Anyone who has ever been to Paris could not help but notice: the Champs-Elysees is not only the most beautiful street in the French capital, but also the busiest urban thoroughfare. Literally everyone knows it. Anyone who has ever walked down this street can't help noticing that the vast majority of people on the Champs-Elysees did not look like "white" Frenchmen, but rather black or, at the very least, dark-skinned immigrants from Africa or Asia. And on any other street, the picture is unlikely to change...
One can't help but get the impression that modern Paris is a city inhabited mainly by Muslim Arabs and Africans. Although it is more correct to say that this is a truly international city, where representatives of various peoples, civilizations and cultures live and communicate side by side. But most of them are still Arabs. And if you live in Paris longer, you will come to the conclusion that the Arabs are firmly entrenched here, and most likely forever.
Well, if you get to some suburban area of Paris, the picture will become frightening at all: everything around is very similar to a residential quarter in some Algerian or Moroccan city. It's as if you've somehow unwittingly found yourself in North Africa. There is a traditional vegetable market, and Arab shops, which are full of goods, as if yesterday brought from the hinterland of some Arab country. Above the entrance to the butcher shop, as a rule, there is a sign that says "halal" in Arabic - "allowed by Sharia law". And anyone who has at least a little experience of communicating with Arabs, it becomes clear that the meat of animals that is offered for sale is cut up in the way that is customary in accordance with Muslim traditions. And if you carefully look at everyone who walks along the street, you will hardly be able to find at least one "real" Frenchman among the pedestrians. Algerians, Moroccans, Tunisians, Africans, Arabs from the Middle East-who are not here!.. True, there are women without burqas ...
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