I love how you bring religion into this to help you dodge your bogus statements... I never once mentioned a religion, so I guess you do not have a counter argument to the fact that many, many Turks, including the Turkish army assist ISIS in fighting Kurds, ok then.
And hmm, how do I put this, but aren't majority of the Kurdish population Musilm? Heck aren't most of the atrocities caused by ISIS are towards the Muslims population of the region? Why are we talking about Muslims again?
Anyway, I don't know how often you visit Turkey, it is a beautiful country from what I hear, one day I'd like to visit myself. I just wish instead of, maybe just drinking beer and hangin out with the ladies, maybe the next time you are there, you instead helped educate the young minds their about their true history and help them to stop feeding on the regurgitated lies their corrupt government has been feeding them through schools and the media for over a century now.
But if you're not up to the task, I understand, just keep swigging that delicious Turkish beer and wave your squeaky clean Turkish flag around and slap the first chick's ass that walks by, it's all good man!
My reply was annoyance. The Kurds in Turkey today as of 2015 have a lot of civil rights, they have a political party that has the 4th most number of seats in parliament, Kurds are part and parcel of Turkish society, every demographic, actors/actresses, singers, everywhere. In other words if a person goes on a day out across Istanbul you'll be seeing and interacting with Kurds, it's unavoidable.
Your previous post makes it look like there is an inherent policy by the government to keep the Kurd down both inside and outside Turkey. There certainly was decades ago, but it's different now. Turkey has good relations with the Northern Iraqi government and favours independence for that region.
Another annoyance was with your idea that the Turkish state and ISIS are BFFs. Highly unlikely that Erdogan's Neo-liberal capitalist Islam that isn't forced upon the non-religious half of Turkey, would jive well with ISIS' caveman Islam that is forced upon everyone they can get their hands on. It just doesn't make sense to me that people with such starkly different ideologies can get along, nevermind the racial, linguistically and cultural differences.
I think a much more reasonable explanation is that ISIS know that it's easy to run around Syria and Iraq, and wouldn't dare challenge Turkey. AKP certainly supported/supports Syrian rebel groups in general, with the aim of getting a Syria ruled by a party with a similar ideology to AKP. Not to mention ISIS talking about conquering Istanbul and kidnapping Turkish diplomats, these words and deeds aren't becoming of an alliance.
You know why Turkey wasn't stopping a lot of people from getting to Syria? Because they weren't privy to intelligence from the Western countries people were coming from and now they're working together and have stopped thousands of people. Not to mention one key thing...those respectable countries you mentioned, why aren't they stopping people at the source when they leave for Turkey?
Last but not least despite bordering Syria, Turkey and the Turkish ethnicity has one of the lowest rates of participation among ISIS. North African countries have a disproportionate representation.
If we were in a thread about the Native American Genocide, I wouldn't bring up the Armenian one. Because they have absolutely fucking nothing to do with each other.
There's literally no reason to be discussing America in this thread, and it's only been brought up because it's an easy way to deflect attention away from the actual subject of the thread. This is how it goes in literally every thread about a non-American country doing something horrible.
My reply there was sardonic. I have previously explained why I think bringing up other countries deeds is justifiable, since there is no equivalent pressure on other countries to recognise their past deeds to the extent that Turkey are made to answer theirs.
This is one of the only few reasonable posts of yours in this thread, and believe you me, you posted by far the most in this thread. It's as if you were doing damage control to an article that may have tarnished your personal family's name.
I highly recommend you and everyone else read this article as well!
Here's a superior read from the Washington Post on the subject.
I certainly need to do more reading on the subject as a whole, that I don't deny.
I'll repeat once again, nowhere in this thread have I played down the Armenian genocide or denied it. I've simply expressed how Turkish deaths in the Balkans and Caucasus are not on the international agenda between Balkan states, Russia, Turkey and Armenia, in the same way the Armenian genocide is.
I'll state it plainly again. Armenians were removed from Eastern Anatolia and Turks were removed from Eastern Europe and Southern Russia. Not many people know about the latter, but for many people the former is one of 4 things they know about Turkey (the other 3 being Kurds, Cyprus and Islamist government). Why do they know the bad things about Turkey but not the bad things about the Balkan states towards Turkey? Why isn't there the same clamouring to get the Balkan states to recognise the ethnic cleansing of Turks?
I didn't mean to derail the thread and take away from the other issue, but I have to comment on this. It wasn't as simple as unification or not, that stuff came with consequences that in my opinion were too high.
Why shouldn't the people who were kicked out of their homes be able to reclaim their land? People were killed, raped, imprisoned and it really wasn't that long ago. A plan that allowed the people who took the land by force to stay there in other's homes would have never worked. If anything it would have caused even more instability between the two. The plan also placed no blame on Turkey for invading Cyprus and allowed Turkish Cypriots the right to move about the island freely while Greek Cypriots had restrictions. Turkish troops would also stay there, I don't see that as much of a solution, but maybe that's just me. The plan should be looked at again to come to an actual real solution.
I knew that, I just wanted to highlight how complicated the whole issue is as you've plainly laid out.