Because
French revolutionaries viewed émigrés as a threat because they were nobles and clergy who had fled France to escape the Revolution and were plotting to overthrow the new government. The émigrés were seen as enemies of the Revolution and potentially aligned with foreign powers seeking to intervene in French affairs. Their return was seen as a challenge to the revolutionary principles and stability of the new regime.
and do the revolutionaries have an optimistic or pessimistic view of life? whats the revolutionaries view of life?
They viewed man as view evil.
The Revolutionaries wanted everyone to study Satanism.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau's writings inspired them to view practices like inherited privilege and absolute monarchy as irrational.
they view men as very very very very homosecual indiviuals
Springboard huh ? well, i really dont know the answer .
That would be a Reactionary view. This term was first coined in the French Revolution, to denote the counter-revolutionaries who wanted to restore the real or imagined conditions of the monarchical Ancien Régime.
Optimistic, they wanted their nation to be great.
they have an omtimistic view because there mom said they did. so write this down.
They viewed other revolutionaries as good because they believed in god, unlike others. So yes they viewed their "kind" as good.
Revolutionaries may view man as inherently good, believing that people have the capacity for compassion, creativity, and cooperation to bring about positive change. However, some revolutionaries may also see man as inherently flawed or capable of evil, which can drive the need for radical upheaval and change in society. Ultimately, perspectives on human nature can vary among revolutionaries based on their ideological beliefs and experiences.
View the link below to understand what a triple threat move.