@AtakanBalo35725 @radikalgoz @ConflictTR You’re becoming more Kurdish everyday 😁 soon you’ll sing all the Kurdish songs and speak the Kurdish language and call it yours. It’s ok, that’s the goal 🤣🤣
@ConflictTR At this point, they hate Kurds so obsessively they’re on track to become more Kurdish than Kurds themselves. Turkey soon will be a Kurdish-cultured state. 😁
@diyarkurda@USAMBTurkiye@namo_abdulla Ama chya mqabalai akan Qsa lasar Kurd bka. Shart nya har kasektan bini blen rat chya lasar flan babaty Kurd bataybaty ka azann aw kasa dzha Kurda. Hamu Kurdek azane Tom Barack ray chya lasar Kurd w Dawlaty Kurdi, bo duzhmni blaw akanawa awanayka haryan bkan leman.
@usengecco@ilhank@ishiitakaaki You’ve done it. You cracked the code. The real mastermind behind modern politics was Marco Polo all along. Because a medieval traveler was secretly a modern Turkish nationalist with a personal agenda.
@ClsnMemed@ilhank@ishiitakaaki So Kurds existing on Kurdish land is “colonial,” but Turkish control over everyone else is normal? Your logic is as broken as your politics.
@ilhank@ishiitakaaki In The Travels of Marco Polo, Book I, chapter “Of the Province called Turkomania,” he calls them “a rude people, and dull of intellect.” So if you want to treat his insults as historical proof, you also have to accept his insults about yourself.
@Glse23784023439@ishiitakaaki Thanks for proving it was never about history, just conquest. “The owners are Turks” is not an argument, it is colonial language.
@BraunKamel@ishiitakaaki Thank you for proving this was never about facts. The moment your Marco Polo point collapsed, you switched to “but Turks built empires.” Empire building is not evidence against Kurdish existence. It is just nationalism trying to cosplay as history
In that same book, Marco Polo, The Travels of Marco Polo, Book I, on “The Province called Turkomania.” On chapter III. The passage says the Turkomans are “a rude people, and dull of intellect.”
Funny how you trust Marco Polo’s prejudice about Kurds, but ignore that he also described Turkomans as “a rude people, and dull of intellect.” So which is it, are his insults all history now, or only the ones you like?
In that same book, Marco Polo, The Travels of Marco Polo, Book I, on “The Province called Turkomania.” On chapter III. The passage says the Turkomans are “a rude people, and dull of intellect.”
Funny how you trust Marco Polo���s prejudice about Kurds, but ignore that he also described Turkomans as “a rude people, and dull of intellect.” So which is it, are his insults all history now, or only the ones you like?