
In 1979, another great French writer, Emil Cioran, wrote that European civilization was going to be defeated and that its decline was due to a refined inactivity, a sublime lifestyle. Cioran saw the day the church of Notre Dame de Paris would become a mosque.
Jihadism is derived mainly from Europe’s refusal to assimilate newcomers to Western values and from its multiculturalism regime. For decades, people in Europe have been affected by an official anti-racism which made them unable to think. Eric Zemmour, another French essayist, is right when he says that the European élites have acted according to the three D's: "Derision, deconstruction and destruction".

One of the Kouachi brothers, the terrorists who decimated the Charlie Hebdo journalists, lived in a French apartment funded by the European Union and with its blue flag sporting yellow stars at his door.
Europe’s dominant ideology is anti-racist, philanthropic, anti-Christian, anti-Semitic and moralist and it has been very effective in concealing a war under an obscure cult of “tolerance”. Europe’s secularism has become a hotbed for pro-Islamic multiculturalism.One of the Kouachi brothers, the terrorists who decimated the Charlie Hebdo journalists, lived in a French apartment funded by the European Union and with its blue flag sporting yellow stars at his door.
In Europe, the national traditions and Western values have been deconstructed under the watchful eye of Qatar, Turkey and Saudi Arabia and the lost gaze of the political and intellectual class. The Red Guards of Europeism, a mixture of "free thinkers", Islamophiles, gender feminists, militants of atheism and euthanasia fans, have created the nihilistic terror which just turned Paris into a war zone.
Meanwhile, another French leftist guru, Michel Foucault, was in Iran admiring Ayatollah Khomeini, "a saint" to him. Deliberately esoteric, Foucault was an extreme libertarian, a denier of the truth. Foucault did not believe there was a purpose in life or in society and that all laws were useless.
That fate is shared by Foucault with two other French intellectuals, two other destroyers of truth. Gilles Deleuze, who threw himself from the window of his apartment in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, and Guy Debord, who took his own life on a cold day in a farmhouse in the Auvergne.