No, Horsefan. French is a beautiful language, which (though I can't speak it) I can read a little:
Un grand merci à toi ^^ C'est toujours un plaisir d'avoir de nouveaux participants ^^ Passe nous voir sur FRAF, un de ces quatre
I've remembered a few things from French class, but most of it is recognizable
Un -- Sounds like the start of unicycle which means one-wheel: one--or by extension, "a"
grand -- sounds like "great", which it is (meaning "large")
merci -- can mean "mercy", but usually means "thanks", but this is something I've just picked up
à toi -- toi is cognate with "thee" English stopped using this word, but French hasn't
A great thanks to thee ^^
C'est -- "it is" (something I've remembered)
toujour -- ach, not sure. I think it means "always"
un -- same as above
plaisir -- hard to see, but pronounced, it sounds like--and means--"pleasure"
d'avoir -- "of having" "avoir" = "to have" (again, French class)
nouveaux -- sounds like "nova" in "nova stella" = "new star", so "new"
participants -- exactly the same
It's always a pleasure having new participants
Passe -- "pass"
nous -- Um, sounds like "nos" and "ni" in Latin and Esperanto respectively (they're related). The English word is "us", but that's just English being weird.
voir -- "to see", "seeing" (again something I've remembered)
sur -- the same in Esperanto (OK, not much help to an English speaker so far)
FRAF -- same
un de ces -- "one of these"
quatre -- "four", maybe. That doesn't make too much sense.
Pass us a seeing one of these four (???)
So, even not knowing the language, it's possible to kinda figure things out. Don't give up.