Is there really any need for that stupid song and music at the start ?
Andrew Jacksonsays
Yes, there is a need. Poking fun at the false religious ideology called “Islam” is a good way to help us “infidels” understand why Islam should must be outlawed throughout Christian nations.
gravenimagesays
George, this is a parody of the song “One Tin Soldier” with anti-Jihad lyrics. Why would you think that criticism of Jihad is “stupid”?
࿗Infidel࿘says
I see what Andrew & Graven are saying, but I skipped that song while watching: somehow, the singing that Hatun produces makes me cringe, sorry
billsays
I think it is really odd that the Jews and the Christians keep praying to god to protect them, even though for a couple of thousand years ( longer in the Jew’s history) their ‘god’ has conspicuously failed to do so. In spite of the ‘fact’ that ‘he’ is described as omnipotent.
born saturdaysays
nobody is talking about armenia because anyone who talks about armenia on the internet is censored and silenced from all social media!!!!!
FREEDOM TO ARMENIA!!!
࿗Infidel࿘says
On the Western side, reason no one is talking about Armenia is that to them, Russia, rather than Turkey, is the enemy. Never mind that Russia has just done an agreement b/w Syria, Turkey & Iran, leaving Armenia in the lurch
And on the other side, both Russia & China have picked the muslim side for mercenary reasons. In fact, Russia has even upgraded its relations w/ Pakistan, something never done before b’cos they’d give India high importance. But they’ve realized that they can’t pry India out of Quad w/o taking their side vs China vis a vis Ladakh, which they won’t do: Russian maps recognize Indian claims on Pak-occupied Kashmir, but not Chinese-occupied Ladakh
Good point that Turkey is 99% Muslim due to the extermination of Christians, and that it’s happening right now in Nigeria.
People are falling for the lies… 🙁
OLD GUYsays
God has given us the tools to protect ourselves, we just need the will to do so.
gravenimagesays
Spot on. OLD GUY.
࿗Infidel࿘says
Just watched the video right now. Quite a few takeaways
In answer to Hatun’s first question about who were the Ottomans & where they came from, a naughty side of me wanted to point her to that Turkish teleseries “Diriliş: Ertuğrul”, which covers the story of the father of Osman, the founder of the dynasty. Since she is a native Turkish speaker, it should be easy for her to follow 😈
The description of the devshirmes/janissaries is one of the reasons why in India, the Rajputs would have their women & kids self-immolate when a city fell to muslim jihadists, while their men rushed out to a fight to the death. As RS describes, it was a crime against humanity. I found it funny when I saw that only 10% of Turkey’s citizens are ethnic Turks, given the racist overtones of Erdogan’s regime and its attempts to get together w/ the ex-stans
On the issue of Turkey being the state of the Turks, there’s one thing that RS forgot to mention: the “Organization of Turkic States”. This is an ethnic based organization of Turkic countries – Turkey, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan & Uzbekistan. Turkmenistan is an observer, along w/ Hungary and the renagade state of “Northern Cyprus”. It’s not just Armenia that’s interrupting this Turkic empire from the Aegean Sea to the western tip of Mongolia: Iran is there as well. If the current islamic regime in Teheran fell, then it’s pretty likely that Turkey would try to resurrect the Seljuq empire (which included Iran) in the same way that they moved against the Kurds in Iraq & Syria. I do think it’s sad how the world has abandoned Armenia
Incidentally, under Viktor Orban, Hungary has been pretty close to the Turkic states, even supporting Azerbaijan against Armenia. It’s not at all clear that Hungarians have negative views about the Turks. I didn’t get what RS meant when he said that there was an Egypt but not a Greece. Since the Treaty of Westphalia was a modern event, states that existed then were not in the same make-up: today’s Egypt has no political relations w/ the Egypt of Ramses or Cleopatra, and today’s Greece has no political relationship w/ the Greece where Peisistratos or Pericles ran the show. The reason Turkey can tolerate the independence of Egypt (for now) but not Greece is that Egypt is a muslim country, while Greece ain’t
I do look forward to the book on the Byzantines. The Ottomans, not so much: actually, other Turkic empires conquered more land, killed more people than the Ottomans did – the Timurides, the Seljuqs, the Ghaznavids & so on. Essentially, the Ottoman story is the sad story of how the Greeks lost Anatolia
Sukabumi JoJosays
In response to your remark ‘I didn’t get what RS meant when he said that there was an Egypt but not a Greece’:
What Mr. Spencer was saying (if you ask me) is that there was a unified state called Egypt, all the way from the faraos into the Greek occupation (Alexander the Great) and its conquest by the mohamedans, but no unified state called Greece (as we know it), because before Greece was conquered, first there were the ‘polises’, the city states; in (pre- and)Homeric times: Sparta, Mycene, Epidaurus, etc.. Homer calls (some of) the Greeks ‘Achaians’: that’s an area on the north of the Peloponesos, I understand, and (perhaps later on, I’m not sure) Macedonia (home of Alexander the Great), for example.
Further on in history, after the split of the Roman Empire and the demise of the Western Roman Empire, there was the Eastern Roman Empire, covering a lot more than Greece ‘stricto sensu’, such as Western ‘Turkey’, a large part of Anatolia (I haven’t yet found out yet whether that includes all of Anatolia, that’s why I say ‘a large part’), large parts of ‘Eastern’ Europe, etc..
But I may be wrong here. It would be interesting to hear his explanation.
In response to your remark ‘I found it funny when I saw that only 10% of Turkey’s citizens are ethnic Turks’: Hmmm, not so funny if you realise that in the beginning of last century there was not only an Armenian genocide, but a Greek genocide, as well as a Greek Exodus, leaving what once was a 100% Christian country with (I understand) only 2% Christians nowadays.
Recently, I read somewhere that the percentage of the Turkish population that quaify as Greek was 80%. I’m not sure how this relates to the 10% Mr. Spencer mentions.
I have a Greek cook book in which it is explained that the Greek cuisine as we know it today was imported from Turkey during the aforementioned exodus.
I wonder whether that cuisine originated in the kitchens of the Roman Emperor. It may well be argued that the mohamedans, denying the existence of the concept of a state, have let the foods prepared there spread through the populace. But my opinion for that of someone else.
࿗Infidel࿘says
Thanks for your explanation. Not sure whether the Turks would have split hairs about the political configuration of Greece (a configuration of city states) vs Egypt (a monolithic state), as opposed to the fact that one was infidel and the other muslim.
One clarification: when I said “funny”, I didn’t mean humorous in the context of the genocide of Greeks, which definitely was barbaric! I meant humorous as in the irony of the people claiming to be the standard bearer of “Turkishness” happening to be only 10% Oghuz Turk (that’s the Seljuq tribe that came out of Turkmenistan and ultimately occupied Anatolia) and 90% Greek/Armenian/Assyrian descent
Stephensays
The Turks up to the present day, don’t call Greece by the logical names that other countries do, and they don’t use the Turk word ‘Gresiýa’, they refer to Greece as a muslim country under Greek occupation, they call it Yunanistan, they want to conquer Greece again.
GreekEmpress says
Great video!
George says
Is there really any need for that stupid song and music at the start ?
Andrew Jackson says
Yes, there is a need. Poking fun at the false religious ideology called “Islam” is a good way to help us “infidels” understand why Islam should must be outlawed throughout Christian nations.
gravenimage says
George, this is a parody of the song “One Tin Soldier” with anti-Jihad lyrics. Why would you think that criticism of Jihad is “stupid”?
࿗Infidel࿘ says
I see what Andrew & Graven are saying, but I skipped that song while watching: somehow, the singing that Hatun produces makes me cringe, sorry
bill says
I think it is really odd that the Jews and the Christians keep praying to god to protect them, even though for a couple of thousand years ( longer in the Jew’s history) their ‘god’ has conspicuously failed to do so. In spite of the ‘fact’ that ‘he’ is described as omnipotent.
born saturday says
nobody is talking about armenia because anyone who talks about armenia on the internet is censored and silenced from all social media!!!!!
FREEDOM TO ARMENIA!!!
࿗Infidel࿘ says
On the Western side, reason no one is talking about Armenia is that to them, Russia, rather than Turkey, is the enemy. Never mind that Russia has just done an agreement b/w Syria, Turkey & Iran, leaving Armenia in the lurch
And on the other side, both Russia & China have picked the muslim side for mercenary reasons. In fact, Russia has even upgraded its relations w/ Pakistan, something never done before b’cos they’d give India high importance. But they’ve realized that they can’t pry India out of Quad w/o taking their side vs China vis a vis Ladakh, which they won’t do: Russian maps recognize Indian claims on Pak-occupied Kashmir, but not Chinese-occupied Ladakh
Dan says
Good point that Turkey is 99% Muslim due to the extermination of Christians, and that it’s happening right now in Nigeria.
People are falling for the lies… 🙁
OLD GUY says
God has given us the tools to protect ourselves, we just need the will to do so.
gravenimage says
Spot on. OLD GUY.
࿗Infidel࿘ says
Just watched the video right now. Quite a few takeaways
In answer to Hatun’s first question about who were the Ottomans & where they came from, a naughty side of me wanted to point her to that Turkish teleseries “Diriliş: Ertuğrul”, which covers the story of the father of Osman, the founder of the dynasty. Since she is a native Turkish speaker, it should be easy for her to follow 😈
The description of the devshirmes/janissaries is one of the reasons why in India, the Rajputs would have their women & kids self-immolate when a city fell to muslim jihadists, while their men rushed out to a fight to the death. As RS describes, it was a crime against humanity. I found it funny when I saw that only 10% of Turkey’s citizens are ethnic Turks, given the racist overtones of Erdogan’s regime and its attempts to get together w/ the ex-stans
On the issue of Turkey being the state of the Turks, there’s one thing that RS forgot to mention: the “Organization of Turkic States”. This is an ethnic based organization of Turkic countries – Turkey, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan & Uzbekistan. Turkmenistan is an observer, along w/ Hungary and the renagade state of “Northern Cyprus”. It’s not just Armenia that’s interrupting this Turkic empire from the Aegean Sea to the western tip of Mongolia: Iran is there as well. If the current islamic regime in Teheran fell, then it’s pretty likely that Turkey would try to resurrect the Seljuq empire (which included Iran) in the same way that they moved against the Kurds in Iraq & Syria. I do think it’s sad how the world has abandoned Armenia
Incidentally, under Viktor Orban, Hungary has been pretty close to the Turkic states, even supporting Azerbaijan against Armenia. It’s not at all clear that Hungarians have negative views about the Turks. I didn’t get what RS meant when he said that there was an Egypt but not a Greece. Since the Treaty of Westphalia was a modern event, states that existed then were not in the same make-up: today’s Egypt has no political relations w/ the Egypt of Ramses or Cleopatra, and today’s Greece has no political relationship w/ the Greece where Peisistratos or Pericles ran the show. The reason Turkey can tolerate the independence of Egypt (for now) but not Greece is that Egypt is a muslim country, while Greece ain’t
I do look forward to the book on the Byzantines. The Ottomans, not so much: actually, other Turkic empires conquered more land, killed more people than the Ottomans did – the Timurides, the Seljuqs, the Ghaznavids & so on. Essentially, the Ottoman story is the sad story of how the Greeks lost Anatolia
Sukabumi JoJo says
In response to your remark ‘I didn’t get what RS meant when he said that there was an Egypt but not a Greece’:
What Mr. Spencer was saying (if you ask me) is that there was a unified state called Egypt, all the way from the faraos into the Greek occupation (Alexander the Great) and its conquest by the mohamedans, but no unified state called Greece (as we know it), because before Greece was conquered, first there were the ‘polises’, the city states; in (pre- and)Homeric times: Sparta, Mycene, Epidaurus, etc.. Homer calls (some of) the Greeks ‘Achaians’: that’s an area on the north of the Peloponesos, I understand, and (perhaps later on, I’m not sure) Macedonia (home of Alexander the Great), for example.
Further on in history, after the split of the Roman Empire and the demise of the Western Roman Empire, there was the Eastern Roman Empire, covering a lot more than Greece ‘stricto sensu’, such as Western ‘Turkey’, a large part of Anatolia (I haven’t yet found out yet whether that includes all of Anatolia, that’s why I say ‘a large part’), large parts of ‘Eastern’ Europe, etc..
But I may be wrong here. It would be interesting to hear his explanation.
In response to your remark ‘I found it funny when I saw that only 10% of Turkey’s citizens are ethnic Turks’: Hmmm, not so funny if you realise that in the beginning of last century there was not only an Armenian genocide, but a Greek genocide, as well as a Greek Exodus, leaving what once was a 100% Christian country with (I understand) only 2% Christians nowadays.
Recently, I read somewhere that the percentage of the Turkish population that quaify as Greek was 80%. I’m not sure how this relates to the 10% Mr. Spencer mentions.
I have a Greek cook book in which it is explained that the Greek cuisine as we know it today was imported from Turkey during the aforementioned exodus.
I wonder whether that cuisine originated in the kitchens of the Roman Emperor. It may well be argued that the mohamedans, denying the existence of the concept of a state, have let the foods prepared there spread through the populace. But my opinion for that of someone else.
࿗Infidel࿘ says
Thanks for your explanation. Not sure whether the Turks would have split hairs about the political configuration of Greece (a configuration of city states) vs Egypt (a monolithic state), as opposed to the fact that one was infidel and the other muslim.
One clarification: when I said “funny”, I didn’t mean humorous in the context of the genocide of Greeks, which definitely was barbaric! I meant humorous as in the irony of the people claiming to be the standard bearer of “Turkishness” happening to be only 10% Oghuz Turk (that’s the Seljuq tribe that came out of Turkmenistan and ultimately occupied Anatolia) and 90% Greek/Armenian/Assyrian descent
Stephen says
The Turks up to the present day, don’t call Greece by the logical names that other countries do, and they don’t use the Turk word ‘Gresiýa’, they refer to Greece as a muslim country under Greek occupation, they call it Yunanistan, they want to conquer Greece again.
365 Constantinople Days says
I would like to learn more about the ancestry of the people of Anatolia and them mostly not actually being Turks.