Uncategorized

Turkish President Erdogan Urges Ethnic Turks in Europe to Expand Their Political Influence

April 12, 2018 Faz 0

Turkish President Erdogan is urging ethnic Turks living in Europe to become involved in the local politics in Europe, and to suppress the Kurds. He urged them to remain loyal to Islam and their country of origin. He is organizing a foreign population inside European borders to act in the interest of Turkey and Islam, which may contradict the interests of the European host country. This is a soft coup through demographics.

Kakistocracy

Big Trouble Within NATO — Turkey Invaded Syria to Fight US-Backed Kurds

January 26, 2018 Jake Morphonios 1

There is a potential for a new proxy war in Syria if Turkey aligns with Russia in its fight against the US-Backed Kurds. After ISIS was defeated in Syria, the Kurds, acting on behalf of the CIA, moved in to takeover the oil fields. Turkey, however, is fighting the Kurds in Syria because they could unite with the Kurds in Turkey to create a new state that might diminish the influence of Turkey in the region. Since Turkey always had been a reliable ally of the US in NATO, this could be the beginning of a major global power shift that would increase the chances of conflicts between US and Russia.

Kakistocracy

Turkish President Erdogan Wins Sweeping New Powers In Contested Referendum

April 18, 2017 BBC 0

Turkey: A national referendum won by a slim majority, 51% to 49%, gives dictatorial power to President Erdogan by replacing the parliamentary system with an executive presidency. The term limits for Erdogan will be extended, he will be able to directly appoint top public officials, the president will decide whether to impose a state of emergency, and he will have the power to override the judiciary.

Globalism

Could The Netherlands Be Overthrown By 400K Turkish Immigrants Living There?

March 14, 2017 Stefan Molyneux 2

The Netherlands has banned rallies by Turks living there who are conducting political campaigns for an election in Turkey. There are 5.5-million Turks living in Europe, and many of them are allowed to vote in their homeland elections. Consequently, Turkish President Erdogan has been sending his agents abroad to garner those votes – but the Dutch want no part of it. Leaders in The Netherlands are worried that Turkish voters in their country, who are divided on support for Erdogan, will clash with each other and cast an unfavorable light on immigration. In response to the ban on Turkish political rallies in Holland, the Turkish government has threatened the Dutch government with sanctions and has theorized that The Netherlands army of 48,000 soldiers could not prevail against 400,000 Turkish immigrants.