Originally posted by Joseph
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As a person with Karachay-Balkar (a bit of Kumyk/Crimean Tatar) background whose forefathers were forced to emigrate to Turkey back in 1860s (broadly known as the Circassian Genocide), I have to assert that more dimensional approach to the problem of genocide and genocidal tendencies must be established since those are (still) all interrelated to the problems of contemporary societies as proven in recent years in Bosnia, Chechnya, and Rwanda.
Nevertheless, let us all agree that any nation could commit a genocide since it is ultimately what so called "modern nationalism" is capable of. In that regard, being a part of a national identity is one of the blurred tools of modern societies that could be used to utilize discrimination amongst different social layers. In the final analysis, I believe that we all have to focus on being more human than being anything else since this is the only way to comprehend the crimes that are related to the aggregate past of humanity.
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