xelefdev

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xelefdev

xelefdev

@xelefdev

Making Xelef, adventure #indie game set in 19th century Kurdistan Discord: https://t.co/WmOo35jjNt Youtube: https://t.co/3tJqN6maDA

Zaxo 가입일 Mart 2025
217 팔로잉387 팔로워
xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
@VivaRevolt @theafroaussie Somaliland is also justified and shameless Najat’s 15+ ethno-nationalist Arab states should all be dismantled for the crimes committed against non-arabs.
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VivaRevolt
VivaRevolt@VivaRevolt·
Kurdistan is not the same as Somaliland. Kurdistan literally witnessed ethnic cleansing and genocides committed against Kurds because they are a different people with a different language and different culture and different ethnicities. Turkey considers itself to be an ethnostate for Turks, Syria considers itself to be an ethnostate for Sunni Arabs, Iran considers itself to be ethnostate for Iranian Twelver Shiites. These states despise the Kurds and wish that they are gone. these states resort to Turkification, Persianization, Arabization to eliminate the Kurds culturally and linguistically. No different from Israel resorting to Judaization and genocide and ethnic cleansing. Israel=Turkey, no different, however, if you consider that an ethnic group being willing to be itself means that any type of repression is justified to crush it, then I have no other words to say
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Najat
Najat@theafroaussie·
A certain enclave has used these very terms but never legally mounted a case to prove their claims, in a bid to Balkanise my country They tell any idiot who’ll listen that they’re “ethnically superior” while literally working in the capital and writing on this very app that they were victims of mass extermination because attempting to destroy a sovereign nation didn’t exactly go to plan A Kurd was literally writing paragraphs about how we Muslims are such apparent monsters and asked where I was when Takfiris were slaughtering them… LOL, what the fuck do you think was happening in our country? How exactly do you think ethnosupremacy begins? I can’t believe I’m having to explain this after three fucking years of the most documented genocide in history Like are y’all okay? Ethnostates shouldn’t exist. Ever.
VivaRevolt@VivaRevolt

@theafroaussie How is Kurdistan ethnosupremacy? Kurds are a distinct ethnic people, with a very long history and with 4 states committing genocide and ethnic cleansing to erase Kurdish existence. Israel uses similar tactics also against Palestinians.

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xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
You do not need to support Israel but if you’re a non-Arab in the MENA, especially a stateless minority you are only fanning the flames by supporting Palestine. ‘Palestine’ is just another codeword for Arab and Arab succes will only embolden more Arab fascism (see Syria).
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xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
Arabs already have 15+ states plenty of which with many non-arabs yet arabic is the only official language. Only Iraq thanks to american democracy is an exception. It is obvious that a free Palestine will only further radacalise Arabs into thinking they can oppress non-arabs.
Najat@theafroaussie

Ethnosupremacy is the gateway drug to mass extermination. Forget about Palestine, right, Karim? Is Missy Elliot coming to the Levant anytime soon? Asking for a friend 😭

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xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
@3babi99 @NenosNshemoon Their talent is wasted on a state that massacred both of them. Iraq is an ethno state forced to stay put because the US breathes down it neck. Anfal is the true face of the iraqi arab people. It wasn’t just Anfal, the oppression has been a century with Anfal as its peak.
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brimstoni
brimstoni@3babi99·
@xelefdev @NenosNshemoon There is kurds and Assyrians in the national team, keep your bs away from iraq It’s not ethno state, iraq wants kurds to stay part of it yet they want an ethno state of only Kurds, if you’re ignorant about iraq then shut the fuck up
brimstoni tweet media
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Nenos Chamany ܢܝܢܘܣ ܟܡܢܝ
Because he is Assyrian and not Muslim, Peter has been removed from Iraq's national team squad for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
Nenos Chamany ܢܝܢܘܣ ܟܡܢܝ tweet mediaNenos Chamany ܢܝܢܘܣ ܟܡܢܝ tweet media
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xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
@Julia_CaSsian Gw3 like gw1 but with jumping and big group boss events from gw2 would be the dream
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Petal
Petal@petaldairies·
Name a video game that you've easily put 1,000 hours into Gifs only!!
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xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
@YahyaDanboos Ngl lighting here looks to realistic vs the stylized textures and 3d models.
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xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
@AbuAmelia_ @Geshti_Azadi The liberation of Iraq was a special military operation, not a progrom against Arabs. It were Arabs themselves who caused most of the dead Arab civilians. The funny thing? What I stated is fact and yours are the delusion of fascist semite who wished he was as slick as an israeli.
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Shoresh Geshti
Shoresh Geshti@Geshti_Azadi·
Somebody should ask the kalb about who's been killing more Muslims, between Kurds and Iraqis. I would, but got blocked since I got ratio on his arabosupremacistic rear.
Shoresh Geshti tweet media
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xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
@zhi_ebl That’s a very random deep thought, I agree.
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Alan
Alan@zhi_ebl·
State building 101: A STATE MUST HAVE A MONOPOLY ON VIOLENCE.
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xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
@XSrodX Yes but I am not talking about just taking away militairy and political power. Being involved with foreign genociders should come at a far bigger price (outright dissolution of said clan or tribe).
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Srod
Srod@XSrodX·
@xelefdev All tribes in Kurdistan should be weakened to a point where they cannot influence streets
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Srod
Srod@XSrodX·
I have noticed that many tribal leaders in Kurdistan have recently replaced Barzani portraits in their reception halls (Diwankhana and Koçk) with portraits of figures from their own tribes. The very same people the PDK created and empowered are now challenging it!
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xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
Bush was to merciful.
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xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
@PollaGarmiany Courtesy of As-Suleymaniya and its many ‘oppossition’ parties who operate on spite against Hewlêr and Dihok.
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xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
@KurdistanWatch @Has132860499 @hishyar09205113 Maybe you should rename yourself to Kurdistan Hater. The fact you find this wild but Iraqis visiting a region they genocided less than half a century ago not says enough about you.
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Kurdistan Watch
Kurdistan Watch@KurdistanWatch·
@Has132860499 @hishyar09205113 This is not how it works. The Iraqi flag represents a much broader spectrum of people than just Shia militias. In fact, they probably don’t even like it. Additionally, the idea here is simple: not feeling that the flag is yours is completely different from disrespecting it.
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Kurdistan Watch
Kurdistan Watch@KurdistanWatch·
This is wild: K24 TV, owned by Masrour Barzani, is now running a social media campaign in support of Harda Karim, a fighter who admitted in that same interview to having deliberately concealed the Iraqi flag, while publicly framing the episode as an ethnic grievance and stoking Kurdish-Arab tensions. In the interview, he explicitly claims that everyone present wanted him to lose because “I am Kurdish”. Here is why that framing is not just wrong but dangerous, and why it matters: The issue is not the Kurdistan flag. The issue is the deliberate disrespect of the Iraqi flag. A campaign for Kurdistan flag recognition would be entirely legitimate, before the event or through a boycott. But entering the tournament under the existing framework, accepting the national listing, competing under Iraq's country designation, and then concealing the Iraqi flag is not a campaign for recognition. The real political problem runs deeper. Displaying the Kurdistan flag and disrespecting the Iraqi flag are not the same act. Conflating them is precisely what makes this episode toxic: The first builds a political case while the second insults a national symbol and then reframes the inevitable reaction as proof of oppression. Those are categorically different arguments, and mixing them poisons the legitimate one. That is why Kurdistan24's campaign is reckless, performative nationalism that does more harm than good. It takes a defensible issue, Kurdish visibility in sport, and attaches it to a bad example. It may excite an internal nationalist audience, but externally it makes the Kurdish case look immature, hostile, and unreasonable. The grievance framing becomes even weaker when Karim discusses the fight itself. In the same interview, he claimed he was treated unfairly “because I am Kurdish” and argued that his opponent was much larger than him: “Everyone knows that my opponent was much larger than me. He weighed more, he was taller, and you can see that in the video where we are standing next to each other. In no way did I lose that fight.” But PFL’s official weigh-in results cut against that claim. Ahmed El Sisy weighed in at 154.4 lbs, while Harda Karim weighed in at 155.6 lbs. Karim may have faced a taller opponent with a longer frame, but the official weigh-in does not support the claim that El Sisy weighed more. This matters because fabricating grievances to construct an ethnic victimhood narrative does not strengthen the Kurdish cause, it corrodes it. There are real, well-documented Kurdish grievances that deserve serious attention. Inflating a personal sporting dispute into an ethnic conflict, using claims that are demonstrably false, undermines the credibility of those legitimate arguments. The Kurdish cause does not need manufactured grievances when plenty of real ones already exist.
Kurdistan Watch tweet mediaKurdistan Watch tweet media
Kurdistan Watch@KurdistanWatch

An Iraqi Kurdish fighter’s appearance at the PFL MENA 9: Pride of Arabia tournament in Dubai has sparked controversy after he appeared to conceal the Iraqi flag on his shorts and then raised only the Kurdistan flag. The fighter, Harda Karim, was competing in an event framed around Arab and regional soft power. Many Iraqis view the act as disrespect toward the flag of the country he was meant to represent. In symbolic politics, perception matters. The deeper issue is that this conduct is both wrong and increasingly normalised in Kurdistan, where much of the Kurdish media ecosystem often openly celebrates such incidents. Had Karim raised the Kurdistan flag alongside the Iraqi flag, the gesture would have been easy to defend. It would have expressed Kurdish pride without affronting a symbol that millions of Iraqis hold sacred. Sport can be a potent vehicle of soft power. A Kurdish fighter from Iraq competing in Dubai could have improved how Kurds are perceived by Arab audiences. Instead, the story became one of a Kurdish athlete appearing to not just reject the Iraqi flag on an Arab stage but disrespect it. The symbolism worsened after Karim lost to Egyptian fighter Ahmed El Sisy, who then raised the Iraqi flag himself. Whether one approves of that gesture or not, its narrative effect was obvious. It allowed the controversy to be framed as an Egyptian showing more respect for Iraq than an Iraqi Kurd. For Kurdish public image, that is a very damaging optic. This is where the deeper problem lies. Parts of the Kurdish media and social-media ecosystem increasingly promote a performative nationalism that mistakes provocation for strength. In that worldview, disrespecting the Iraqi flag is treated as an act of courage. In practice, it achieves the opposite. It does not strengthen Kurdistan; it deepens many Iraqis’ suspicion of Kurdish intentions. This matters because popular culture often shapes public attitudes more quickly than politics does. A sporting moment can become a political symbol within hours. Once an image spreads, it shapes how communities view one another.

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xelefdev
xelefdev@xelefdev·
@HyaPublic @diiyyaa01 We fought against Arabs, Iraqi Arabs specifically. It wasn’t Saddam who lived in the home stolen from my family but a ‘regular’ Arab who could have been anyone’s neighbour. Only on gunpoint did he surrender what he stole from my family! May Allah swt humiliate Iraq forever.
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Hya
Hya@HyaPublic·
@diiyyaa01 Sorry I shouldn't have said "gives". But you say you fought, against who? The dictator saddam or the Iraqi state and why do you feel you're a Kurd in spite of Iraq not within it?
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