Red France, Red Flag
Auteur : Thomas Lander
Date de publication : 2025-03-28
Éditeur : Blue Wild Horse
Nombre de pages : Non disponible
Résumé du livre
What if a modern democracy didn't collapse through war or violence-but unraveled from within, slowly and methodically? In Red France, Red Flag, author Thomas Lander exposes the silent transformation of the French Republic under the weight of an ideological system rooted in cultural Marxism. Behind polished institutions and noble slogans lies a nation reshaped by state overreach, bureaucratic inertia, and intellectual conformity. With sharp analysis and immersive prose, Lander paints a portrait of a country where free speech is tamed by virtue signaling, where elites preach diversity while enforcing ideological uniformity, and where family, merit, and common sense are quietly erased in favor of collectivist reflexes. Schools no longer enlighten but mold. The State doesn't serve-it expands. And corruption has seeped into every corner, from public procurement to the world of sports and healthcare. Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of citizens quietly leave-not out of hatred for their homeland, but because they refuse to suffocate within it. This exodus is not exile, but resistance. Red France, Red Flag is both a diagnosis and a warning. It speaks to readers who sense that democracy can be emptied not through violence, but through words, slogans, and a bureaucracy that feeds on the very nation it claims to protect. In the spirit of Orwell and Solzhenitsyn, Lander invites readers to look beyond the rhetoric and ask the harder question: Is France still the Republic it claims to be-or has it become something else entirely? "They sang of liberty while the Republic quietly stitched their straitjacket."