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That doesn't sound good. I had a Turkish friend who was living in the US for many years. He criticized Erdogan on Facebook constantly, and he told me that he got threatened frequently by Turkish people in the US, and told to stop. He laughed it off. He's a tough guy.
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36 sats \ 5 replies \ @orto 6 Sep
Unfortunately, most of them live in America because the source of their power is the United States. Erdogan was also on the side of Fethullah Gulen. Maybe you know Fethullah, who died in Pennsylvania....
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Yes. My friend and his friends hated that man. I don't follow Turkish politics too much. Did he die fairly recently?
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36 sats \ 3 replies \ @orto 6 Sep
Yes, he recently died. In 2016, he attempted a U.S.-backed military coup. More than 250 people died. F-16 fighter jets bombed the parliament. The soldiers, who believed in Ataturk, the founder of the country, prevented the coup. They killed the general who was the commander of the coup in Turkey while the coup was taking place. At the time of the coup, a senator in the U.S. House said "A lot of good things are happening across the ocean, in Turkey right now...." P.S.: Fethullah Gulen was a radical Islamist like ISIS...
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Fethullah Gulen was a radical Islamist like ISIS..
That's exactly how he was described to me.
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36 sats \ 1 reply \ @orto 6 Sep
In short, we can say that almost all of the radical Islamist organizations that have emerged in recent years are the products of the United States and Israel. What is being done is to make Muslims turn against each other and present Islam to the world as a religion that sheds blood. In this way, the Muslim geography will be weakened and they will be at the disposal of those who hold power. Read very carefully, I say: Charlie Hebdo, Twin Towers attacks etc. The U.S. and Israel are at the backstages of the attacks.
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I don't know enough about it to speculate, but I distrust mainstream narratives.
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