Collectif Némésis is an identitarian feminist organization based in France and Switzerland. It focuses primarily on the threat posed by third-world migrants to native white women. Its “racist” “far-right” ideology is anathema to mainstream feminist groups, who shun it and marginalize it. (See the previous Collectif Némésis video.)
Below are four videos from Collectif Némésis featuring the testimony of French-speaking women who have been harassed, intimidated, threatened, and otherwise had their lives made miserable by culture-enrichers in France and Switzerland. Many thanks to HeHa for the translations, and to Vlad Tepes and RAIR Foundation for the subtitling.
Video #1: Melissa in Nantes
Video #2: Alice in Nantes
Video #3: Unidentified woman in Switzerland
Video #4: Mathilda in Lyon
Video transcript #1:
00:00 | The 100% of the assaults, more or less severe, that I have suffered in Nantes | |
00:03 | were exclusively committed by men of immigrant origin. | |
00:06 | I am sorry to point that out: it’s the truth. And probably, | |
00:09 | if those men had never been here, perhaps nothing would have ever happened to me. | |
00:12 | And I owe this to Nantes city hall, which has implemented an absolutely disastrous migration policy. | |
00:16 | And the mayor of Nantes will absolutely not admit to that, because of her own ideology. | |
00:20 | And I guess she will never assume what consequences her policies may have for the safety | |
00:24 | of the inhabitants of Nantes. And even my friends and acquaintances who are staunch leftists | |
00:28 | or are for immigration, cultural diversity and stuff like that, | |
00:31 | acknowledge, with a bit of difficulty, that we have many problems in Nantes, | |
00:35 | and that they are mostly tied to the problem of migrants. I have seen people who in private, | |
00:39 | at parties, don’t mind acknowledging where the problem comes from, but who have | |
00:42 | a little bit more difficulty admitting it publicly. Basically, Nantes is the historical capital | |
00:45 | of Brittany. So we are really steeped in the Breton culture, | |
00:48 | but as time goes by, because of population changes, | |
00:51 | we kind of feel that we are losing that culture and that image. | |
00:55 | And nowadays, the historical capital of Brittany, Nantes, is transforming more and more into Kabul. | |
01:00 | For example, this weekend there is going to be a Muslim soccer tournament in Nantes, | |
01:04 | where Quran prayers and Islamic recitations will be held, right in Nantes. | |
01:09 | So it will deal with a very big gathering in the heart of the historical capital of Brittany. | |
01:13 | We are witnessing a huge change of culture, customs and population, right now. |
Video transcript #2:
00:00 | I don’t know anybody who has never had bad experiences. | |
00:03 | Over the years, I was able to observe a recurring type of offender. | |
00:06 | Which has pushed me, as a consequence, to get closer to political parties | |
00:10 | that are for a strict migration policy. | |
00:14 | Don’t be afraid | |
00:17 | of identifying your offender. | |
00:20 | My name is Alice, I am 25 years old. I live in Nantes. | |
00:23 | Until ten years ago, Nantes was the French people’s favorite city, actually. | |
00:28 | Nowadays it has become one of the worst cities, with respect to safety. | |
00:33 | The general climate has deteriorated over the years. | |
00:36 | There has been an absolutely remarkable rise in the lack of safety, in recent years. | |
00:40 | I think it’s mainly due to the migration policy of the mayor of Nantes. | |
00:45 | Because there has been, for about ten years, an overwhelming reception of migrants in Nantes. | |
00:51 | It’s since then that we have started seeing people hanging around on the street. | |
00:56 | On one side, there are those migrants, and on the other side, there are other communities | |
01:00 | who have been here for much longer, who generally are from the Maghreb | |
01:04 | or sub-Saharan Africa, and who sell drugs. | |
01:07 | Right now in Nantes, there are some drug-selling points in the very center of the city. | |
01:11 | There is a well-known point, in Nantes, called “Mie Caline”, | |
01:14 | where people just place their chairs to sell drugs. | |
01:19 | I was born in Nantes, so therefore the poor condition of the city really saddens me, | |
01:24 | because I don’t live in the city that I used to know anymore. | |
01:28 | Nowadays we can’t even go for a walk safely, as we used to before. | |
01:32 | Even the parks we used to go to, back when we were little, | |
01:35 | are now occupied by hordes of migrants. | |
01:39 | When we were younger, we could go for a walk safely, in a place called “hangar à bananes”, | |
01:45 | which, by day, is a very nice spot along the Loire, where you can go for a nice walk, | |
01:50 | or drink a cup of coffee. Today we don’t go to the hangar à bananes any more, | |
01:54 | because we know that, after walking three steps, | |
01:57 | you can be stabbed, they can steal your phone from you. | |
02:00 | Some months ago, a woman from Nantes was sexually harassed | |
02:04 | by three Sudanese men, at the hangar à bananes. | |
02:07 | So this gives you an idea of the general atmosphere that you can find in that area. | |
02:11 | I recall the time when I started going out, through Nantes, | |
02:14 | something like ten years ago. Back then I never felt unsafe, | |
02:19 | I never really felt in danger. Nowadays, every time I get ready to go out, | |
02:22 | I always have my tear gas canister with me. | |
02:25 | Not in my pocket, but right in my hand. Now, my friends and I always share each other’s location, | |
02:32 | because we know that potentially we can get into trouble, at any time. | |
02:37 | I live very close to the city center. I could use public means of transport or even go on foot | |
02:41 | in certain places, yet I almost always drive my car. | |
02:45 | Because I feel safer, actually. | |
02:48 | Even when I go on foot somewhere, for ten minutes, I am scared. | |
02:52 | We also notice a very clear difference between going out, on a girls’ night out, and going out | |
02:58 | with men accompanying us. Whenever we go out with men, we almost never get into trouble. | |
03:02 | Whereas, whenever we go out with other women, and we are all women, | |
03:06 | we notice there is a difference. That is, we notice there is a sort of respect, | |
03:09 | face to face, towards the men’s presence, | |
03:12 | which is lacking if there are women only, and we are called out, harassed, much more. | |
03:18 | I don’t know anybody in Nantes who has never had bad experiences. Some months ago, | |
03:22 | a friend of mine was chased by someone who was masturbating at her. | |
03:25 | All of my friends got mugged. They robbed them of jewels, watches, baptism lockets, | |
03:31 | or were chased. It’s shocking to see the number of people who have had bad experiences. | |
03:36 | A friend of mine, a man, was attacked. | |
03:39 | He was stabbed while they were trying to steal his padded jacket from him. | |
03:42 | When I was a student at the university of Nantes, | |
03:45 | I was chased on several occasions, | |
03:48 | and that happened three times or so. It was a black man who chased me all those times. | |
03:55 | This really scared me, because I said to myself that, | |
03:58 | if my parents’ house hadn’t been next to the tram stop, something bad | |
04:01 | could have happened to me, potentially, if I had walked on to my destination. | |
04:04 | The migration policy of Nantes has had, as a consequence, the regression of our freedoms, | |
04:09 | as women. Our freedom of movement, | |
04:12 | our freedom of clothing. Over the years, I was able to observe a recurring type of offender. | |
04:18 | Which has pushed me, as a consequence, to get closer to political parties | |
04:22 | that are for a strict migration policy. | |
04:25 | As a woman, I became accustomed to being called out so often, | |
04:29 | either on public transport, or on the street, that I don’t pay attention to it any more. | |
04:33 | It has become a habit, something normal that I cope with. |
Video transcript #3:
00:00 | Honestly, it’s always Maghreb-like people that chase me, or whistle at me, or insult me. | |
00:05 | There’s always an individual of Maghreb-like appearance who approaches us, | |
00:09 | asking me whether I want some hash, some crack, or some cocaine etc… | |
00:12 | We say no, and he keeps insisting, for ten minutes. He asks us: “Can we spend the night together, | |
00:15 | girls?” We say no. We say we are in a hurry, we need to take the subway. | |
00:19 | They ask: “Can we stick together, in order to go through the turnstiles?”, etc… | |
00:22 | I tell him: “No.” I needed to take the tram, and when I reached the platform, | |
00:25 | I noticed those two individuals, with six more friends. | |
00:28 | So I found myself all alone on the tram platform with them. | |
00:31 | Then the train, sorry, the tram came in. I got on the tram | |
00:34 | and I went to sit in the front part, where the driver’s seat is. | |
00:37 | I said to myself, “If I am in trouble, the driver’s there, at least.” All of them got on, | |
00:41 | and some of them placed themselves in front of the doors. I didn’t feel that reassured, | |
00:44 | at that moment. I was wearing a sweatshirt, so I put up the hood at once, to avoid being seen. | |
00:48 | The first individual sat next to me. | |
00:51 | I tried to open a pack of chewing gum, but I was really exasperated. | |
00:54 | I didn’t know why I stared at him; I asked him “Will you keep doing this for long?” | |
00:57 | The guy didn’t understand a word of what I said. He tried to explain me he didn’t speak French. | |
01:01 | We were approaching the tram stop. And many of them were standing in front of the doors, so I | |
01:05 | couldn’t get off from the back. And the guy sitting next to me blocked me the way, so I couldn’t | |
01:08 | get off. As soon as the tram stopped, I said: “Hurry, hurry, that’s my stop, I need to get off.” | |
01:12 | And instead of moving over, to let me pass, | |
01:15 | he raised his pelvis so I could grind on him. I guess we are pretty privileged in Switzerland, | |
01:20 | with respect to this. Nevertheless, we are actually heading in the same direction as France. |
Video transcript #4:
00:00 | I lived in Lyon, in a district called La Guillotière, for a year. | |
00:03 | I lived right above a shisha bar. | |
00:06 | They insulted me, spat on me, several times, | |
00:09 | every time I refused to give them a cigarette. | |
00:12 | There was just one person left on the train, with me. | |
00:15 | It was a man in his thirties I think, of African origin, very tall. | |
00:20 | He got off at the same bus stop as mine, right where I lived, and started caressing my hair. | |
00:25 | Don’t be afraid any more of identifying your offender. | |
00:31 | Good morning. I am Mathilda and am 25 years old. | |
00:34 | I used to live in Lyon for three years before moving to Paris. | |
00:37 | You need to know that in Lyon, I lived for a year in a district called La Guillotière, | |
00:41 | which traumatized me a little bit because of the street harassment there. | |
00:44 | Because every time I used to return home late, in the evening, | |
00:48 | I was forced to borrow a private car, or take an Uber. | |
00:53 | I wouldn’t venture the trip back home by subway or on foot, | |
00:56 | because I was afraid of bumping into the individuals who stationed themselves at La Guillotière, | |
01:00 | especially at Place Gabriel Peri, since I used to live right next to it. | |
01:03 | They insulted me, spat on me several times, every time I refused to give them a cigarette, | |
01:09 | every time I didn’t reply to their “compliments”. | |
01:12 | I lived right above a shisha bar. | |
01:15 | Every time I walked past it, while returning home, there were people forcefully staring at me, | |
01:19 | they used to insult me, whistle at me, calling me with tongue clicks. | |
01:25 | Something else happened to me in Lyon. I didn’t live at La Guillotière any more, at that time. | |
01:29 | I lived in a neighborhood a bit more distant from the city center. | |
01:33 | One night, I was returning home from a university prom, | |
01:37 | so I took the subway that time. | |
01:40 | I was a bit careless, reckless back then. | |
01:43 | It was very late in the evening in that rundown neighborhood, | |
01:46 | on a train that was completely empty. There was just one person left on the train, with me. | |
01:51 | It was a man in his thirties I think, of African origin, very tall. | |
01:56 | He got off at the same subway stop as mine, where I used to live. And as soon as | |
01:59 | I started going up the escalator, he was right behind me. | |
02:02 | He started caressing my hair. | |
02:05 | So I turned around, terrified. Then I realized it was him, right behind me, on the escalator steps, | |
02:10 | and he was touching my hair. So I panicked, I started running. | |
02:14 | I lived right next to the subway stop. | |
02:17 | I ran as fast as I could. I can’t recall exactly what happened during those 30 seconds of running. | |
02:24 | Actually he was screaming and running as well, after me, | |
02:28 | shouting “Elvira, turn around!”. He ran after me, until I arrived in front of my building. | |
02:35 | I had an electronic badge that would open the street door automatically. | |
02:38 | I managed to get in. He managed to get in, as well. | |
02:41 | But there were two separate staircases, like this. I took either and I guess he took the wrong one. | |
02:44 | Fortunately for me, he took the other staircase, so therefore he couldn’t find me. | |
02:48 | But actually, after that, I sat down in front of the door of my apartment, for several hours. | |
02:54 | I wanted to be sure he wouldn’t find my apartment, | |
02:57 | and wouldn’t break into it. I was terrified. I was crying. | |
03:00 | And that has extremely shocked me. So I had a very, very bad experience in Lyon. | |
03:06 | I take all possible precautions, since then. | |
03:09 | I was shocked, so I moved out. | |
03:12 | I have never returned home by subway train, all alone, after that. | |
03:15 | And I was really afraid, every time I used to walk all alone in the street, by night. |
Ursula van der Leyen had a different experience at the London School of Economics:
“I got to know a warm, vibrant, colourful, multicultural society – the likes of which I had not really experienced before.”
She should now visit Nantes, and without bodyguards.
She looks like the type that would visit Gambia and similar white-European-female-frequented African nations to experience rampant diversity enriching exchanges; likely without bodyguards.
One almost feels sorry for the African males who have to service obnoxious middle-aged and elderly European females their own kind won’t touch. If it wasn’t for the exclamations in German to ruin the illusion they could just close their eyes and imagine she was a goat.
Getting through to our elites that what they think and believe about things is completely wrong is the biggest political problem of our era. They live in a bubble that cannot be pierced from the outside, for their media refuses to talk about the problems the rest of us see, and they refuse to trust any other media. The result is unbelievable stupidity in everything. To take just one example, I heard a liberal woman the other day complain about how awful San Francisco had become. She had heard this not from her favorite media, but from someone who had just been there. The rest of us have known this for ages, but she was just hearing about it.
ref.
https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/brexit/2020/01/08/ursula-von-der-leyen-old-friends-new-beginnings-building-another-future-for-the-eu-uk-partnership/
Evidently Nantes has been ruined, joining many other cities and towns in culturally enriched Europe.
These distressing experiences are predictable, and were, indeed, predicted. The Left, that thinks it knows better, continues in wilful denial at the cost of everyday quality of life. In the New Normal silent adjustments are continuously made to an ever lower standard. No jewellery or watches can be openly worn. Parents can no longer allow their children to go to the local pool, or even the local park. Pupils are made miserable at school, picked on, insulted and humiliated. Teenage boys are beaten up by gangs. Girls and young women cannot venture out alone, least of all in the evening. Pensioners are robbed on the street. Bars and liquor stores lose business and close. Drugs are openly sold on the street. Litter and graffiti abound, even including urine and human waste. Meanwhile the boats keep coming, and the EU inflicts ever more compulsory quotas on the reluctant member states.
This is what we pay for.
“The Left, that thinks it knows better”
The Left “thinks” it knows just about EVERYTHING.
The fly in the ointment: One of the things The Left doesn’t know is that EVERYTHING it does know is 180 degrees out-of-phase with truth/reality.
Everything you have described – taken as a whole – indicates that the society in question is under attack and at war. A low-intensity war, to be sure, but under wartime conditions none the less. It bears repeating that to an elderly pensioner who has just been robbed, or to a teenager beaten by thugs, there’s nothing “low-intensity” about it. It’s just a war – pure and simple.
The fact that more Europeans are waking up to that fact, is perhaps cause for hope – or perhaps not. That remains to be seen.
I know how things were before Merkel invited in the hordes because I spoke to the locals and wrote home about the differences. Things that you automatically notice as a foreigner are the eyes of the potentially vulnerable and responsible, young women and police respectively. The eyes of the young women showed that they had no concept of fear of being alone at night and the pleasantly dim street lighting showed that there was no demand for security as compared to my homeland. The police looked as though they were only there in case somebody needed directions for where to go. The problem was that the locals, men with daughters, assumed that this was the normal state of affairs rather than a result of their culture which they were fond of disparaging.
Now I think that my observations are too influenced by disgust for the decadence for them to have the accuracy of neutrality.
“Ordo ab chaos”. This is the clear example of how the globalist elites implement their domination strategies to reach their objectives. These strategies comprise always three stages:
1.- The creation of a “threat” for the society and also a “solution” for the problem.
2.- The society then request the “pupet” government a “solution” for the problem.
3.- Then the elite´s pupet government provide its “solution” that was defined long before the “threat” appeared.
This strategy only works if the society is divided. For instance, those who welcome the refugees and those who see the culture enrichers as invaders. Should this scenario hold true, the elites’ plans will work as expected.
What will be the preplanned fix for this “threat” to the worried Nantes citizens?
That is a “no brainer” answer: tyranny.