13 Replies to “Those Moderate Muslims!”

  1. Another Red Line coming up.
    It was only a matter of time for the Islamist Erdogan to begin turning Turkey into an Islamist state.
    Ataturk will be rolling over in his grave.

  2. That’s not good. Turkey has one of the largest armed forces in the area and it’s hard to say whether loyalties would lean towards Europe or the middle east. My guess is the ME which would mean the next crusade is off and running.
    http://www.globalfirepower.com/active-military-manpower.asp
    If Turkey implodes you can throw all your world maps away because borders would change in a hurry.

  3. Perhaps commenters ‘Marc’ and ‘Daniel hates Red Tories’ could explain again to us how the “first safe country” rule is aptly descriptive of Turkey.

  4. Simple. As was made abundantly clear to you and other open borders refugee zealots on previous threads, there are at least 140,000 Syrian Kurds in UN-administered refugee camps in Turkey. They are perfectly safe there.
    Are you saying that the Turkish government is bombing UN-administered refugee camps in Turkey? If that is your ridiculous assertion then provide a news quote for that.
    The fact that Turkey may or may not bomb Kurdish terrorists somewhere, is inconsequential to evaluating the safety of UN-administered refugee camps in Turkey.
    But beyond that, not only are the refugee camps in Turkey perfectly safe, the alleged “war zone and dangerous refugee situation” in Syria itself was also proven to be pretty safe by the undisturbed journey of Abdullah Kurdi with three coffins back to the exact same place that supposedly forced him and his family to flee. He went back and nothing happened to him.
    Your contention that Turkey is not a safe country is what open border zealots use in order to push for western countries with generous welfare systems to accept the invasion, as they are the only ones deemed “safe” enough for the “refugees”. Feel free to push that angle at cbc.ca

  5. “The U.S. Embassy in Ankara has responded with two strongly worded tweets”
    OOOOOOHHHHHH watch out….

  6. Turkey has neither loyalty to EU nor to ME. Turkey has loyalty to Turkey. They will become increasingly hard line islamic but they will stay Turkish. They despise both Persians and Arabs, and they hate the Joooos and Kurds. With the situation in the region spiraling out of control every day they will take this opportunity to revisit their tradition of genocide and ethnic cleansing. Kurds – the last ally of civilization in the region apart for Israel are in mortal danger.

  7. “they will take this opportunity to revisit their tradition of genocide and ethnic cleansing”
    My view exactly. This is my view of Turkey. Why can’t they protect their culture and heritage like Japan does? Because Japan is an Island and Turkey is a nexus point from Asia Minor into Europe.
    Why is it that Europe has allowed Turkey to join NATO and yet shut them out of the EU for these many decades?
    Turkey is as Fascist Germany was, but once Ottoman style, now with an Islamist government… Nazi style.
    Turks are nationalist, and Muslim.
    A very tough and determined combination. What their determination is… well.
    I think Turkey burns the candle at both ends planning to hold the middle while the carnage that ISIS makes leaves Turkey the beneficiary after NATO cracks down.
    NATO is busily focused on Russia, the imminent threat of invasion into Europe.
    If NATO takes the fight to ISIS, they do not have the ability to oppose Russia taking Ukraine or anything Putin thinks he can take, short of nuclear war.
    Therefore: If NATO does take the fight to ISIS, then Europe is left exposed.
    NATO can no longer fight a 2 Front war, especially if Russia is in a better position of resupply and a significant portion of NATO firstline fighting groups are actively deployed elsewhere.(fighting ISIS)

  8. Yup. I remember the Shatila refugee camp(Palestinians) and think about what the Phalange did there in Southern Lebanon.
    Did you know that the same camp still operates today even after that?
    Difference though, is that today, really right now, the same camp is filling with Syrian refugees?
    Of course, it’s still being run by a UN NGO so it’s just as safe today as it was back in ’82.

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