THE FRENCH DISEASE
On August 3, 1492, Christopher Columbus departed the Spanish port of Palos at the mouth of the Rio Tinto. After discovering islands he named San Salvador (in the Bahamas), Juana (Cuba), and Hispaniola on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, he returned from his epochal voyage, reaching Palos on March 15, 1493. According to the journal of Spanish physician Ruy Diaz de l'Isla, the pilot of Columbus's ship had contracted a previously unknown disease marked by severe fever and frightful skin eruptions.
The pilot wasn't the only one. By the time Columbus reached Barcelona, several of his sailors had come down with this strange new disease and were treated by the mystified Dr. de l'Isla. Unbeknownst to them, the sailors had acquired the disease through cohabitation with infected native "Indian" women on the discovered islands.
Europe had finally begun to recover from the Black Death of the bubonic plague in the middle 1300's, which had killed fully half of all Europeans. Once again, Europe was ravaged by a plague to become known as morbus gallicus, the French Disease. It would kill one third of the entire population of Europe.
Today we are witnessing the effects of another French Disease on the streets of Paris and on the campuses of dozens of universities throughout France. The social disease of the French Anti-Capitalist Welfare State has obviously caused severe brain damage among French students.