⛤Clara Suppengrün⛤ ♄⛧⚸☿☩☥

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⛤Clara Suppengrün⛤ ♄⛧⚸☿☩☥

⛤Clara Suppengrün⛤ ♄⛧⚸☿☩☥

@mithras776

View the world as a conspiracy run by a very closely-knit group of nearly omnipotent people, and think of those people as yourself and your friends!

Delphi انضم Aralık 2023
2.7K يتبع1.2K المتابعون
⛤Clara Suppengrün⛤ ♄⛧⚸☿☩☥ أُعيد تغريده
Homer Pavlos
Homer Pavlos@HomerPavlos·
“Turkey is a NATO country” Turkey was in NATO when they invaded Cyprus in 1974 and they threat Greece (another NATO member) with war every single day. Of course you won’t talk about that. Everything is about Israel nowadays. You don’t even know where Turkey and Greece are in map
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Stop The Bollocks with Mirabel@MirabelTweets1

Turkey is a NATO country The US wants to withdraw from NATO so it can attack Turkey with Israel That’s it.

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Homer Pavlos
Homer Pavlos@HomerPavlos·
Turkey keeps ignoring the treaty. They speak about “Turkish minority” in Thrace. There is no such thing. The treaty recognizes only Muslim minority. It’s frustrating and it seems Turkey understands only the language of war Turkey is searching for reasons to invade Greece.
Turkish MFA@MFATurkiye

Regarding Greece’s Policies Toward the Muftis of the Turkish Minority in Western Thrace mfa.gov.tr/no_-66_-yunani…

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⛤Clara Suppengrün⛤ ♄⛧⚸☿☩☥ أُعيد تغريده
My_name_is_Nobody
My_name_is_Nobody@Nob0dymyname·
Turkey is no ally it’s an adversary. Hamas sponsor, NATO saboteur, occupier of Cyprus & threatening Greece with war. A threat hiding behind a NATO badge. #TurkeyNotAnAlly
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The Jerusalem Post@Jerusalem_Post

Opinion: Continuing to label Turkey as a reliable NATO ally is dangerous, as Ankara’s ambitions erode the very alliance structures that have long sustained Western security. jpost.com/opinion/articl…

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⛤Clara Suppengrün⛤ ♄⛧⚸☿☩☥ أُعيد تغريده
orlando
orlando@orlando1678·
Eines der berühmtesten Bilder von Albrecht Dürer (gestorben am 6. April 1528), die vielleicht bekannteste Naturstudie der Welt: der "Feldhase". Wünsche einen heiteren Ostermontag!
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⛤Clara Suppengrün⛤ ♄⛧⚸☿☩☥
In a ridiculously childish manner, Albanians and Turks are trying to project their DNA issues onto the Greeks. But this isn’t a game of insults. There is DNA, there are ancient DNA studies, and there are publicly available DNA tests. Show me a serious study that supports the claim that modern Greeks are not the biological descendants of the ancient Greeks. There isn’t one!
Dominus Albaniae@EpiriEtAlbaniae

I am ancient Greek Are you, really? Let's find out what your DNA says

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⛤Clara Suppengrün⛤ ♄⛧⚸☿☩☥ أُعيد تغريده
The Uncivilised One
The Uncivilised One@Sea2Sea1Way·
High time to kick turkey🇹🇷 out of NATO
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Homer Pavlos
Homer Pavlos@HomerPavlos·
Kydonies, known today in Turkish as "Ayvalik", was once a thriving Greek city. This Greek city suffered two massacres in its modern history and is now under Turkish occupation in the fake state called Turkey, which has no history in this land. The Greeks had lived in Asia Minor for over 3,000 continuous years, and no one had ever driven us out. Not even the Persians themselves dared to expel us from our ancestral homes and the cities we had founded. On April 10, 1821, the neighboring island of Psara, near Kydonies, rose up in revolt. As a result, Turkish forces numbering 4,000 men encamped outside Kydonies. On July 4, the inhabitants of Kydonies realized that the Turks were about to attack. They sent the teacher Veniamin to the Moschonisia islands, who asked Tombazis to transport the civilian population to Psara. Because of the shallow waters of the harbor, only small boats were sent to collect the refugees. The embarkation of women and children began immediately, while armed Turks tried to prevent their escape to safety. A battle then broke out between them and the boats that were armed with cannons. The Turks took the start of hostilities as a signal to begin the sack of Kydonies. They rushed into the shops and houses, looting them, while seizing women and children to sell them as slaves. At the same time, they carried out a general massacre of the population, and the city was set on fire. The toll of the destruction was very heavy for the Greeks. The entire magnificent city of Kydonies was destroyed, while a large part of the population was slaughtered and enslaved. Greek ships managed to rescue 5,000 refugees. After the tragic events of the 1821 destruction, and specifically from 1827 onwards, the Greeks began to return to their ancestral lands and homes in Kydonies. By 1842, the population of the city had already reached 18,000 Greeks, a number that continued to grow steadily in the following decades. At the beginning of the 20th century, the population of Kydonies was exclusively Greek again, forming a purely Orthodox Christian community. The city had once again become a vibrant center of Hellenism in Asia Minor. The Greeks had lived in Asia Minor for over 3,000 continuous years, and no one had ever driven us out. Not even the Persians themselves dared to expel us from our ancestral homes and the cities we had founded. However, the outbreak of the First World War and the crimes committed by the Young Turks and Kemal against the Christian element proved to be the death knell for Hellenism in Asia Minor. At least in theory. Because although they drove us out (temporarily), slaughtered civilians, women, and children, whenever you lift a stone, underneath it you will find an entire Greece reminding the whole world who lived there for thousands of years. In 1917, a large part of the able-bodied population, mainly young men, left Kydonies and took refuge on the opposite island of Lesvos. The Greek military presence in Kydonies began on May 29, 1919, when units of the Greek army, as part of the wider operations that followed the landing at Smyrna (early May 1919), entered the area. The goal was the liberation of the occupied Greek territories of Asia Minor. It was neither an invasion, as the lying Turks call it, nor anything evil. It was a military effort to liberate Greek cities and the Greeks who had lived there for 3,000 continuous years. However, the final blow to the Greek presence in the region came with the collapse of the Asia Minor Front in August 1922 and the disorderly retreat of the Greek army, which had tragic consequences for Kydonies as well. On August 29, 1922, the first Turkish army units entered the city, and their presence was further reinforced on September 6. This was followed by a generalized persecution of the Greek population: the men were led to Labor Battalions, destined for forced labor camps in the interior of Anatolia. Many of them were executed without trial, while only a few survived to flee to Lesvos together with women and children and continue from there their path into exile. The reasons for the outcome of the war were mainly political. The Great Powers did not want Greece to grow dangerously large under any circumstances. They saw that the Greeks were continuing the plan of the "Great Idea" (Megali Idea), which was the revival of Byzantium and the territories that the Greeks had always held. This sounded terrifying to the Great Powers. Thus, the Soviet Union (Russia), France (which had supported us until 1921 and then supported the Turks), Germany, Italy, Circassians, and Kurds helped Turkey, while Britain and France betrayed us. At the same time, there was a national schism in Greece, where the government, in the middle of the war, declared elections. The campaign was condemned and the dream remained half-fulfilled. But nothing is over. The best is yet to come. This I promise.
Homer Pavlos tweet mediaHomer Pavlos tweet media
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⛤Clara Suppengrün⛤ ♄⛧⚸☿☩☥ أُعيد تغريده
Dr Phoxotic
Dr Phoxotic@Phoxotic·
Anybody else feel kinda bad for the actor? I mean he could give the best acting performance of all time but the casting is just so bad that it won't matter at all lmao. It'd be like casting Al Pacino as MLK. Acting would probably be great but it's just not gonna work lol.
Severus@SeverusChud

Whoever let this happen is downright evil

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Homer Pavlos
Homer Pavlos@HomerPavlos·
Many Greek Christians, in Constantinople and Crete, pretended to be Muslims in order to avoid torture, rape and death but in reality remained Christians. They dressed like the Turks, accepted circumcision, prayed in the mosque, and observed all the other religious customs of the Turks. Inside their homes, however, they kept icons of Christian saints and performed the services of their true faith, with the help of crypto-Christian priests who simultaneously wore the attire of dervishes. These crypto-Christians formed distinct communities among the Turks and married among themselves, thus preserving their national homogeneity as well. In 1570–71, Cyprus was subjugated by the Muslim Turks, and many Greeks were forcibly converted to Islam. However, many of them became "crypto-Christians" and even acquired the nickname "linovamvakoi," meaning made of linen and cotton, since they had a dual conscience and dual faith. The most "spectacular" execution for the Muslim Turks was the dismemberment of the victim and the public display of the severed limbs. Muslims would tie them up and either bisect them into two pieces or cut them into many small pieces. This was their favorite torture, apart from flaying the skin while alive or impaling (staking). It was carried out publicly and given a festive character. When, toward the end of the 15th century, the Turks defeated the Venetians in the Peloponnese, they captured 500 prisoners and sent them to the City (Constantinople). There, they bisected all of them. Many times, Christian captives were placed in front of cannons that were fired, and they were turned into human rags of flesh. In other cases, they were tied to galleys that sailed in opposite directions and were torn apart. Dismemberment of victims was also carried out with horses, as in Western Europe. But the Turks surpassed the Europeans in barbarity, since they displayed the pieces of the victim on scaffolds and trees.
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Homer Pavlos@HomerPavlos

In 1822, Muslim Turks captured two Greek Christian women in Naousa. They smeared them with honey on the head and tied them exposed, so as to receive the stings of wasps and of passersby. The wife of Zafeirakis was then built into the wall up to the neck in the church of Hagia Sophia in Thessaloniki. She was left there for days for the entertainment of the wild mob that went there cursing and hitting her head with sticks as it protruded from the wall. She did not back down for a moment, strengthened until her last breath by prayer, and she never abandoned her Christian faith. Her martyrdom lasted five days. A passing gypsy woman, to hasten her end, threw a large stone at her, and thus the blessed one delivered her heroic soul into the hands of God, Whom she did not deny. The lifeless bodies of all these holy women ended up in the sea. The other woman, Maria, refused to change her faith, and for this Ebub Lubut enclosed her in a sack with deadly snakes, where she was martyred. The historian Eustathios Stougiannakis writes: "The acute venom diffused into the veins of the martyr from the bites, however, killed her in sweet lethargy, praying until the last moment for her executioners and invoking the Most High and the Virgin." And Pouqueville describes in the darkest colors to the civilized world the dramatic scenes he saw with his own eyes there: "Many women naked were put up to the neck in sacks with cats, snakes, and mice…"

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CAN BEBİĆ
CAN BEBİĆ@canbebich·
@mithras776 Most of the modern Greek population didn't speak Greek two generations ago. Most of your people are Albanian, Vlach, and Christian from Konya/Karaman. So you are not ancient Greeks. LOL. Keep deceiving yourself. 😂
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⛤Clara Suppengrün⛤ ♄⛧⚸☿☩☥
There are two levels to this. At first, the child would be Greek only in a cultural sense, but would then become biologically Greek if it stayed there and had children with other Greeks. In Greece, citizenship is granted by ius sanguinis, and that is a good thing. We are an ancient European people, not a melting pot like France, the UK, or the USA. There is nothing wrong with that. The fact that we incorporate other ethnic groups to a certain extent (through marriage, adoption, etc.) is not a bad thing, but it should remain at that level if we wish to continue to exist as a culture.
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Yango Kalamaris
Yango Kalamaris@YangoKalamaris·
@mithras776 I am afraid I disagree. If I adopted a black African child and raised it as a Greek, they would be Greek. Anything else is romantic, or worse, dangerous.
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⛤Clara Suppengrün⛤ ♄⛧⚸☿☩☥
I strongly disagree with that. Cultural and biological origins are inextricably linked. For this reason, modern DNA research plays a very significant role in reinforcing and validating cultural narratives. Even if there are no “races” in the classical sense, there is still a common biological ancestry among tribes, peoples, and nations. Let’s not confuse the two.
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Yango Kalamaris
Yango Kalamaris@YangoKalamaris·
@mithras776 DNA shouldn’t even matter. Cultural heritage has nothing to do with purebred races, as they don’t exist.
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