| Topic: |
Religions > Atheism |
| User: |
"Kevin Alfred Strom" |
| Date: |
13 Jun 2004 01:44:16 AM |
| Object: |
France Lays Dauphin to Rest |
http://www.nationalvanguard.org/story.php?id=3D3076
France Lays Dauphin to Rest
News/Comment; Posted on: 2004-06-09 07:55:11 [ Printer friendly ]
=
The France that once was... =
In a High Mass (pictured) marked with history, faith, tradition,
patriotism and pride, and with political implications as Europe-wide
elections are set to take place, the heart of the slain Dauphin of
France, Louis-Charles, was finally laid to rest on June 8, 2004 in
the Saint-Denis Basilica near Paris. =
The son of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, the Dauphin (the title of
the French Heir) Louis-Charles was only 10 years old when he died of
tuberculosis in a Parisian dungeon in 1795, at the height of the
French Revolution. =
His parents, Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, were beheaded in the
upheaval.
The French Revolution originally contained much of the best of the
Enlightenment, and good men initially supported its aims. However
the Revolution soon devolved into a blood-soaked egalitarian orgy,
with the far-left Jacobins slaughtering opponents at the guillotines
in the name of "liberty, equality and brotherhood," in a social
meltdown unmatched until the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917. The "Amis
De Noirs" (Friends of the Blacks) freed the slaves of Haiti,
resulting in the genocide of Whites on the until then fabulously
successful Caribbean island, with consequences felt to this day. =
Inevitably, Napoleon Bonaparte put an end to the chaos of
egalitarianism and eventually proclaimed himself Emperor.
(Historians acknowledge the irony of an experiment started in the
name of "equality" ending with an Emperor whose title and powers
exceeded those of the King the original Revolution displaced!) =
The fate of the Dauphin was long a mystery and was only cleared up
thanks to advances in DNA analysis. The heart itself was kept in
Royal circles for generations, and in the meantime many pretenders
appeared in the 19th Century claiming to be the Dauphin. Mark Twain
even parodied the popularity of supposed 'Dauphins' in his day in
Huckleberry Finn. =
The Basilica of Saint-Denis is the traditional burial ground of
French Royalty, and contains the remains of the Immortal Charles
Martel, who defeated Islam at Tours in 732 AD. =
There is a long-standing Royalist undercurrent in France associated
with Traditionalist Catholic and White nationalist circles. While
secular, Republican nationalists within the sociobiological
Enlightenment stream dominate nationalist politics in France, there
is still a degree of sentiment for what France=92s Royalist history
stands for -- Roland, Joan of Arc, the architecture of the Middle
Ages, and the chivalric legends of La Belle France, when France=92s
knighthood took the field of honor beneath the Oriflamme. =
It hearkens back to a time when France had a purity and dignity that
has been lost in the soulless, multiracial nightmare that flowed out
of the Revolution. The tradition has had a high degree of influence.
The Royalist newspaper Action Francaise, which exposed the treason
of Dreyfus, a Jewish officer who betrayed France to the Germans 100
years ago, is still in circulation, and there are still sections of
Paris where fashionably dressed men and women are seen relaxing with
a glass of pastis, Gauloises, and copies of Action Francaise and Le
Pen=92s National Hebdo at sidewalk cafes. =
The interment of the heart of His Royal Highness, Prince
Louis-Charles, Dauphin of France, with his Fathers in Saint-Denis is
a fitting salute to the France that once was. And, if the French
nationalists do their duty, a herald of what France will be again
some day soon. =
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Denis_Basilica =
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Martel =
Heart of Louis XVII gets royal funeral:
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2004-06/04/content_1507951.htm =
=
Source: Golden State National Alliance Newsletter =
=
http://www.nationalvanguard.org/story.php?id=3D3076
-- =
Kevin Alfred Strom.
News: http://www.nationalvanguard.org/
The Works of R. P. Oliver: http://www.revilo-oliver.com
Personal site: http://www.kevin-strom.com
.
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| User: "Colin Day" |
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| Title: Re: France Lays Dauphin to Rest |
13 Jun 2004 10:44:15 PM |
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Kevin Alfred Strom wrote:
http://www.nationalvanguard.org/story.php?id=3076
France Lays Dauphin to Rest
News/Comment; Posted on: 2004-06-09 07:55:11 [ Printer friendly ]
<snip>
It hearkens back to a time when France had a purity and dignity that
has been lost in the soulless, multiracial nightmare that flowed out
of the Revolution. The tradition has had a high degree of influence.
The Royalist newspaper Action Francaise, which exposed the treason
of Dreyfus, a Jewish officer who betrayed France to the Germans 100
years ago, is still in circulation, and there are still sections of
Paris where fashionably dressed men and women are seen relaxing with
a glass of pastis, Gauloises, and copies of Action Francaise and Le
Pen’s National Hebdo at sidewalk cafes.
Wasn't Dreyfus eventually cleared and reinstated in the French Army?
<snip>
Colin Day
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| User: "Vidar Hokstad" |
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| Title: Re: France Lays Dauphin to Rest |
14 Jun 2004 05:55:44 AM |
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Colin Day <cday3@sc.rr.com> wrote in message news:<40CD2354.3000300@sc.rr.com>...
Kevin Alfred Strom wrote:
The Royalist newspaper Action Francaise, which exposed the
treason
of Dreyfus, a Jewish officer who betrayed France to the Germans 100
years ago, is still in circulation, and there are still sections of
Paris where fashionably dressed men and women are seen relaxing with
a glass of pastis, Gauloises, and copies of Action Francaise and Le
Pen?s National Hebdo at sidewalk cafes.
Wasn't Dreyfus eventually cleared and reinstated in the French Army?
He was pardoned in 1899, and exonerated and reinstated at his former
rank in 1906, and later promoted to major and given the Legion of
Honor. It wasn't until 1995, however that the French army publicly
conceded that he was wrongly convicted.
Ironically enough, the only real support Dreyfus got from anyone in
the French army at the time, was from an openly anti-semitic officer -
Lieutenant Colonel Georges Picquart -,who nevertheless fought to have
Drefus' case re-examined. Investigation revealed that the real spy was
likely a major named Walsin Esterhazy (who was aquitted). Picquart
ended up being transferred to Tunisia because he refused to let the
Dreyfus case rest.
Vidar
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| User: "dudalb" |
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| Title: Re: France Lays Dauphin to Rest |
15 Jun 2004 11:27:36 PM |
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"And, if the French
nationalists do their duty, a herald of what France will be again
some day soon. "
A Tyrannical Dictatorship AKA Vichy France?
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| User: "Emilie Gruchow" |
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| Title: Re: France Lays Dauphin to Rest |
18 Jun 2004 04:01:41 AM |
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"dudalb" <dudalb1@earthlink.net> wrote in message news:<Y_Pzc.6132$Wr.396@newsread1.news.pas.earthlink.net>...
"And, if the French
nationalists do their duty, a herald of what France will be again
some day soon. "
Didn't Louis XVI's father (the prior dauphin) read Rousseau? Louis XVI
himself was all about Tacitus (who, interestingly- given this king's
adverse relationship with the Holy Roman Empire- wrote "Germania");
and was very wary throughout his life of the weaknesses that led to
the execution of Charles in England. He abolished torture as a way of
obtaining confessions, increased the status of Protestants, and was
very careful about his son's (this dauphin's) moderate education.
Louis XIV even, at his death, told Louis XV to refrain from war. If
the monarchy were to have survived, I imagine, it would probably have
been much more progressive than what you describe...
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| User: "Frenchy" |
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| Title: Re: France Lays Dauphin to Rest |
14 Jun 2004 04:22:34 AM |
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Colin Day <cday3@sc.rr.com> wrote in message news:<40CD2354.3000300@sc.rr.com>...
Kevin Alfred Strom wrote:
http://www.nationalvanguard.org/story.php?id=3076
France Lays Dauphin to Rest
News/Comment; Posted on: 2004-06-09 07:55:11 [ Printer friendly ]
<snip>
It hearkens back to a time when France had a purity and dignity that
has been lost in the soulless, multiracial nightmare that flowed out
of the Revolution. The tradition has had a high degree of influence.
The Royalist newspaper Action Francaise, which exposed the treason
of Dreyfus, a Jewish officer who betrayed France to the Germans 100
years ago, is still in circulation, and there are still sections of
Paris where fashionably dressed men and women are seen relaxing with
a glass of pastis, Gauloises, and copies of Action Francaise and Le
Pen’s National Hebdo at sidewalk cafes.
Wasn't Dreyfus eventually cleared and reinstated in the French Army?
<snip>
Colin Day
Sure. I didn't think one could still find people to speak of Dreyfus
as "a Jewish officer who betrayed France to the Germans". But the last
bit about "fashionably dressed men and women" is telling ; quite funny
to hear talking like that about Lepenists...
Frenchy
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