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Turkish Politics & Internal Affairs

Do you agree with what I wrote?

  • I agree

    Votes: 5 38.5%
  • I agree but,....

    Votes: 1 7.7%
  • I don't agree

    Votes: 2 15.4%
  • Don't care

    Votes: 5 38.5%

  • Total voters
    13
  • Poll closed .
@LegionnairE

If you joined gezi-provocation you are an Anarchist.
nope... I was in the heart of the protests and the overwhelming majority of the crowd were regular people like workers, shopkeepers, middle class, poor. There were all kinds of people.

dude there were a couple of millions of protestors in beyoğlu easy. Actual anarchists were a tiny minority.
 
I am not leftist. Even i do not support a single political party. I dislike the policies of chp. I am not lying or defending anyone. Ataturk is died long long ago but you are so pathetic, still fighting with him and his ideas. That's the why Ataturk is one of the most greatest leaders. If he could be alive now, 100% sure he may be elected again.

In 1930's there were smartphones and internet but chp ate it :D

I really impressed by your logic. Compering current days between 30's not easy thing. Not much people able to do that. :D

I asked one question. Which part of his speech consists Islam???

Be civilized, do not insult.
 
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you owe your citizenship to Atatürk before him you were owned property of a monarch. Now who's the ungrateful little brat?

My English isn't broken, my IQ was documented 120 by a licenced psychiatrist and I'm a well respected person by people who know me. And Sinan is a respectable engineer in his field. Now I'm TOTALLY sure you're not cleaning toilets in sweden. And it's NOT that butthurt that makes you come here and insult people.

Turkey was never north korea but it's sure as hell trying to be one by founding organizations like TİB, killing protesters, arresting record numbers of journalists, sending angry mobs on newspapers and let's not forget that just a couple of weeks ago AKP members have assaulted a journalist in front of his house.

It's clear to me who wants Turkey to be N. Korea
Firstly, I dont have a turkish citizenship. Secondly im actually doing a masters degree in a Scandinavian university. As i said, nothing really amazes me from an indoctrinated citizen who has gone through the turkish education system.
I really dont care about your background. Your words are a representation of your backward views. I shouldn't even care for Turkey, guys like you deserve the shitty Turkey void of roads industry and quality education. Yet at the same time there are people who are deserving. Thats why i keep caring
 
nope... I was in the heart of the protests and the overwhelming majority of the crowd were regular people like workers, shopkeepers, middle class, poor. There were all kinds of people.

dude there were a couple of millions of protestors in beyoğlu easy. Actual anarchists were a tiny minority.

Yes anarchists and also hooligans can also be "regular" People. You are an anarchists because of your Actions not your heritage.

@TrMhMt

Yes Keep telling that to yourself that CHP would one day win a democratical election in Turkey. This is not possible. CHP was a stillbirth since the beginning.
 
Please, for the sake of Allah. Who cares chp? Hell with it...
You are here accusing Ataturk as being anti-Islamic. And i asked only one question that you couldn't give an answer yet.
Why do you bringing chp up each time? I know that current chp can not win a single election for a few decades. But my point is not chp or it's policies.

Still none could have achieved the same achievements that Ataturk has achieved. Today's leaders, even Erdogan couldn't reach to that point. You and your ideology know only one thing which is talking...

Current gov. used to sell the assets which were left from him to be re-elected again.

As i said you are so pathetic and still fighting some one who is dead. :crazy:
 
@TrMhMt

CHPKK is your only hope as leftist dude.

Your new leftist vermin leader from tunceli/dersim

kemal-kilicdaroglu-nun-noel-ba.jpg
 
Yes anarchists and also hooligans can also be "regular" People. You are an anarchists because of your Actions not your heritage.
yeah but what you're doing is labeling people
you just say "if you're doing this you're this" like "if you're eating meat you hate animals"
it's stupid.

If I was indeed an anarchist I'd proudly say that. I'm not afraid of anyone. Especially not internet commandos. An anarchist works to destroy the state. I work to protect the state from those who abuse the power.

according to you leftists shouldn't be hired in government positions which is fascistic and sinister.

did you know that asking someone his or her political alignment during a job interview is a crime in the USA? Yeah it is
 
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Erdoğan's Tough Talk May Pay Off at Turkey Polls

Erdoğan's Tough Talk May Pay Off at Turkey Polls

In-Depth Coverage
by Jamie Dettmer October 19, 2015

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's gamble to hold a snap election just months after voters denied his party a parliamentary majority may pay off, but only just, according to pollsters.

The combative president's Justice and Development Party (AKP) appears to be regaining the approval of nationalist voters in the run-up to next month's crucial parliamentary elections – thanks mainly to tough nationalist talk, including bruising rhetorical attacks on the West, and the government's counter-terror operations against separatist Kurds.

Erdoğan has promised his counter-terror fight will continue until 'not one terrorist is left". And by talking tough on the Kurds, the AKP hopes to win back voters who either didn't vote in June or switched to other parties.

Ankara-based pollster Mehmet Murat Pösteki says his analysis suggests Erdoğan's counter-terror fight focused on the Kurds is "paving the way for the AKP to regain votes that shifted to the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).' He thinks the AKP at the moment is short just one seat to be able to form a single-party government.

Rhetoric

With just 12 days to go to the November 1 polls, Erdoğan and top party officials have intensified their belligerent rhetoric, lambasting Europeans and the West in general and maintaining an 'us-verses-them' view of the country. The Kurds, members of other minority communities, leftists and opposition activists are being relegated to 'them' status in a politics of polarization which will make it highly difficult to agree on a coalition government after the November 1 polls, if the AKP fails to secure a majority.

At an election rally last week heralded as "Millions of Breaths as One Voice against Terror," Turkey's president implored Turks to vote on November 1 for "domestic" candidates.

"I think you understand what I mean, don't you?' he thundered at the rally held in Istanbul's working-class district of Yenikapi. Erdogan's target was clear: the pro-Kurdish opposition, the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), that helped deny the AKP a majority in June.

In a report earlier this month the Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington-based think tank, said Erdoğan's muscular nationalism would likely secure the AKP the 276 seats required for a parliamentary majority.

Loss of support

Some pollsters say the AKP lost some ground in the immediate wake of the twin suicide bombing in Ankara 10 days ago that left 102 people dead.

Accusations of government incompetence – and even collusion leveled by some pro-Kurdish leaders – hurt the party's standing among swing voters. But overall the Erdoğan electoral playbook may work this time round.

In June it didn't. The nationalist MHP picked up some traditional AKP voters and enough centrist voters moved from the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) to the pro-Kurdish HDP to deny Erdoğan's party a majority, dashing the President's hope of re-writing the country's constitution.

Pre-election surveys by pollsters Gezici Research suggested the AKP lost significant popular support because of President Erdoğan's nationalist rhetoric.

But with the breakdown of a two-year-long peace process with the Kurds and separatist attacks in southeast Turkey continuing despite an election cease-fire declared by the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), "anti-Kurdish sentiments have skyrocketed since the June 7 election," says Lisel Hintz of Cornell University's Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies. Six more Turkish soldiers were killed at the weekend in two separate incidents.

Disapproval of West

Not content with taking aim at the Kurds – both with airstrikes and verbal broadsides – Erdoğan and top party officials have maintained a steady beat of disapproval of the West, in the past week symbolized by the European Union.

The visit to Turkey at the weekend by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who was seeking to calm a dispute between Ankara and Brussels over a draft deal between them to stem the refugee flow from Turkey into Europe, was used as an occasion by Erdoğan to launch some vintage broadsides.

Erdoğan mocked the Europeans for "insincerity" over a promise to re-energize accession talks and introduce visa-free travel to Europe for Turks. Erdoğan seemed to demand instead immediate Turkish membership in the European Union – an unrealistic stance that is likely to antagonize some European politicians, who have already argued Ankara is trying to use the refugee crisis to blackmail the European Union into agreeing visa-free travel for Turks.

On Sunday in an interview with the BBC, HDP leader Selahattin Demirtaş said he remains "confident that the [November] election will see a re-run of the June."

Either way, "Turkey is at a critical juncture in its history," according to Kati Piri, an EU lawmaker and member of the European Parliament's foreign affairs committee. She told reporters here last week: "One of the problems is that Turkey is so polarized that it would need a president at this moment … who will play the role of bringing groups together. I see a president who is very good in dividing groups."
 
Yes Keep telling that to yourself that CHP would one day win a democratical election in Turkey. This is not possible. CHP was a stillbirth since the beginning.
of course CHP wouldn't win an election in a political climate that is dictated by hate they stay moderate and cool headed

AKP feeds on religious hate, HDP and MHP feed on ethnic hate. Just like how NSDP fed on German peoples' hate.

if hatemongering parties win, the country loses as a whole.
 
Turkish police have detained dozens of ISIS-connected suspects, among them 24 under the age of 18, who are being trained to operate in Syria and Iraq as Islamic State’s militants.
The Istanbul Anti-Terror Directorate has arrested dozens of foreigners in one of the districts of Turkey's largest city. Those detained are suspected of getting ready to transfer to areas of Syria in Iraq under Islamic State's control, the Turkish daily Vatan reports.

Detectives targeted some 18 homes in Istanbul's eastern Pendik district. Special operations teams supported by a helicopter simultaneously raided all the suspicious addresses.

The raids were part of the investigation into the massive terror attack that killed over 100 people in the Turkish capital, Ankara, on October 10.

READ MORE: Powerful explosions kill dozens at peace rally in Ankara

Altogether 53 people have been detained, including 24 minors, all of them from the Central Asian countries of Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. The minors were brought to the Pendik Children's Bureau Headquarters, while most of the rest were summoned to the Anti-Terror Directorate headquarters for questioning. Many of those detained had entered Turkey illegally, authorities said.

The anti-terror teams say they have proof that the detained Tajiks and Uzbeks have connections to Islamic State (former ISIS/ISIL), finding maps of conflict zones in Syria and Iraq, as well as other documents, in their raids.

Turkish authorities believe that the suspects organized training for the 24 minors in the basements of the raided installations. The children were taught radical Islam, extremist ideology and rules for living in Islamic State-controlled areas.

Thousands of foreigners have joined Islamic State, which is currently estimated to have from 30,000 to as many as 200,000 fighters in its ranks. Up to 5,000 of them are believed to be Uzbek nationals, Vatan reports.

In August, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), a terrorist organization founded in 1996, officially announced its voluntary dissolution and swore allegiance to Islamic State. Before that, it had been affiliated with Al-Qaeda.

Islamic State has never concealed the fact it uses children in its operations, organizing training camps for them, where they are trained to become jihadi fighters and even behead people.

READ MORE: Turkey joins US-led coalition against ISIS, provides jets & air bases

Turkey had opened its border with Syria in the beginning of the civil war there in an effort to help rebels fighting against President Bashar Assad's regime. This has reportedly allowed jihadist groups that rose rapidly in Syria to safely cross into Turkey to use it as a safe haven and resupply base.

READ MORE: ‘Direct aggression’: Syria accuses Turkey of helping militants

After Ankara agreed to share its bases with members of the coalition battling Islamic State in July, ISIS released a video blaming Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan of aiding “crusaders” and their jets to kill the Muslims in Islamic State. The jihadists called Erdogan an infidel and urged Turks to rebel and conquer Istanbul.

ISIS camp in Istanbul trained children as terrorists — RT News
 
while calling all "under 18" people as "children" is silly and obsolete, it is no surprise that erdogan's government allows isil to operate bases in turkey.

After Ankara agreed to share its bases with members of the coalition battling Islamic State in July, ISIS released a video blaming Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan of aiding “crusaders” and their jets to kill the Muslims in Islamic State. The jihadists called Erdogan an infidel and urged Turks to rebel and conquer Istanbul.

isil is spreading disinfo...erdogan and isil and "syrian rebels" are one.
 
you will hate it but they were trained there by the CIA and then went to iraq and syria
 
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