German & # 8221; The Turks are a part of Germany & # 8217 ever increasing
population, but current events show how many of them, perhaps the majority,
are more loyal to Turkey that the State German or the West in general.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has recently called its & # 8221
compatriots; Germany to boycott Angela Merkel's conservative & # 8221;
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and the center-left Social Democratic
Party (SPD) and the Green Party of the Left.
Although the election has not begun by the end of September, the poll
indicated that many German & # 8221; Turks listened to someone who, for
many of them is technically a foreign leader. Over a third of respondents
in the weeks before the election said they would not vote.
In addition, Erdogan himself is popular among Turks in Germany and the
Netherlands, even after scoring the leaders of these countries as & # 8221
enemies; and & # 8221 Nazis; ([1] [2]). He also failed to stand out from
its political allies in the Turkish media that spoke of true war with
Germany and France. Millions of European & # 8221; Turks will second this
rhetoric or refuse to oppose it.
As people interested in the preservation of Western culture, we should be
deeply concerned about this and see how replicable to many other ethnic
groups in Europe, America and elsewhere. It is yet another indication that
very large community of non-Western migrants, many of them existing for
decades, are quite happy to follow the guidelines of an external power with
which they have strong blood ties or exclusive. In case of more serious
bickering between Western and non-Western or armed conflict, it seems
almost certain that millions of ethnic minorities in places like Europe
will side strongly with their non-Western countries.
A sign of things to come
Turks in Germany, many or most of them German citizens, rallied in large
numbers to Erdoğan in the past.
Since last year, Germany and several other countries, including the
Netherlands, have been quarreling with Turkey on the allegedly repressive
measures taken by President Erdoğan after a military coup attempt against
him. The Netherlands, which has a smaller proportion of ethnic Turks as
Germany, still felt a very powerful set of its Turkish population after
Erdoğan raised very nationalistic sentiments in some Dutch cities. He even
try to organize political rallies for himself on Dutch soil.
While you might think that Return Of Kings would have supported calls for a
boycott of the three German political parties that supported the open door
immigration policy that started in 2015 (or Turkey smirked causing mayhem
for Dutch government cuckservative), Erdoğan interference is very
disturbing. It may have helped a little in the killing of German Socialists
that took place last month, and therefore contributed to the
anti-alternative mass migration für Deutschland (AFD), but this was simply
a misfire of nevertheless a disturbing power of many foreign leaders
brandish now in western countries. In the future, we should expect more of
this and it will be used much more efficiently and dangerously.
The lack of many immigrants basic loyalty is clouded by economic prosperity
Frankly speaking, Germany was a job and welfare teat for many Turkish
immigrants and their descendants. Compared to the salaries and other
financial benefits they might reap their ancestral homeland, even low-end
jobs in German supermarkets and factories are much more preferable.
Millions of Turks live in Germany. In response, the authorities were
unaware of what might happen if the bubble bursts economic multicultural
keyed-up.
We have no idea about the number of immigrants would lovingly turn to their
relatives elsewhere if major economies began to fail. If unemployment in
Germany, which perpetually oscillates around 10%, doubled or tripled, would
we really expect the German multiculturalism to stand together? And if,
because of a financial crisis, the payments of social assistance had to be
cut and some ethnic communities overrepresented received less than what
they had before? Without German & # 8221; culture to keep the country
intact functionally, can we really expect positive vibes and sing-a-long?
The Turks are one of the least problematic groups in the Middle East & #
8211; So what will happen with other communities in the future?
These hordes of Syria, North African and other migrants from the Middle
East are likely to be much harder than the future in the Turkish
communities in Europe established.
For all the negative talk that I hear about Turks in Europe, they are
actually the most secular and non-fundamentalist of all major ethnic groups
in the Middle East. All who know the foundation of the Turkish Republic and
the biography of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk knew that Turkey largely avoided
political and social instability outcry that we associate with other highly
populated countries like Egypt or Iran. This strain secular, more moderate
still exists today, but in a diluted form with Erdoğan people.
Turkish nationalism is certainly a major threat to Europe, but I probably
would much better five million Turks in Germany five million Egyptians.
Hence the question: if the most secular Turkish communities are causing
these problems, what will happen with other minority communities
increasingly in the future? When the shit hits the proverbial fan, don t
say I don t ask.
Read more: Turkish leader Atatürk DEMONSTRATED terminal decline of a nation
can be reversed
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