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America Hijacked [Multiple Texts]
The State.com ^
| 1/25/2003
| N/A
Posted on 01/25/2003 11:44:03 AM PST by a_Turk
Here's an example which shows just the tip of the iceberg of how the USA has been hijacked by foreign interests sworn to hate Turks. When this happens in other countries and the target is America, then that's not alright.. I submit that this behavior all together is cowardly and wrong, and should not be tolerated by any government entity, let alone be bowed to..
Here is a sample of what goes on everywhere in the USA by now, even this forum is rife with examples of this devious behavior of those who would like to live in you like a symbiant and have you act out their dastardly agenda even if it meant your destruction.
Part 1 - An excerpt from the State of the State address of Governor Sanford of South Carolina
Mr. Speaker, Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen of the General Assembly, Constitutional Officers, My fellow South Carolinians:
Its an honor to be with you tonight and I would say before I begin that the last few months have been an amazing voyage for our family. While I am in the process of recognizing people, I would like say that no one has played a larger role in this personal voyage than my wife Jenny, South Carolinas new first lady. I would ask that you recognize and welcome her as well.
Snip..
I want to repeat this; my hands are tied right now monetarily, so Im not here tonight asking for new programs, but for new tools. The transforming effect of new tools on government could be told with a thousand examples, but heres one Ataturk. Ataturk emerged as the national liberator of the Turks at the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. He ended the Ottoman tradition of theocracy and dynasty and instituted a Republic system. As he described it, he moved to a system of the people. He transformed the legal and educational systems, and made similar advances in housing, manufacturing, and agriculture. His reforms were so dramatic that within the decade, gross national product increased five-fold. In the similar vein, Argentina ......
Governor Sanford was soon attacked by those who detest the friendship between the US and Turkey.
Part 2 - Governor Sanford's reference to Ataturk draws fire
Gov. Mark Sanford's praise for Ataturk brought howls of protest Thursday from those who view the founder of modern-day Turkey as the Hitler of Asia Minor.
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk was either the visionary founder of a reformed, westernized Turkey or a fascist murderer of millions of Christians in the first half of the 20th century.
Or both.
In his State of the State address Wednesday, Sanford presented Ataturk as the reformer.
To Dr. Glenn Moradian of Chapin, Ataturk was responsible for genocide.
Sanford praised Ataturk's transformation of Turkey from a theocratic dynasty to a modernized republic.
He did not mention that Ataturk is reviled by many who believe he was responsible for the systematic killing or forced relocation of millions of Greeks and Armenians, first as a military general and then as the first Turkish ruler.
Sanford "needs to do his history," said Moradian, who is of Armenian heritage. "I'm a Republican, I voted for him, but he needs to do his research. It's absolutely offensive."
Sanford spokesman Will Folks said the governor was "looking for an example of someone who affected a tremendous degree of structural reform to the benefit of his country.
"Different people are going to read history in a lot of different ways," Folks said, "and in a lot of cases, it depends on who is writing that history."
The governor should have chosen a different example, said Father Ari Metrakos, pastor of Columbia's Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church.
"I can't imagine that anyone who knew the entire history of the oppression of the Christian people of Asia Minor would hold up Ataturk as someone to be emulated," Metrakos said.
Ataturk was central to a discussion at Metrakos' church in December. A Greek woman named Sano Halo, who survived Ataturk's brutal policies, was honored by the church and by proclamations from the city, the state Senate, and then-Gov. Jim Hodges.
Halo's family and community were forced from their homes in the Pontis region of Turkey by Ataturk's forces in the 1920s. Thousands, including most of Halo's family, died as they were marched across the country.
Metrakos said he is willing to believe Sanford must only be familiar with Ataturk's transforming Turkey into a modern secular state.
Others were less forgiving.
S.C. Democratic Party chairman Dick Harpootlian, who is of Armenian descent, said he was offended by Sanford's speech.
"Ataturk, to the people of Greek and Armenian heritage, was like Hitler was for the Jews," Harpootlian said. "In 'Mein Kampf,' Hitler says the Turks had the right idea with the Armenian Christians, they just weren't efficient with it."
Calling Ataturk "an administrative genius and a land reformer would be like calling Benito Mussolini a railroad executive because he made the trains run on schedule and Hermann Goering (of Nazi Germany) an art collector without recognizing what they did that was dark and evil," said Walter Karabian, a California attorney and leader of the Armenian-American community.
The Turkish government denies there was a genocidal slaughter of Greek and Armenian Christians living in Turkey. It was an era of great unrest in the country, as the Ottoman Empire was falling and young Turkish leaders, like Ataturk, were coming to power.
"It is not unusual, but it is a little overreaching for Greeks to criticize Ataturk," said Cem Saydam, a Clemson University graduate and a professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, who is of Turkish descent.
As for Armenians, Saydam said Ataturk was not involved and Turkey denies any claim of genocide. "It was an inter-communal war, which they started," Saydam said of the Armenians.
Turkey believes Armenians living in Turkey joined with invading armies of czarist Russia to battle the government in Istanbul.
"To a large extent, it's pretty childish" for Armenians to criticize Ataturk, Saydam said, "but they're pretty consistent in their approach."
It's not the first time Sanford has upset an ethnic community. During last year's gubernatorial campaign, he apologized for offending Jews who were upset that he referred to his time working on the family farm as a "concentration camp for boys."
Now what's a poor Governor to do? Sell out a friend, of course, no matter what the actual truth of the matter.
Part 3 - Sanford sends apology for praise of Turkish leader
Gov. Mark Sanford apologized Friday for his praise of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern-day Turkey who some say was responsible for the deaths of millions of Christians in the early 20th century.
In his State of the State address on Wednesday night, Sanford held up Ataturk as a model for the kind of governmental reform he wants to enact in South Carolina. He depicted Ataturk as a leader who transformed his country.
But Ataturk is reviled by those who say he was responsible for the forced relocation and deaths of millions of Greeks and Armenians from 1915 to 1917.
Leaders in the Armenian and Greek communities were quick to pounce on the governor after his speech, with some likening Ataturk to Adolph Hitler or Benito Mussolini as a choice for a role model.
In a letter to the editor of The State newspaper that will appear Sunday, Sanford wrote:
"In the whirlwind of setting up a new office and inauguration, I tried to think of examples of structural change for my State of the State speech and thought of Ataturk. Some have taken offense for genuine reasons, others I suspect for political reasons.
"Let me simply say this. I apologize to anyone I may have offended."
The Rev. Aris Metrakos, pastor of Columbia's Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church, said Sanford called him personally Friday morning to apologize.
"I not only accept it, but appreciate his apology," Metrakos said. "It was not an intentional offense. It was a mistake. A lesser man would have said nothing. It shows he's a big man. He's a man of character."
After learning of Sanford's speech, Metrakos said the governor should have used another example.
In his letter, Sanford said, "It goes without saying I do not agree with actions of (Ataturk's) government."
He urged critics to focus on the point he was trying to make in his address.
"We need to change South Carolina's government structure," he said, calling it the key "to changing all our lives."
Sanford spokesman Will Folks said the governor would have no comment beyond the letter.
The Turkish government has long denied there was genocide of Greek and Armenian Christians as the Ottoman Empire fell and leaders such as Ataturk came to power.
"It's not unusual, but it is a little overreaching for Greeks to criticize Ataturk," said Cem Saydam, a professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte who is of Turkish descent.
It was not the first time Sanford had to make amends with an ethnic community. During last year's gubernatorial campaign, he apologized for offending Jews after he referred to his time working on the family farm as a "concentration camp for boys."
State Democratic Party chairman Dick Harpootlian, who is of Armenian descent, said Friday Sanford "obviously isn't ready for prime time."
"Is this administration going to be a series of apologies? Who's he going to offend next?"
TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News
KEYWORDS: napalminthemorning; turkey; usa; wot
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Ataturk was an honorable soldier. We regard him as the savior of our nation. Foreigners speak of him with praize and write books about him. Heads of state admire him. Truman had his portrait on his wall. Will you allow this minority, decended from survivors of an unsuccessful movement of backstabbers, select your friends?
There are many more examples I can give like this one. Would you be interested in the 3 years sentence the Armenian Terrorist Murad Topalian received from a US court, inspite of his complicity in terror attacks which killed dozens of Turkish diplomats and their families?
I watch with sadness how a small group of hyphenated Americans is ruining a once excellent friendship. Is it too late to turn it around?
1
posted on
01/25/2003 11:44:04 AM PST
by
a_Turk
To: 11B3; 2Trievers; alethia; AM2000; another cricket; Archie Bunker on steroids; Fiddlstix; ...
ping..
2
posted on
01/25/2003 11:45:20 AM PST
by
a_Turk
(The price of oil is always high.. Question is who pays it.)
To: a_Turk
I don't know. I just don't know.
3
posted on
01/25/2003 11:58:11 AM PST
by
Sparta
(Statism is a mental illness)
To: a_Turk
It seems a lot of the anger came from the victims and heirs of victims of the genocides of early 20th century.
Some of us simply dont know the details here:
Historically speaking, did Ataturk have anything to do with teh Armenian genocide by Turkish/Ottoman Govt of 1915-1919 that killed 2 million Christian Armenians?
4
posted on
01/25/2003 12:35:26 PM PST
by
WOSG
To: WOSG
Ataturk wasn't in control of the country then. I recall reading somewhere that he commanded a Turkish military unit involved in the killings, though. The supposedly "moderate" Muslims of Turkey have nevertheless indulged in a systematic ethnic cleansing campaign from the 1920s onward. A wholesale massacre of the largely Greek and Armenian Christian Orthodox population of Smyrna was carried out in 1922, for example. The Greek and Armenian Christian (and Turkish Christians) population has been reduced to a tiny fraction of what it once was. Srda Trifkovic has given this issue some coverage in the following article:
http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/News/Trifkovic/NewsST060502.html
To: a_Turk
Look, its not either-or. People are not unalloyed creatures.
We are rise out of a specific time and place, all of us are shaped and molded by the times, and the culture we were born into.
Some few of us then manage to go beyond those limitations, to see a little further than the others see, and of those few, an even smaller number manage to act on what they see.
I love and admire my country, as the world's greatest moral experiment. I reject the criticisms of her enemies. But that doesn't change the fact that we obliterated the native tribes in our march west. And the fact that we did so does not change the great moral experiment that was going on in parallel.
People are not plaster saints. They do what they think is right, in the moment they have on this earth.
It is entirely possible for us to admire the courage of the US Cavalry, while recognizing that 19th century attitudes and tactics are not our own. And that they were often sent into battle by men who were their moral inferiors. Some of the great Indian Wars were caused by the natural clash of civilizations, as two completely different cultures competed for the same land. And several of the wars resulted directly from political corruption as crooked politicians saw an opportunity to profit by the Indian's misery.
Similarly, it is possible to see the Armenian genocide as one of the great crimes in history, perhaps right up there alongside some of the Indian Wars of the old west, and still admire the Turks, and even admire Ataturk himself. If Turks still can't admit what happened to the Armenians, at the beginning of the new millenium, how was Ataturk going to see it at the twilight of the Ottoman Empire?
Similarly, I have read of the absolute slaughter of the Greeks, in the aftermath of their uprising on the Turkish mainland. It is horrifying. I know I would never want to face Turkish troops in war.
But their slaughters would soon be eclipsed, only a few years later, by German troops as they launched outward on their rampage through history.
Every country in Europe has its history of slaughter. Some of them have come to terms with it, some have simply forgotten it ever happened. The most important lesson out of the second world war is not what awful people the Germans were, but that even the Germans, the most advanced people in Europe, were vulnerable to be drawn into evil.
Evil is not only committed by evil people. Evil is often committed by otherwise good people who do not see what they do.
We can't completely absolve our ancestors of their crimes, because even in those times there were people who saw it for what it was, there were people even then who knew it was wrong. But we also have to recognize that this is the human condition. We are not only the sum of our crimes. We are also the sum of those rare souls who are able to see a little farther than the rest, and have the courage to act on it.
Ataturk was a great man. He was also a human being. God will judge him as God will judge us all. The Turks have earned a reputation as solid people, brave and honorable, and absolutely fearsome in war.
If Turks want to study the American Old West, and mainly the Indian Wars, you will find an era that is absolutely fascinating, and full of endless examples of courage, and common people facing uncommon challenges. You will also find episodes that will bring tears to your eyes, and make you ashamed for us. There are two sides to this story. There are even two sides to the Indian's story, as they are also human, and they are also not plaster saints. But history is made up of the actions of human beings, not saints. Thats why its so fascinating.
6
posted on
01/25/2003 1:05:42 PM PST
by
marron
To: a_Turk
Thank you for the ping. Turkey is our friend -- bump!
7
posted on
01/25/2003 1:17:52 PM PST
by
ellery
To: a_Turk
But Ataturk is reviled by those who say he was responsible for the forced relocation and deaths of millions of Greeks and Armenians from 1915 to 1917.This is indeed when the greatest offenses occured, but Ataturk was not in power then! I believe that Ataturk can be held responsible for depravations against Armenians that occured later, but these were under much more "colored" cirsumstances, including a revolt by the Armenians (in an attempt to establish an idependent state) and collusion with Russian forces attempting to fragment the Turkish state.
IOW my take is "both and". Ataturk was involved in the trailing end of a long genocidal campaign against Armenians (which the Turks would do best, even it terms of their own interests, to acknowledge) and he was a great man, one of the worlds all-time most skilled and accomplished leaders, who transformed the homeland of an ancient Islamic empire into a modern, liberal, democratic state.
8
posted on
01/25/2003 1:41:46 PM PST
by
Stultis
To: WOSG
>>killed 2 million Christian
Where the hell do you people get your numbers? Why not just make it 10 million? 10 million, sounds good..
9
posted on
01/25/2003 1:51:49 PM PST
by
a_Turk
(The price of oil is always high.. Question is who pays it.)
To: Bogolyubski
There were population exchanges between Turkey and neighboring countries where millions of people were exchanged. So what?
10
posted on
01/25/2003 1:53:13 PM PST
by
a_Turk
(The price of oil is always high.. Question is who pays it.)
To: Stultis
What Ataturk was or wasn't. I suppose is secondary to what I wanted to convey here. There is a group among you, increasingly assertive and successful, who wants to see the US and Turkey at odds. Their motto: Turkey the Great Satan. It's seeping into your kids school books. Just like the group among Arabs who teach US hate in their madrassahs. What's going to be done about this?
If you folks feel that one is ok, then the other should be just as ok.
11
posted on
01/25/2003 1:59:13 PM PST
by
a_Turk
(The price of oil is always high.. Question is who pays it.)
To: a_Turk
Mustafa Kamel fought a great battle against the ANZACS, saving the Ottoman Empire in WWI. I don't know as much as I would like to from the history of Turkey, but I greatly admire him for the amazing victory he achieved.
To: Stultis
I know in the first few years of the 20th centuries the Ottoman Empire (under the theocratic rulers Mustafa Kamel overthrew)commited genocide on a number of people who call themselves Syrics or Syrans (not to be confused with the people of Syria). Now their remnants are scattered throughout Europe and West Asia.
To: a_Turk
There is a group among you, increasingly assertive and successful, who wants to see the US and Turkey at odds.I'm not aware of any specific anti-Turkish movement over here, other than some Armenians and Greek Orthodox who go into the standard political correctness rant any time something positive is said about Ataturk. Turkey is widely percieved favorably in America as bulwark of liberal values on the NATO front lines. There do remain, among the general American public, stereotypes about Turkish political corruption, but then these are (however unfortunately) fairly well warranted.
14
posted on
01/25/2003 2:17:37 PM PST
by
Stultis
To: Stultis; a_Turk
I agree. I am unaware of any anti-Turk movement. I live in California, where much of the Armenian diaspora wound up. The Armenians I know are salt-of-the-earth... but they don't talk about it. Its not a subject for normal conversation.
Americans hold no grudges against Germans, or Japanese either, and they killed plenty of us. We don't hold grudges.
What we do, though, is we know who our friends are. In recent years, that means tensions are rising between us and our Euro ex-friends, especially in the aftermath of 9/11. You live in the US, I believe, so you must have noticed that, aside from the left, we have been very shaken by what happened. Not by the attack, mind you, but by the sight of seeing our friends side against us.
For that we are angry, and getting madder.
But we noticed who was still at our side, and who didn't take the opportunity to take a slap at us. The Turks are front and center. So people who never gave Turkey a second thought are suddenly very pro-Turk. You see people all over this website talking about the new alliance between us and the Turks, and the Russians, and the Indians...
All that may be hyperbole, but the sentiment behind it is real, and it is rooted in appreciation. We are looking to see who our friends are, and they aren't many. But we appreciate the people who stand with us.
15
posted on
01/25/2003 2:33:50 PM PST
by
marron
To: a_Turk
Food for thought. Sad to read this about Ataturk.
I had an interesting discussion once with an Austria man, about their president at the time, Kurt Waldheim. Waldheim was also a former general secretary of the UN, but a big stink was suddenly being raised about him turning out to have worked in military intelligence during the war.
The Austrian's (wise) remark: "You have to look pretty hard to find an old man in Europe without some blood on his hands."
To: Stultis; a_Turk
I'm not aware of any specific anti-Turkish movement over here,
I would'nt be so sure of that. The Turks have been fighting Radical Islamists,communist rebels,facing a wonderful neighbor "Syria" that stirrs up dissent. When things happen in Turkey its not Broadcast out so the world can see whats going on in the frontier areas. If it is, normally the Turks are made out to be the villan. Liberal Bias perhaps? Or did too many Communist get killed that day so it deserved to be in the paper?
17
posted on
01/25/2003 3:21:59 PM PST
by
Madcelt
(tis better to starve free, than live a fat slave!-Aesop)
To: Madcelt
Oh, yeah, it goes without saying that the communists, and much of the rest of the left, will attack and villify any liberal, capitalistic government, or any civil society, that is in conflict with barbarism, despotism, or violent insurrection. That's not particular to the Turks, but the fact that they have far and away the most progressive government in the Arab/Muslim religion (yeah, I know they aren't arabs) means that the so-called "progressives" are going to constantly be on their case (while licking blood off the jack-boots of the thugs within and across their borders).
18
posted on
01/25/2003 6:03:55 PM PST
by
Stultis
To: Stultis
the so-called "progressives" are going to constantly be on their case (while licking blood off the jack-boots of the thugs within and across their borders). did ya have to bring up A.N.S.W.E.R.? Did ya?
19
posted on
01/25/2003 6:14:05 PM PST
by
Madcelt
(tis better to starve free, than live a fat slave!-Aesop)
To: a_Turk
Go to this web site:
http://www.armenian-genocide.org/
And read the FAQ:
http://www.armenian-genocide.org/genocidefaq.htm#How%20many
How many people died in the Armenian Genocide?
It is estimated that one and a half million Armenians perished between 1915 and 1923. There were an estimated two million Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire on the eve of W.W.I. Well over a million were deported in 1915. Hundreds of thousands were butchered outright. Many others died of starvation, exhaustion, and epidemics which ravaged the concentration camps. Among the Armenians living along the periphery of the Ottoman Empire many at first escaped the fate of their countrymen in the central provinces of Turkey. Tens of thousands in the east fled to the Russian border to lead a precarious existence as refugees. The majority of the Armenians in Constantinople, the capital city, were spared deportation. In 1918, however, the Young Turk regime took the war into the Caucasus, where approximately 1,800,000 Armenians lived under Russian dominion. Ottoman forces advancing through East Armenia and Azerbaijan here too engaged in systematic massacres. The expulsions and massacres carried by the Nationalist Turks between 1920 and 1922 added tens of thousands of more victims. By 1923 the entire landmass of Asia Minor and historic West Armenia had been expunged of its Armenian population. The destruction of the Armenian communities in this part of the world was total.
NOTE: THE IRAQI DESTRUCTION OF KURDS (ABOUT 1/2-1 MILLION) BY SADDAM'S REGIME IN 1980s IN THEIR "ANFAL CAMPAIGN" ALSO CLASSIFIES AS A CLASSIC GENOCIDE
20
posted on
01/25/2003 6:44:42 PM PST
by
WOSG
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