- A revolution before our eyes - Incorrect Book Prize 2012 - Michèle Tribalat Christopher Caldwell Johan-Frederik Hel Guedj - Books

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  • Facts, without  

    A revolution before our eyes - Incorrect Book Award 2012 (Paperback)
    (I read it in English and I admit it must be difficult to make it into French, where it may have a somewhat heavy style) Only facts, there is a call to common sense to show the contradictions and shortsighted partisan diversity. Opponents can only sp
  • healthy reading  

    A revolution before our eyes - Incorrect Book Award 2012 (Paperback)
    I'm glad to see that it appeared book (and read) in 2009 has finally been translated into French. It's always boring to have a vision of a foreign problem. Especially when it comes to the phenomenon across Europe. Without this book, who would have kn
  • The end of the world  

    A revolution before our eyes - Incorrect Book Award 2012 (Paperback)
    The facts are simple: In Germany, for 40 years, the Aboriginal fertility rate is 1.3 children per woman. At this rate, in a century, the population of Germany will decline by 75%. But there, a predominantly Muslim immigration multiplies at high speed
  • Remarkable objectivity  

    A revolution before our eyes - Incorrect Book Award 2012 (Paperback)
    I borrowed the book and read it in one evening because it is simply unique. Indeed, the theme addressed is part of French unspoken, issues that you can not develop without political correctness forces you to cut off debate. Speaking of facts, and an
  • Good questions  

    A revolution before our eyes - Incorrect Book Award 2012 (Paperback)
    To paraphrase a famous phrase, that of Laurent Fabius about the National Front, this book wants to avoid the wrong answers to the right questions. He does so with foresight, with obvious concern for balance, and with the backing of historical researc
  • A great book! 3  

    A revolution before our eyes - Incorrect Book Award 2012 (Paperback)
    here at last THE BIG BOOK on Islam in France! no ideology, no demagoguery, facts, only facts. The conclusions are not "politically correct", they are still very worrying. But the search for the truth, is it not more important than our comfort? a