
Johnny
5.3K posts


@tutuzauuau @AlbanMlar98391 @ShefqetFejzo11 The question is, why so many turks live in Germany? I thought you were the best nation ever and ruled so many countries? But the true is, you are not better than countries like Romania and Albania.
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@AlbanMlar98391 @ShefqetFejzo11 You would pay money to live in Germany 🤣🤣🤣🤣
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@st0wb3tty30750 @ApollHyperborea So Turkey is not so big and great like I always head from some people?
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@ApollHyperborea Because with the current life standarts in Turkey it’s almost impossible to live as a normal human being
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Warum leben eigentlich alle türkischen Patrioten in westeuropäischen Ländern?

altai@AltaiSchizo
@ApollHyperborea @ShivamHere_56 turks mog germans and it’s not even close
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@aysekanburoglu @FootballKosovo I hope your players will think the same, so you got destroyed bei our brothers. You turks can spport Germany at the world cup.
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@FootballKosovo We are brothers; there are no opponents. It’s just going to be a peaceful game.
Wishing both teams the best of luck!
🇽🇰 🇹🇷
#WorldCup #PlayoffFinal #Kosovo #Türkiye

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@oderfora @H___L____ @baran1905_ Sanki Türkiye'nin yarısı Almanya'da yaşamıyor gibi. Türkiye'nin nesi bu kadar harika? Arnavutluk daha da iyi. Pakistan ve Bangladeş dışında, Türkleri gerçekten seven bir ülke yok.
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@H___L____ @baran1905_ Yarrak kafalı sünepe Arnavut, delikanlıysan İsviçreden ülkene dönsene. Arnavutsunuz %80'iniz İsviçrede yaşıyor, kendi ülkenizde mafyadan başka bir şey yok, failed statesiniz senden de akıl almayalım be amına koyduğum
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sırplar soykırım yapmasın diye asker gönderdik adamlara kardeş diyoruz paylaşıma bak arn*vutların Türk düşmanlığını halen çözemedim sizin burnunuzu yere sürtmek lazım
Kosovo Football 🇽🇰@FootballKosovo
Prishtina is ready… our opponents are in for a special night 💪 #KOSTUR | 🇽🇰🇹🇷
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@gsarayibnedir @shemsifcb How stupid to say. So Kosovo is bigger next time? Believe me, everybod would be happy, if Kosovo would win. Even the serbian people.
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@shemsifcb It’s opposite. Football heritage wants Türkiye, kosovo is too small to qualify. You will qualify next one insallah not this one
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@shemsifcb But the sad thing is, that the people support Kosovo, not because they are known or liked, the people just cannot stand the turks.
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@poludeo2 @shemsifcb Turkey or Kosovo? Common, this might be the only game, where Serbs would support Kosovo. I surely support them against the turks.
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@shemsifcb Of course not. What a stupid question to ask.
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@JohnnyLand12 @FenerSahipkiran @heis_fede sen nasil bir Turk dusmani orospu cocugusun ya AHAHAHAHAHHHAHHAA ben de urugayli sandim
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Johnny retweetledi

@HFgmgk58193 @StaLoundina @TrollFootball An then you got fucked by the greek. Remember Valtetsi, Tripolitsa and Gerontas.
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@StaLoundina @TrollFootball Bro destroyed turks with one picture. Turks remembered the beating from the greek heroes during the greek independence war.
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@FenerSahipkiran @heis_fede This says nothing. Uruguay still much better.
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@jobjob91981155 @snkguzman For me they are all french. I see no difference between Dembele and Griezmann or Mbappe and Rabiot.
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@JohnnyLand12 @snkguzman It’s obvious they’re not French. Would you, at first glance, think these people are French? You’d assume they’re African, right? That’s the answer.
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@bosunatiklama Hassiktir. O zaman Sobieski geri döndü. 1683 unutmayin.
youtube.com/watch?v=CxlRJs…

YouTube
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@Adh1tya @vcatalina96 Bayern has no classic rival in Germany. The rival always depends on which team is the second best at that time.
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@vcatalina96 And those two teams are the classic rival in their league!
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Ottmar Hitzfeld is the only coach to win the UCL with two teams from the same league.

🥷🏻@wirtzszn_
What’s a stat that sounds fake but is 100% true?
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Johnny retweetledi

There is a genre of October 7 commentary that works by constructing a historical arc so compressed and so selective that the conclusion becomes inevitable. A people wronged, hemmed in, their world dismantled across generations. Rage follows. What else would you expect?
The history offered in support of this arc is not really history. It begins where it needs to begin, omits what complicates it, and arrives at a destination that was chosen before the argument started.
The Arab population of Mandatory Palestine never held sovereignty that was taken from them. There was no state. A significant portion immigrated to the land only in the 19th and early 20th centuries. The land passed from Ottoman to British control, and two national movements competed within that framework. One of them, the Jewish national movement, was not a colonial project arriving from outside. Jewish communities had existed without interruption in Jerusalem, Hebron, Safed, Gaza, Tiberias, the Galilee and elsewhere, through centuries of pre-modern colonial empires, Roman, Byzantine, several Arab Caliphates, the Crusaders, and Ottoman, and long before any of them emerged.
The Zionist movement was a national liberation movement of a people with three thousand years of documented connection to that land, rejecting the exile that was imposed on many of them, and building upon a presence that had never left.
The other national movement, the Arab Palestinian one, crystallised largely in reaction to Zionism rather than predating it, which is why the sovereign state being projected backwards into history as ancient and continuous is itself part of the inversion, not a foundation for it. Arab leaders, who rarely called themselves Palestinians then and most of whom saw themselves as part of greater Syria, rejected partition in 1937 and again in 1947. That rejection, and the violence that accompanied it across the three decades of the Mandate period, is precisely what this genre of argument leaves out.
What does the enforcing are films like "Palestine 36," marketed as historical drama about the bloody Arab Revolt, but functioning as something closer to historical replacement. They strip Jewish indigeneity and continuity from the record, recast a people with millennia of connection to that land as recent colonial arrivals, and present the conflict as a simple story of indigenous resistance to foreign imposition.
The purpose is not to inform Western audiences about a complex national conflict. It is to recruit them to a conclusion: that Jews and Israel are an illegitimate implant in the region, that the appropriate remedy is dismantlement, and that what would follow, the imagined state from the river to the sea, would be a tolerant, secular, democratic alternative, where Jews can live in peace under their Arab Palestinian Muslim rulers, not as a national group but as a religious minority.
That last part is perhaps the most dishonest element of the entire narrative. The movements driving that agenda in the Middle East are neither democratic nor secular, and whatever secular veneer some of them maintain is precisely that, a veneer. The model being implicitly promised has no precedent among Muslim-majority states in the region, and sits in direct and unacknowledged tension with the political and religious character of the organisations whose cause these films are made to serve, like Hamas.
Without all of this, October 7 cannot be made to look like the inevitable product of accumulated injustice. It looks instead like what it was: a brutal, sadistic rampage by Arab Palestinian Islamist terrorist organisations, and the civilians who joined them, to murder, rape, and kidnap Israeli citizens, residents, and foreign nationals. No historical narrative, however artfully constructed, changes what happened that morning. It only changes who the audience is willing to hold responsible for it.
This is the genre James represents, and he is far from alone in it. It is not engagement with history. It is the use of a selective version of it to launder a conclusion that was held before the argument began.
James Melville 🚜@JamesMelville
I’ve just watched Palestine 36: So many people need a history lesson. October 7th wasn’t the start. It goes back a long long way. Imagine being a citizen to a place that lost status, sovereignty, human rights, freedom and land. And then for decades got hemmed in, encroached, destroyed and an appropriation of the land unchecked. Destinies of people who have lived there for generations completely torn up. Grief turns into rage. It would anywhere. But apparently it’s “antisemitic” to raise any concerns about this.
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Halk TV yazarı Gürel Yurttaş:
“Kenan Yıldız’ı daha ‘Türkçeyi doğru dürüst konuşamıyor, bu mu Türk’ diye linç ediyorlar.
Evet. O Türk. Çünkü milli takım seçeneği koyulduğunda ‘Türkiye’ dedi gururla.
Biz başka ülkenin formasını giyip de Türkiye'ye gol atınca sırıtanları da biliyoruz.
Örneğin Mesut Özil… Ne zamanki futbol onu bırakmış... Ne zaman ki Alman Milli Takımı'ndan dışlanmış, soluğu Türkiye'de almış.
Şimdi sorarsan en Türk o.
Orasına burasına dövmeler yaptırıp ne kadar çok Türk olduğunu kanıtlamaya çalışıyor.”


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@Alexand40817790 @RosarotePanzer Fußball ist ein Sport der Unterschicht bzw. der Migranten, aber das ist nicht stellvertretend für die gesamte französische Bevölkerung. Im Rugby sind die weißen Franzosen klar in der Überzahl.
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@RosarotePanzer Auch der Bayer dürfte sich ab und an mal ein Länderspiel mit den Les Bleus ansehen, oder?

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