for a public housing accommodation.
01:33   All of my applications were rejected, over three years.
01:36   I wasn’t helped. I had big troubles, despite the job I was working,
01:42   paying my bills, buying food; I even had to apply for food stamps, several times,
01:48   to feed myself, and especially my son. These are the difficulties
01:51   that I experienced, as single-parent family.
01:54   At that time, I had just a minimum growth salary, since I was hairdresser.
01:58   A little more than €1,100 a month was not enough, of course,
02:02   to pay for housing, food and to raise my child.
02:05   Then I asked for help, applying for a public housing accommodation regularly,
02:09   so my son could have had his own room, at least.
02:12   And so they rejected my application. My case file wouldn’t go through.
02:15   And at the end of those three years, since I had insisted a little bit,
02:18   I requested and obtained an appointment with the deputy mayor, who was in charge
02:21   of public housing. She answered me, quote:
02:25   “Well, Mrs. Lechanteux, at the end of the day, you have no foreign-sounding surname,
02:29   you don’t have four children, so therefore yours is not a high-priority-case”. This is the kind
02:33   of injustice that I have experienced, as many French people have, in many fields.
02:37   That is why I’ve committed myself since then to the Rassemblement National Party.
02:40   I had a professional career among the most ordinary and simplest ones.
02:45   I would have never imagined a future in politics.
02:48   I thought it was something restricted to elitist milieus.
02:51   The Rassemblement National found this force within me and gave me a chance.
02:55   Because I knew all too well their difficulties in paying
02:58   for their own housing and food, raising their own children.
03:01   Of course political engagement is difficult,
03:05   as a woman, even more so, perhaps. But despite that, it’s more than necessary.
03:09   And it’s lucky to be women,
03:12   because we are dragged into reality, all the time.
03:15   If only because we are family women, through our children.
 

5 thoughts on ““We Are Dragged Into Reality”

  1. White Europeans will need to find the strength and the courage to answer accusations of racism with the declaration that they are proud to be a racist and proud of their ethnic and cultural heritage. And that they are against the dumping of orcs in their midst precisely because they are outsiders and do not belong in Europe.

    When the biggest club the globalists and their fifth columnists have is the fear of being labeled a racist for not wanting orcs in one’s midst then the tables need to be turned by proudly owning the label. Nothing would infuriate the globalists more than such epithets being reclaimed and worn with pride by ethnic whites.

    • “The “graduates” of the WEF, Merkel, Macron, and now Sunak, are ruining Europe.”

      And, yet, they continue huffing and puffing, which is ruining the air!

  2. Reality is making “The camp of the saints” look more like a documentary that a work of fiction ebery day.

    • “Reality is making “The camp of the saints” look more like a documentary that a work of fiction ebery day.”

      Repeal the 19th Amendment and, unsurprisingly, the nightmare’ll fade away. ‘Til then, see “Zardoz”.

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