About 12 apparentlyWhile you're having fun, people die because of this. Only yesterday a suicide bomber - a kid, according to authorities - killed 51 people at a Kurdish wedding, and you think this is a laughing matter?
Sickening.
McHrozni
About 12 apparentlyWhile you're having fun, people die because of this. Only yesterday a suicide bomber - a kid, according to authorities - killed 51 people at a Kurdish wedding, and you think this is a laughing matter?
Sickening.
McHrozni
You might have meant to claim freedom of speech. Even those in durka-durka lands think what they like.
I a totally agree, but it ain't half a good strategyYeah, I heard 12-14. Sickening
McHrozni
No, I mean thought.
Article 18, Universal declaration of Human rights
Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.
McHrozni
Yet a page ago you were endorsing Kemalist suppressions of freedom of religious expression.
You have to take those words in the context of the Kemalist environment of the time. Being openly pious was a career killer in government or military jobs. A key Conservative hope when the AKP came to power in 2001 was greater religious freedoms of expression - like the wearing of headscarves at university and opening senior roles to openly religious people.
The staunch secular hegemony of that time was almost as undemocratic as the current Erdogan government. That regime stacked judiciary, education boards, senior civil service, and military positions with their own people and locked conservatives out. The early years of the AKP involved a great struggle to get conservatives into these positions. The party even had to struggle for its own existence with a failed legal move to have them closed.
Judging from what happened to Turkey, it was downright necessary to keep the conservatives down and out.
McHrozni
Now, back pedalling on your applauding suppression of the West's great gift of freedoms?
This was already answered to you in the post above yours. Try to keep up, will you?
McHrozni
Your double standards were not.
And an Islamophobe an Islamophobe.
Now that it is generally appreciated that we have once again seen a failed attempt at regime change through proxy instigated by the US , why aren't you talking about :- ---- World War 3 which Witch Clinton would organise if Turkey backed out of NATO , kicked the US out of their air base in Turkey ( the nukes are in Romania already) with other countries ( the Balkans probably , plus Greece ) all wanting to get out of NATO .It is assumed that Turkey will nestle closer to Russia and hence Iran and China . This would leave US geo political strategy totally shredded
Now that it is generally appreciated that we have once again seen a failed attempt at regime change through proxy instigated by the US ,
why aren't you talking about :- ---- World War 3 which Witch Clinton would organise if Turkey backed out of NATO , kicked the US out of their air base in Turkey ( the nukes are in Romania already) with other countries ( the Balkans probably , plus Greece ) all wanting to get out of NATO .It is assumed that Turkey will nestle closer to Russia and hence Iran and China . This would leave US geo political strategy totally shredded
Now that it is generally appreciated that we have once again seen a failed attempt at regime change through proxy instigated by the US , why aren't you talking about :- ---- World War 3 which Witch Clinton would organise if Turkey backed out of NATO , kicked the US out of their air base in Turkey ( the nukes are in Romania already) with other countries ( the Balkans probably , plus Greece ) all wanting to get out of NATO .It is assumed that Turkey will nestle closer to Russia and hence Iran and China . This would leave US geo political strategy totally shredded
Religious parties are a problem in Israel; the BJP is a problem in India; Christian Dominion infiltration in the US a la Gulen's (alleged) strategy is a problem. Mosly potential as yet, but the global resurgence of religion in politics since the Cold War is pretty evident and it's not over yet.My point exactly. It's not religious parties that are the problem, it's the Islamic parties. Let's call a spade a spade.
Ironically, it buys into the fantasy that the US is central to everything, which runs counter to the idea that the West's days of power are done and Turkey is about to become great again under Erdogan's inspired leadership.Primarily because it is generally accepted that US involvement in the coup is one of those especially retarded conspiracy theories ...