(October 9, 2011 at 7:50 pm)popeyespappy Wrote:(October 9, 2011 at 6:12 pm)Rhythm Wrote: Fellas, turkish girls are awesome, and they just love John Q Whitey and his army uniform. I have pics Mehmet, maybe we've visited the same places? I probably have a few illegitimate red haired turkish children running around. By the by, the folks in turkey seemed very nice, nothing like this chest puffing douche.
(what can I say, poisoning the genetic well with mic blood everywhere I go)
Sinop? Izmir?
Quote:Fellas, turkish girls are awesome, and they just love John Q Whitey and his army uniform. I have pics Mehmet, maybe we've visited the same places? I probably have a few illegitimate red haired turkish children running around. By the by, the folks in turkey seemed very nice, nothing like this chest puffing douche.The İncirlik air base? I never went to Adana. And besides, I'm kinda unsure that they would even come near you with that neanderthal look you have going there.
(what can I say, poisoning the genetic well with mic blood everywhere I go)
Not to mention that even the girls here are chest puffing douches.
I attend rallies of turkists at the 3th of may, and I see a lot of them, doing our trademark gesture, the grey wolf.
Quote:Yes I have, I spent my teenage years in a neighbourhood with a lot of people of especialy Greek and Syrian descent.However, blood is not a piece of clothing that you throw away.
Culture and language are like clothes, you can change them quite easily and people change their culture all the time.
And for that matter, I can tell you that there were turkish speaking greeks in Turkey, yet even though they didn't know how to speak greek, they still used the greek alphabet, referred to themselves as greeks, married only amongst their own, and were christians, not muslims.
It was almost too easy to distinguish them from the local Turkish population(in my native Konya region, especially Karaman), since they didn't dress like Turks, did eat pork, and did not even circumcize their young, like all Turks do. But they spoke only Turkish. Those were luckily sent along with the other greeks during the population exchange.
Even if you do not speak your own language anymore, you still do actually retain knowledge about who you really are. Those turcophone greeks have not forgotten who they were, and are now some of the leading nationalists in Greece.
It's not to say that some of the descendants of the early order(as the late order only had native muslims in it, not converts) of the janissaries didn't survive until now, but after years of marrying only Turkish locals, I'm sure their original bloodline has been snuffed out fairly enough.
I still maintain my position that the majority of this country is compromised from the descendants of the original Oghuz Turks, and the supplementary Kipchaks, and other Turks such as Uyghurs who came to this country after the republic was founded.
Quote:Sinop? Izmir?I did live in Izmir for like 7 years, although I was un-fortunate enough to be born in Istanbul. Izmir's a nice town, but we lived in a not-so nice neighborhood.
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