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Erdoğan’s censorship now targeting media outlets in Europe (turkishminute.com)
227 points by doener on Dec 31, 2020 | hide | past | favorite | 136 comments



OK I will try to explain really what's going on and how it feels to live in Turkey, and try my best to keep this as objective as possible, besides my personal opinions.

First of all, democracy is not happening, at all. If you have any opposite thoughts, yes thoughts, not actions, you can face real jail time. This can be a comment on Twitter, or even something you say in your neighbourhood, around friends, anything and anywhere. No cartoons, no essays, no personal blogs. You can have an pollice officer in your door knocking.

We have a big website called "eksisozluk" which motto was "sacred source of knowledge", and now is filled with entries, posts regulated and restricted with court orders, deleted accounts, and also imprisoned users.

Turkey blocked Youtube, Wikipedia and such websites for a very long time. Paypal is still not operating. Even they seem not related, everything is related. Journalists are in prison, some of them are in exile, or some even dead.

Sorry for not revealing news or links, because of time, but Google can do that for me in an instance. So go ahead and search.

They are doing everything in their power to succeed. And I believe this will go on for a long time.


Turkey first blocked youtube for insulting videos about Atatürk.


I’m living in Turkey and it’s really ironic that I can’t even access this article. That is the extent of these censorships.


I archived it here, hopefully that works: https://web.archive.org/web/20201231175554/https://www.turki...


> On 9 October 2016, GitHub and Internet Archive[273] were blocked and associated administrative orders were subsequently posted by the BTK stating that access had been officially restricted.

Not sure it'll be accessible.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Censorship_in_Turkey


Is there any chance Erdogan will be democratically ousted?


Hardly. He's got a tight grip on the media, imprisoned or silenced most of the opposition, purged the military and the police after the failed coup and has the support of the conservative Turks, which basically granted him a mandate for many years to come. He'll probably end up being president for the rest of his life, just like Franco. Now his ambitions lie beyond the Turkush border into Southern Caucasus and Europe. Europeans should at the very least push back, support their Greek and Cypriot fellow EU members, grant asylum to kemalists, kurds and his other opponents, refuse further blackmail with refugees pouring in.


Turk here. i doubt it. Average education level of turkish people is around 8th grade.

He controls all the mainstream media, and preachers in the mosques. What remains as a free ground to spread the criticic voice is internet, which has been partially censored up to now and is going to be heavily suppressed as of 2021. And social media will no longer be a safe place for criticizing Erdogan, unless utilizing secure VPN's.

When you indoctrinate uneducated people with religion and politics, you can control them anyway you want. Think about republican voters and how fanatic they have become under Trump's rule in mere four years. Turkey has been ruled by erdogan for the last 18 years, imagine how brainwashed their voter base is and how powerful erdogan has become.

Even if erdogan loses in the elections, which court/state authority can punish him in the event that he refuses to leave the presidency? None.


Not sure why you got downvoted, it’s very concerning. Before the coup attempt I was hopeful in democracy for Turkey. I believe it was then when most opposition was routed :/


Sad to say, but HN is also targeted by government-sponsored troll factories, at least from Russia and China. I can assume, they have "guidelines" to support "in a phony mode" anti-Western authoritarian and totalitarian regimes, including Iran, Turkey, and North Korea


I’d like to know why this post is getting downvoted. Can some elucidate? Is this HN trump support at work, or is there something iffy about this post that I can’t identify?


It's hilarious that you're voted down probably due to talking bad about Trump, but then you're actually from a place where a man like Trump was in charge for 2 decades, so maybe people here should listen to you about his ilk and what they do to a country and stop supporting him.


> Think about republican voters and how fanatic they have become under Trump's rule in mere four years.

Fanatics? Is that how you refer to different political views? If so, we are all fanatics.


(Keeping this short, as OT) There's a big difference between different political views & refusing to accept the results of a US election and peddling conspiracy theories.


[flagged]



Erdogan is just a different political view. /s


If you can tolerate a police baton up your anus, hold a rally. :) (I'm referring to human rights reports from 2016, which stated that detainees after the failed coup were sodomized by the police)


Just change your dns to google or use nextdns.io. ucan open that page although i also live in turkey.


After spending the last year reading about constant warmongering and provocations against my country, with military units on combat alert even on holidays, I only have to say democracy should be reinstated in Turkey and I hope the circumstances can not detriment the friendship and common heritage of Turkish and Greek people.


And also someone should care about the Syrian refugees, these people are being used as a pawn to make demands and their rights are violated.


I appreciate you saying that. I am from the Balkans but from neither of these two countries and I was wondering whether you would say most of the people around you share your view. It is heartwarming to see humanist messages like yours, but I have the impression that much bigger part of the Balkans expresses more jingoistic nationalistic and xenophobic views.


Balkans are a war torn region, I honestly don't share some of my compatriots, idiotic opinions about naming other countries. Although they haven't lived though let's say Sarajevo in the 90s, I hope we all realize, that war isn't the solution to disputes. To answer your question, I try to surround my self with educated people, not dogmatic morons.


I understand your sentiment, but, the flip side is that a strong military is a good safeguard for peace. I have this... Hard to formulate opinion that you should be prepared to prevail in violence but at the same time avoid it as much as possible.


Si vis pacem, para bellum


In times of peace, prepare for war.


Not quite.

It means 'If you want peace, prepare for war.'


> common heritage of Turkish and Greek people.

What common heritage are you speaking of?

Edit: Who knew such benign question would trigger so many. I guess foreigners have a different understanding of what heritage means. Heritage doesn't mean being conquered and/or exchanging words, food, building, etc. Heritage implies "descent". Just because you eat sushi doesn't mean you and a japanese person have a common heritage. Just because native american buildings like the hogan are in the US doesn't mean we share the same common heritage as native americans.

https://study.com/academy/lesson/native-american-houses-fact...

We specifically say they are native american homes, not "american" homes because even though the natives were conquered, their heritage is different from ours.


They lived in close proximity for a good part of a millennium. Do you think they haven't influenced each other?


Maybe so but they are entirely different countries currently in the things that matter.


> entirely different countries currently in the things that matter.

I don't know, there seems to be quite some common ground when it comes to food and drink, for example. That's part (and the result) of some shared culture, I'd say. Isn't it nice to realize that your neighbors might be people just like you are, who like to take their coffee in quite a similar way?


Different countries ... with a common heritage.


Maybe during history lessons you preferred a good beauty sleep instead of paying attention to the class :)


If you don't see a lot of overlap between Greek and Turkish culture ... not sure what to say.

Over a million "Greeks" were deported to Greece in the 1920s, despite many speaking only Turkish and many "Turks" were sent back the other way. Not to mention that most of those inhabiting Turkey today - and identifying as Turks - have an awful lot of non-Turkish ancestry. It's not only Greek of course (plenty of Armenian, Kurdish, Arab, Albanian, Circassian, Bulgarian, etc), but Greeks and Greek culture has had a massive imprint on modern Turkey - and Turks have also had an impact on modern Greek culture.

Of course neither side is particularly happy to admit it, but it's very much there.


Greeks are Christians, Turks are Muslims. For starters.


That's a bit of a tautology because the population exchange was done on the basis of religion, not language. There were plenty of Greek speaking muslims and Turkish speaking orthodox christians before 1915.


Many parts of Turkey and N Cyprus still speak Greek in secret


That is both a difference and a similarity. Both are way closer to each other than any two random religions on average.


Perhaps you don't realize that the heart of ancient Greece was really in what we now call modern-day turkey


> They lived in close proximity for a good part of a millennium.

And? That doesn't imply common heritage.

> Do you think they haven't influenced each other?

That doesn't imply common heritage.

Also if you talking about the ottoman empire. isn't the greek position that the ottoman empire was bad for them and hence why they sought independence?

Or are you saying that greece should rejoin the ottoman empire and embrace the "common heritage"?


> And? That doesn't imply common heritage.

Western Turkey was inhabited by large Greek populations and colonies for a very long time, which was one of the reasons behind the Persian War. During the Hellenistic era, the Seleucid Empire, a Hellenistic kingdom, ruled most of modern-day Turkey. And then from the Roman era to 1453, the area remained largely Greek-speaking, with Constantinople (aka Istanbul) the center of Greco-Roman civilization, with the citizens thereof actually called "Greeks" by many peoples.

Of course the Arabic and Turkic invasions introduced new peoples and changed things up quite a bit, but there's definitely common heritage between many people in Turkey and the Greeks, to the extent that many 'Turks' citizenship-wise are ethnic Greeks and other ethnic groups that spoke Greek and had a long participation in the Greek and Roman kingdoms.


They share food, words, customs and attitudes. That's the common heritage.

Joining Ottoman empire is just a non sequitur.


No. It's just pointing out the obvious. When you say greek heritage, I assume ancient greece, I don't assume ottoman empire. When you say turkish heritage, I think central asian steppes and ottoman empire. Last I checked, the ottoman empire was a turkish empire, not a greek one.

Perhaps it's just the language difference. For example, nobody here would say the native americans and non-native americans have the same heritage. We've been living with natives for hundreds of years, but certainly american heritage stems from britain while native american heritage doesn't. You'd be mocked ( a la Elizabeth Warren ) or canceled if you claimed american native heritage when you are not native american.

Seems like a lot of people are upset for no reason. But when politics and identity are involved, that's just what happens.


>That doesn't imply common heritage.

spot the american.


Guilty as charged.

So you think australia and indonesia have a common heritage because they are neighbors, but the US and australia don't because we live an ocean away?

It's so funny, I was genuinely interested in this topic as my understanding of greece and turkey was one of conqueror and conquered, not "common heritage". I thought maybe there was history/ties/etc I was missing, but apparently it's just some politically driven people spewing nonsense.

Perhaps foreigners just don't know what "common heritage" means.

Spot the foreigner.

Edit: As I noted in my other comment, to say greeks and turks share the same heritage is like saying americans and native americans share the same heritage. American heritage stems from britain, but no sane person would claim that native american heritage comes from britain. I don't think any sane person would associate the ottoman empire with greeks. They would associate it with the turks because it was a turkish empire. I bet most greeks see their heritage as ancient greece.


The American educational system has really failed this one


The conqueror and conquered relationship has been about the 40% of aforementioned millennium.

The rest they have been allies, mercenaries, enemies,trading partners, etc...

It's far more nuanced than a single relationship type.


That solves it then, you are Greek-American never went to a Greek school. Well Greek history books are available freely online/


I was very lucky enough to travel through Turkey. The South Western coast of Turkey, from Antalya to Bodrum, is some of the most beautiful Mediterranean sea coasts in the world. Seriously, take a look at pictures from Fethiye or Kas for example.

I'm not expert on the definition of the word "heritage" but my own impression is these countries share more than just a land border and adjacency to the Aegean sea. The people look similar, dress similar, eat extremely similar food, have similar drinks (raki vs. ouzo), live in similar houses. For much of the time I was in that area of Turkey I remember thinking it felt more like Greece than Greece did!

This should be no surprise (although it was to me). They have been neighbours for millennia and their cultures have mixed and intertwined with each other longer than the USA has existed. Much of the land between them has switched hands back-and-forth between various empires dating back to Alexander the Great (and beyond).

Comparatively, the native peoples of the Americas were culturally isolated for that same length of time until ~500 years ago when Europeans with a completely distinct culture showed up in ships for the first sustained contacts. There is almost no reasonable comparison to be made between the two circumstances.


Constantinople/Byzantium was in practice a Greek state. In their conquest of it, the Ottomans assimilated both many peoples as well as much of the culture and practice of the area, with Sultan Mehmed II going as far as calling himself 'Ceasar.'


Perhaps Istanbul shows it more than other places. The city was originally Greek, then Roman, Byzantine and more recently Turkish for the last 600 years. But the city itself is a myriad of cultures likely due to its economic importance. Wikipedia covers the history pretty well.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Istanbul


You'll probably have some puritanical argument to disregard this but throwing it out here anyways: the genetic pool of modern day Turkey is substantially more Greek and Iranian than Asian.


Turks are in large part the descendants of Greeks that were forcefully converted maybe?


Turkish speaking Christians and Greek speaking Muslims moving after the population exchange to boot


You are the same people ousting Greek refugees during the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–1922 (considering them Turkish because they also spoke Turkish) (known locally as the Asia Minor disaster) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asia_Minor_disaster For anyone interested I recommend this excellent movie https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0378897/


>Heritage implies "descent"

You might have noticed that Turks hardly look Central Asian.


Similiar food, music, habits, look-alikes.


Atheist turk here, this youtube channel is the largest social media channel of gulen religious sect/terror group, which tried to topple erdogan in 2016.

Despite hating Erdogan to my guts, i can assure you that this gulenist movement/terror group is a bigger threat to secularism and democracy in turkey and world alike.


I find this to be one of the most insidious side-effects of press censorship under authoritarian regimes - it seems to create an ecosystem of resistance media that is just as biased as the government propaganda.

A similar thing happens with China through stuff like Epoch Times or Guo Wengui's channel. The outlets that position themselves as strong opposition to the regime are themselves untrustworthy sources, which ironically just serves to bolster the position of the regime. ("See? You can't trust anything! Even in so-called free countries all the news is fake!" etc)

Do you have any recommendations for media organizations that are doing reliable reporting on Turkey but aren't propaganda fronts for one faction or the other?


Yeah, this was a serious problem in Egypt where the post-Arab Spring elected goverment was less liberal than the military dictatorship.


There's a lot of doubt internationally that Gulen was behind the coup attempt. And there are some that believe it was a false flag operation to allow Erdogan to solidify his power.


Genuinely curious to know why you think the gulen movement is a bigger threat to secularism & democracy in Turkey & the world. From my findings, they start & fund secular schools(elementary to university), fund & organize interfaith dialogues, fund social programmes etc.

I've skimmed a couple of books written by Fetullah gulen and what he preaches peace, love and cooperation amongst all. Of course, every group has it's idiosyncrasies, but can't find anything out of the ordinary with the gulen movement.

Has it been established with proof that the gulen movement is responsible for the coup?


> I've skimmed a couple of books written by Fetullah gulen and what he preaches peace, love and cooperation amongst all.

He's a lovely fellow indeed: https://twitter.com/kyleworton/status/1086084532393136128


That's the beauty of it; he had been favored as the harbinger of "moderate and peaceful islam that west had been trying to spread in the middle east, starting from turkey", and he played it pretty well in their eyes. and by milking this very support of the western countries, he managed to infiltrate in very critical positions in Turkey, thanks to his well educated followers, who were picked up from poor families as teens in the outskirts of Turkey. For this very reason, his followers also have held key positions in many african and asian countries.

These well educated brainwashed army of his followers, who are hidden their secret agenda under the "peace, love and cooperation" are greater threat to Turkey and all these corresponding countries than Erdogan might dare to pose, whose followers are just uneducated, nationalist inferiority complex driven, unintelligent turkish people.

Yes, it is certain that it was fethullah gulen movement behind the coup. However, erdogan took advantage of this to gain the absolute power of the country and to suppress all the opposing voices.


Gulen’s group used to give answers for civil service exams to his followers on the condition that once they were inside they were owned body and soul


that's why you need open media, so all sides can be heard, and frankly exposed for what they are


This is a very tricky situation. Two things come to mind.

1. Turkey wants a fight. I keep up on reading the western commentary and analysis about the region (Not the mainstream crap), and it's apparent to me that deeply-entrenched forces in Turkey want a fight. Our strategy so far is to do the best we can to ignore/placate them. I'm not sure how long that continues to work.

2. From time-to-time, we talk on HN about the internet becoming more and more walled off, with commercial ventures preventing competition and nationalistic devices like the Great Firewall of China preventing movement of information. There's not going to be one dramatic moment when we wake up and the net is gone. It's probably mostly gone now, and every day a bit more slips away unnoticed. We talk about and react to stories like this, but there are plenty of similar actions that nobody responds to. It's like Google customer support: the only way to make anything at all happen is to make a big stink, and in the long-run even doing that doesn't matter much to the average net user.

I am deeply unhappy and concerned about Turkey's future. I wish there was something I could to to help, but any response at all from the west will be used as political fodder. They're not in a good spot right now.


I don't believe HN is the right place to engage in political discussions but I need to clarify couple of points.

> Turkey wants a fight.

You need to make clear references about what and who you refer to when you say "Turkey".

Even with a totally oppressed media and everything else, Erdogan's support in Turkey is in the band of 30-40%. Majority of Turkish citizens are not happy with him.

Western world keeps doing the some mistake (if not on purpose) as they do with Russia, skipping that difference when bringing up all the negativity about him. As Putin, this just helps him solidifying his base, by using this to create a common enemy outside of Turkey.

With that said, I don't believe even Erdogan himself wants to have any fight with anyone outside of Turkey but just trying to protect country's interest internationally. That's why although his support is in a band of 30-40%, a solid 85% of Turkish people are supporting his international policies.


Yes, thank you. I am not one to mince words but think people make a huge mistake when they talk about what ${country} wants instead of ${country.leader} or ${party}


Yeah, westerners freely disassociate themselves from their leaders. But they abruptly lose this ability as soon as some other country is involved.


I completely agree with you. Thank you for that additional detail.

I have no politics in this matter, as I have no list of desired winners or losers and no desired end-state (aside from just being generally unhappy with the way things are in Turkey currently). I don't know how I could be less political.

It's a very complex situation, as you've pointed out. My only intent was to provide a shorthand evaluation of the area for others to dive down on if they desired. There is no one "Turkey", which is why I used the broad term. Of course it's much more nuanced. Thanks for the help.


There is a deeply-religious Islamist section of the Turkish elite, with influence in Anatolia, who helped bring Erdogan to power. Integration with the West promotes secular, urban Istanbul interests relative to them. An East-West engagement, with Turkey in the East, boosts their power.


> I don't believe HN is the right place to engage in political discussions

Why? Surely politics falls under the 'anything that gratifies one's intellectual curiosity.' rule.


Clarify, please. What kind of a fight, and with whom? A political fight, or a real shooting fight? With internal enemies, the west, or Syria (or somebody else)?


If you inspect the article and its author, you can easily see that its author Yasin Kesen is a member of FETO ( Fetullah Gulen's Terrorist Organization ) and he is run off from Turkey to Germany just before than 15 July coup attempt ( in this attempt, FETO is killed more than 300 innocent civil person in streets, bridges and homes. They misilled bombs from airplanes, they attacked also TBMM (Grand National Assembly of Turkey). People are mashed by tanks pallets in streets. He is a terrorist organization member and writing disparagement posts. They tried to get the governance, but failed. Their commanders give command to their pilots and tank drivers: "Kill everybody that moves. No pity. Just kill". And their friend in a foreign country writes something to calumniate the legally voted governence.


A lot of us think that if it was a real coup attempt that the mastermind was Erdogan. Infiltrate the coup plotters and trigger a hopeless coup.


Americans and the American media complain about how bad Facebook and tech censorship is, and it is bad, but overseas in countries such as turkey it is way worse. Americans truly take for granted the freedoms they have.


I don’t think it’s taken for granted. Those complaints stem from fear of turning into a place like Turkey and other nations with strict censorship.

If we don’t complain now, it may be too late later on.


I think Americans are really preoccupied by that kind of stuff, because if we normalize the behavior then we might become a Turkey or Russia some day. Democracy and freedom of press and expression are intrinsically linked.

That being said, there's many who talk about "big tech" censorship but ignore some of the other problems of modern big media. So it's not always people who are pro-freedoms bringing this up.


I can't reach any Iranian website from NYC. DNS does not resolve.

Is this "targeting media outlets"?

https://www.google.com/url?q=https://www.presstv.com/Detail/...

Google is allowed to look at Iranian [headlines] and they have this teaser:

"US's Treasury Dept. blocks, seizes website of 'Iran ... - PressTV"

"Apr 25, 2020 · Tried before 204.155.146.233 and other addresses that point to PressTV but in the look up translate pointer table it blocks the ip address that ..."

Oh, I love the smell of irony, even in the afternoon..


Really looking forward to see how the EU respond here with Turkey vs, say, China or Google or FB. It's just interesting to me how values change depending on whom you're talking to.


It's telling that only an outgoing US administration decided to -weakly- sanction Turkey over the Russian missile fiasco.

The European Union looks more and more like a banking cartel than a federation of nation states. Germany and Spain, that vehemently opposed sanctions in the last eurogroup, are doing good business selling weapons to Turkey. Weapons, that are then used by Turkey to openly threaten Greece and Cyprus. There was a slight concession in 2019, with a temporary stop on new contracts being awarded, but that obviously did not affect existing ones.


Is there any country that makes weapons that doesn't sell them for a hefty profit? Hell, in the past decade the Americans have funded the death of their own troops by selling rocket launchers and bombs to the Saudis that are resold/handed out and used in Afghanistan and Iraq.

I recommend the 1980's "Deal of the Century" with Chevy Chase and Gregory Hines. It's a black comedy about the insanity of countries selling weapons to their own enemies.


The Congress cancelling a deal to sell a 100 F-35s along with some of their parts being produced in Turkey hardly sounds like a weak sanction.


Turkey's S-400 system was both contracted for and delivered during the Trump administration. We'll see what the US does or doesn't do when the president isn't the weakest since Harrison.


> Speaking to the Deutsche Presse-Agentur (dpa), [German Foreign Minister] Maas said: “I do not find the demand of an arms embargo against Turkey strategically correct. It is not easy to do this against a NATO partner. We saw that NATO ally Turkey easily bought missiles from Russia because it could not buy from the U.S.”

https://www.dailysabah.com/politics/eu-affairs/german-fm-maa...

> At a summit on Friday, EU leaders agreed to prepare limited sanctions on Turkish individuals over a row with Greece and Cyprus about offshore energy exploration, but postponed discussions on any harsher steps until March.

https://www.ekathimerini.com/260286/article/ekathimerini/new...


Politics is the general relativity of human relations. There is no absolute frame of reference.


Religion (with Theology/Philosophy) is the absolute frame of reference of human relations.


I'm sorry, but with my (admittedly broad and _shallow_) view of religious history, trying to see human relations through the filter of religion seems at least as fluid and relative as politics.

So much individual human mucking about with what could be basic universal principles. On one end, people who say that "this version of this written word is God's literal truth" when their version has a known history of edits, blatant rewrites, and translation errors. On the other end, recently started religions (Jainism is the first but not by far the only) that are at least as valid in their core principles but have their own dogma and assumptions.

Throw in Quakers etc who believe in a direct personal relationship with their God, and I can't see any consistency except "believe in us, and convince your friends! Their soul is in peril if they aren't with us!"


Erdogan has been a loose canon for a long time, and I suspect is only tolerated because of Turkey's precarious NATO membership.


- He does the US's bidding in the region , countering russia in Syria, Libya, and Nagorno-karabakh without the US having to take blame for it

- He does Germany's bidding by countering French interventionism in Libya / eastmed without Germany having to take blame for it


...Nagorno-karabakh...

That's another recent event that went totally uncovered by USA news media firms. They thought some confused Americans might object to military aid that encourages Muslims to attack Christians.


> Americans might object to military aid that encourages Muslims to attack Christians

Baku is far from a strategic rival to the United States. It’s not an ally either, more non-aligned. Transcaucasian geopolitics—-in reality, most geopolitics—-are not a daily priority for most Americans in a badly-managed pandemic.


Baku is certainly too far away to be a "strategic" anything. One would have hoped that the requirement for military aid would have been a bit more stringent than that! However, they got the arms used in their continued efforts to squeeze the Armenians from USA via Turkey.

Foreign wars playing on USA TV is a double-edged sword. Yes, we should be more aware of how our actions harm those in other nations. But, no, it isn't a good thing for the news firms to make us more worried about remote events, since that fear is itself the most common pretext to additional disastrous violence.


Uh, didn’t Israel sell weapons to the Azeris because they buy their oil? Pretty sure there’s realpolitik going on


No, because the EU's refugee deal with Turkey is paramount.

Without it there are more refugees in Germany (and other "core" EU countries), and the tense political atmosphere tips over.


Why aren't neighboring countries like Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iran, Ethiopia, etc. taking in 100% of the refugees? Can someone shed some light about refugee situation around NATO/EU? While humanitarian aspects must be taken care of, I only see refugee situation in Germany as a negative thing. It brings nothing to the country, and in fact brings other nonsense such as religious fundamentalism. These people are not going to assimilate into German culture.

Edit: I know you’re downvoting based on political stance. Would be great if we can engage in a discussion. Could you share your thoughts please?


> Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iran

They don't want to, and disregard the human rights of large numbers of people already in the country.

> Ethiopia

Can't afford to.

There is no solution without ending the war, and there's no solution to that without addressing the forces keeping it going. It's like many of the Cold War conflicts, a proxy for wars not being fought with Russia.


> They don't want to, and disregard the human rights of large numbers of people already in the country.

I see, thanks. Is there any sanctions, diplomatic pressure that can be applied?

I am just trying to put myself into the shoes of the average German who doesn't give a shit about geopolitical state of the world - they see a bunch of refugees with zero skills, language barrier and strong embedded religious fundamentalist views taking over. How is this difficult to see?

This feels unfair to Germans and Europeans in general because of some conflict thousands of miles afar. I can understand small numbers of refugees being taken in, I support rebuilding and financing such tasks in their home countries, but jeez...


> This feels unfair to Germans and Europeans in general because of some conflict thousands of miles afar

If you were to talk to the refugees themselves, you'd probably find that they thought losing everything they couldn't carry and being stuck in a country where they can't speak the language, have no status, no recognition of qualifications, no right to work, and yet no safe way to return either isn't particularly fair.

> taking over

Could you elaborate on to what extent they are taking over? What political and military offices they hold, what property they own etc?


I can see how they would feel that way and I think part of the problem would be exactly that - they will not be able to assimilate ever.

> taking over

Culture. Dilution of values. Fundamentalism which is so entrenched the religion (I suspect, high 90s % of strongly religious demographics, primarily Islam).

Long term, I see even worse divergence of national unity - these people are now speaking the language, but their own German dialect, their kids are raising with local kids, etc. I personally do not see Germans share most of middle-eastern/islamic values. You cannot forcefully assimilate 2 different polarizing cultures, it is a time bomb of cultural divide. No matter how humanitarian your views are, there is no going away from this fact.

I think the best solution is to provide aid - military, financial, food/medicine to these impoverished countries instead of taking refugees.

Edit: I can't respond to your comment below, but I basically have fundamental disagreement about aligning Holocaust with Syrian refugee crisis. You're trying to shoehorn a narrative from the perspective of the lawmakers, I am asking simple questions about assimilation and integration. We're talking past each other? Anyways, I learned a few things from your opinions about the history of these archaic refugee laws. IMO they should be with the neighbors, not transcontinental. Thanks for the discussion.


Different values that diverge from German national unity? Impossibility of integration? Maybe you'd like them marked out somehow? Discouraged from owning property or business? Put on a train to ... somewhere? From which they don't come back?

Bluntly, Europe's laws on refugees date from the time when millions had to flee Germany, and the "military aid" was incinerating Dresden. The options are integration or extermination, and sending people back to Syria where they will quite likely be killed counts in the extermination column. Germany has decided to try the not getting millions killed option for a bit.


> They don't want to

Any idea why?


The pan-Islamic world is often nationalist before it is Islamic, or even tribal/racist at a level below the nation.

It's also non-free countries. The Saudi royal family will go so far as to murder journalists in other countries to preserve their power. Letting a couple of million syrians die is nothing to them, and they're happily smashing up Yemen at the moment.


If we go to the extent of accepting refugees from their neighbors, may be we should also look at sanctioning these evil nations to the point where they feel the same pain as the nations under crisis.

Fuck Saudi Arabia.


They don’t feel like throwing money around? They don’t feel like increasing the levels of insecurity? Just two examples.


If France has war going on, we expect the neighbors Spain/Switzerland/Germany/Italy to help with the refugee situation. There should be no reason to send the French people to Indonesia even if Indonesia is the richest nation in the world. Local dynamics should be accounted for.


> France has war going on, we expect the neighbors Spain/Switzerland/Germany/Italy

Per Wikipedia:

> "Switzerland was easy to reach for refugees from the Nazis. Switzerland's refugee laws, especially with respect to Jews fleeing Germany, were strict and have caused controversy since the end of World War II. From 1933 until 1944 asylum for refugees could only be granted to those who were under personal threat owing to their political activities only; it did not include those who were under threat due to race, religion or ethnicity.[33] On the basis of this definition, Switzerland granted asylum to only 644 people between 1933 and 1945; of these, 252 cases were admitted during the war.[33] All other refugees were admitted by the individual cantons and were granted different permits, including a "tolerance permit" that allowed them to live in the canton but not to work. Over the course of the war, Switzerland interned 300,000 refugees.[34] Of these, 104,000 were foreign troops interned according to the Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers outlined in the Hague Conventions. The rest were foreign civilians and were either interned or granted tolerance or residence permits by the cantonal authorities. Refugees were not allowed to hold jobs. Of the refugees, 60,000 were civilians escaping persecution by the Nazis. Of these 60,000, 27,000 were Jews.[33] Between 10,000 and 24,000 Jewish civilian refugees were refused entry"

Europe's relatively humanitarian laws about refugees are based in the knowledge of how many countries barred entry to Jews who were subsequently exterminated in the gas chambers.


Only that those countries (UAE, etc) don’t give a flying fuck about liberal values (in this case, good for them I guess)


That's the same thing people said about the Gastarbeiter in the 70s.


Put some armed sentry that shoots on sight,, no more refugees.

It is part of Turkey's strategy fill Europe with Muslims and them wanting to reinstate the Caliphate.


Yes, but given past issues, the German government response is most likely to push/penalize Youtube into no longer helping Erdogan while ignoring any direct confrontation. Yet another YouTube ban in Turkey should work for almost everyone.


We only need a deal on 'refugees' with Turkey because of political cowardice.

In practice we don't need a deal, we need to secure the EU border as we should be.


What values are you speaking of? Censorship is and has been alive and well in germany for a long time. You can even say germany has no conception of free speech, they just mimic it.

Germany is the inspiration of censorship around the world.

https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/11/06/germany-online-crackdow...

https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20170720/01434337827/russi...


I have no idea how this dictatorship is even considered for EU membership. Can someone explain this to me?


When they were first seriously considering it, it wasn’t a dictatorship; things went seriously downhill in the past several years since then.


They applied in 1999. They were told what criteria to meet. They have not yet met them. This includes freedom and rule of law criteria.

EU accession is not going to happen until Turkey is more like a normal European country.


It's hard to believe the process is still going on. I remember on the first day of a class in 2004, the instructor had everyone introduce ourselves. One of the students started with, "Hi, I'm from Turkey. You have probably heard about my country from our lame attempts to join the EU..."


I don't think anyone wants to definitively close the door, because then a whole load of ugly follow-on questions like Cyprus get worse.


Cyprus has really nothing to do with this. If accession talks fail Republic of Cyprus is still the recognised government of the whole island but currently has no control over the the occupied area. Just like it was when Cyprus was accepted in EU. Turkish Cypriots already have EU citizenship via Republic of Cyprus, the only isolated population is the illegal Turkish settlers in North Cyprus.


> Turkish Cypriots already have EU citizenship via Republic of Cyprus, the only isolated population is the illegal Turkish settlers in North Cyprus.

Children of Turkish Cypriot and Turkish marriages are not granted passports.

The relative isolationism of T/C as well as the high (recessive) Thalassemia, means T/C marry outside their villages quote often.

T/C are therefore dwindling every generation due to one T parent voiding their passport rights, or inbreeding reducing their lifespans.


While true, let's not pretend the membership criteria were ever objectively evaluated in Turkey's case. It was always entangled with domestic politics of member countries.

And one would wonder if member states like Poland and Hungary would meet such criteria right now.


It's not. At the moment all talks about its membership are frozen due to its more and more autocratic rule.


There is zero actual consideration for membership in the last years or the forseeable future. It's a diplomatic fantasy. But it'd be a counterproductive affront to formally rule it out now, as it would give the guy political capital in interior politics. On the other hand, maybe it'll be useful as a threat in the future.


That EU membership was never serious


Hate to see how easily monopolistic services like YouTube give up basic human rights, in order to please tyrants, who's in solo charge of accessing to the market, which YouTube does not want to lose.

I witnessed multiple shutdowns of accounts, criticizing Russian regime. No explanation was provided, like Google always does. Selling ads is more important, than life and freedom of people.


At some points, a company (any company) has to assume a legal system. When the legal system does not work well - be it, because the laws require censorship, or be it because not everyone can effectively fight for their rights in the courts - this will lead to problems and injustice.

It seems, Turkey is not the only place where it's tough to get copyright claims sorted out in court, but the claim is that the (assumed) legal means are leveraged for going after political opponents.

The EU will have to understand that freedom of speech and the legal framework of copyright claims can be at odds and can be abused in this way. This isn't going to be easy, but leaving it to private companies to come up with something will likely not produce the desired outcome as they will all eventually go the path of least resistance and profitability (it's in general not a private company's job to defend values and reform the legal situation).


Stop relying on faceless corporations then, use PeerTube.


There are several youtubers live in turkey, say what they want to say about Erdoğan.


Source?


"The channel, already under an access ban in Turkey since 2019, was shut down in mid-December and is now inaccessible on YouTube. The Erdoğan government had it shut down using YouTube’s copyright policy."


He seems dead set on buying into the chinese model of governance, russian military hardware, and larger regional ambitions. All of those still seem to be out of his grasp.


It's obvious why You-Tube allows them access to the content system. It's the price of being allowed to operate there at all.


That website controlled by followers of gulen that killed 250 innocent people in 2016. Can somebody tell me that DAES (ISIS) related main news websites is allowed in Western countries.


Mr, in democratic societies voicing your views is protected by the freedom of speech. However hate speech and extremist groups preaching it should be prosecuted, as criminal organizations. A Jewish philosopher has advocated for this stance (whose name I've forgotten). Are you a sympathizer of this group by any chance? Why do you think it would be beneficial for a person living in a Western country being subjected to extreme violence, intolerance and hate speech?


staging coup and killing 250 civilians isn't extreme enough for you?


you can't come to a western website and drop the fact like that. funny how would HK feel if this was ISIS promoting website on western ban on ISIS propaganda instead of Gulenist one. as western says one mans terrorists, others freedom fighter.




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