Jean Raspail Dies At 94: Lived Long Enough To Say "I Told You So"
06/13/2020
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Jean Raspail,  author of The Camp Of The Saints, a 1973 novel about mass migration destroying France and the West, has died at age 94. So far it seems to have only been reported in the French media, with headlines like Mort de Jean Raspail, écrivain et explorateur, auteur du «Camp des Saints», by Michaël Naulin, Le Figaro, July 13, 2020. [Google Translate]

At the moment, when search Google News for "Raspail," you get French death notices, and New York Times story, illustrated with a picture of presidential aide Stephen Miller, titled A Racist Book’s Malign and Lingering Influence, by Elian Peltier and Nicholas Kulish, NYT, November 22, 2019.

Miller and GOP Congressman Steve King are alleged to have read Raspail's book, and to have pointed out—correctly—that it was prophetic, and that's a bad thing, according to the NYT, which is in the business of deciding what's not fit to print, and suppressing it. (Their story is in the "news," rather than Opinion section of the paper.)

We have been covering Raspail and his prophesies since we began here at VDARE.com.

See Truth Follows Fiction: Camp Of The Saints begins in France, by Paul Craig Roberts, February 20, 2001.

See also:

I'll add that VDARE.com has a large number of copies of the physical book, The Camp of The Saints, in English translation.

It's not up on our book page at the moment, but we used it in a promotion for an earlier appeal for funds—see The Book They Don't Want You To Read—Now Available On VDARE.com.

Email assistant@vdare.com  if you want to buy one—they may be the last physical copies on the North American Continent.

To quote another controversial Frenchman:

"When I am dead, I hope it may be said: His sins were scarlet, but his books were read."

Hilaire Belloc, 1923

 

 

 

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