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@NikosHawk
Λάκων στο βιοπορισμό & στα λόγια,Αλέξανδρος στις ενέργειες,Αριστοτελική σκέψη & λίγο από Πλήθωνα Γεμιστό.Έτσι φαντάζομαι τον τέλειο Ανθρωπο
Katılım Mart 2015
1.6K Takip Edilen1.9K Takipçiler
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Στη νέα λίστα της διεύρυνσης που ανακοίνωσε το ΠΑΣΟΚ συμπεριλαμβάνεται και η πρώην βουλευτής του ΜέΡΑ25 Αγγελική Αδαμοπούλου. Είναι η ίδια που έλεγε ότι «μας κουνούν το δάχτυλο αυτοί που έλεγαν ότι μαζί τα φάγαμε» και υποστήριξε ότι στις τάξεις της Ελληνικής Αστυνομίας υπάρχουν όργανα που «φορούν κουκούλες και ρίχνουν μολότοφ, για να διαλύσουν τις διαδηλώσεις». Η δήλωση αυτή προκάλεσε την αντίδραση των συνδικαλιστών της ΕΛ.ΑΣ. Συγκεκριμένα, η Ένωση Αξιωματικών Ελληνικής Αστυνομίας Κεντρικής Μακεδονίας κατέθεσε μήνυση εναντίον της για συκοφαντική δυσφήμιση.
Ελληνικά
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I’ve been seeing some public debates regarding the subject of what some call “crypto Greeks” in Turkey.
“Crypto” means hidden or secret. This term doesn’t define the vast majority of people in Turkey who have Greek ancestry or DNA.
The correct term should be “Islamized Greeks” as the vast majority of us in Turkey, whose Greek ancestors were forcibly Islamized, have no knowledge of our true history. So, these people are not “crypto Greeks” - they are descendants of forcibly Islamized Greeks. Using the correct term matters.
Also, please avoid talking about us and the predicament we are in after treating us with utter disrespect.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
English
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🇪🇸 À Barcelone, les gens installent du fil barbelé sur leurs balcons pour empêcher les faux réfugiés de squatter leurs appartements. On vit désormais comme dans une favela assiégée par l’invasion migratoire. Bienvenue en Europe 2026 : on ne peut même plus vivre chez soi sans se protéger des parasites !
Français
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I was born right into the Aegean Dispute and witnessing it firsthand. The view in this post is taken from our balcony and been seeing it since I was born, is Agathonisi/Esek Island, the northern tip of the Dodecanese Islands, which both Greece and Turkey claim sovereignty over. The video was taken on a day with poor visibility and a bad camera and even so, the islands from Ikaria to Kos (encircled in the map), a huge chunk of the Aegean, can be seen from one single point from where we live.
The situation is simply an anomaly. Some islands, like Samos and Kastellorizo, are only a few kilometres away from the Turkish mainland. This creates a huge disturbance for both countries, because the geography itself constantly feeds political, military, and psychological tension.
When looked at from Turkey, islands that are only a few kilometres away appear very “unjust” and abnormal when they are in the hands of another country whose mainland is hundreds of kilometres away. Traditionally populated islands like Agathonisi have been known as Greek islands by the community where I live. However, empty islands like Farmakonisi/Bulamac which is even much closer to where I live and famous Imia/Kardak were perceived as Turkish islands as there have been no continous permanent residents.
When looked at from Greece, the picture is completely different. The islanders see massive Turkish coastlines across the water, and these coastlines are perceived as a “threat”. The majority of these islands fall within drone, howitzer, artillery, and even mortar range of the massive Turkish Aegean Army. The traditional Greek perception of the “enemy from the north” changed after the 1950s and the Cyprus Dispute into the “enemy from the east”.
The coastlines, including where I live, have a huge number of Turkish migrants from Greece and the Balkans, known as “muhajirs”. Where I live, muhajirs are mostly from Thessaloniki, Florina, Crete, Rhodes and other islands now in Greece, southern Bulgaria, Macedonia, and Kosovo. All of them have tragic memories from the Balkan Wars and WWI, when their family members often died/murdered under the horrible conditions of war and subject to forced exile. However, there is no hatred against Greeks or revisionist ideas, no matter how painful their family history was, even though they were exiled and their towns where they lived for centuries were razed to the ground.
Unlike the popular view, revisionism in Greece is also seen mostly in toxic, anonymous social media accounts. Ultranationalists do indeed exist, but they are quite few compared to the overall situation. On our last trip to Rhodes with my family, I met an ex-special forces soldier of the Greek Army from the Cyprus War, and it turned out that he had fought directly against my mom’s uncle’s battalion at the front. After learning this, he hugged me and my children and spoiled my kids with gifts. He told that he resigned after what he had seen in the war in 74'.
Well, my two uncles and grandpa continued to serve as officers after the war and always complained that some strategic areas should have been captured, too. Yet both my uncles and my grandpa never had any hatred or negative ideas towards Greeks, even though they had also seen quite a lot on the island between 1960 and 1974 and during the war.
The biggest mistake for both countries is that, even during détente periods, the two communities were not able to develop closer relations. The Samos community in Greece and the Kusadasi community in Turkey, only a kilometre away from each other, should have had much denser relations. I have been seeing the same Greek island, Agathonisi, since I was born, right in front of our noses, but I cannot visit there, and they cannot visit here due to the lack of any transport or intercommunal projects. Over the years only a few of my friends, fisherman, ended up in jail in that island as their boats engines failed or storm pushed them there, but it was only a bureauctatic procedure and they were not treated bad. The area is full of migrant smugglers though and their situation is different upon being caught, if you know what I mean.
While the EU has been dumping millions of euros into empty projects, it has never cared to build a strong relationship between the two communities and has always pushed Turkey away. This has caused the notorious “security dilemma” that has been eating into both sides’ budgets and draining resources.
Very ironically, in the last year, there has been a record massive flow of Turkish tourists to the Greek Islands due to extremely high prices and sharply declining service quality in Turkey. This is contributing to cross-cultural dialogue, yet it is one-sided at the moment, as there are nearly no projects for both communities. Even in the 1990s, there were some minor projects that allowed both communities to visit each other, which produced nice outcomes.
Finding a political solution could have been much easier by building trust and much denser relations between both sides: the Aegean island communities and the Turkish Aegean. The geographical “anomaly” could have turned into a much softer problem that might have ended with a common agreement. Now, after years of the EU’s alienation of Turkey and the domestic political arenas on both sides, things are going downhill towards something bad. Really bad, especially if unilateral actions like expanding Greek territorial waters to 12 miles which is casus belli for Turkey officially will be enforced.
The scene in the last photo is the famous Apollon Temple from my town. The temple was the second biggest oraclein ancient Greece, built on a Karian Civilization's Shrine, which was also built on an unknown civilizations paganic shrine. Agathonisi Island is the place where Roman Emperor Ceaser was kidnapped when he was young by the pirates (and he later found and executed all of them!), where Farmakonisi Island was visited regulary by Hippocrates for the famous herbs the island, not surprisingly making the island named with the same root of the word "pharmacy".



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@PsyGuy007 Bir Türk olarak; Türkiye'nin AB üyesi olmasını istemiyorum...
AB Türkiye'yi yavaşlatır..
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