Originally posted by bell-the-cat
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The Assassination of Hrant Dink
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Originally posted by bell-the-cat View PostThat is wrong.There are not "both sides". Not for this issue, not for any issue. Please do not fall for the "English disease" of thinking that everything has to have at least two sides, two viewpoints. It has made today's journalists second only to politicians as being the most contemptable of creatures. There is only truth, and finding that truth is mostly unrelated to what one "side" or another "side" says.
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No Jade, speaking in a general terms, the Armenian genocide happened too long ago for such things as personal or collective loss to be credible emotions. It would be the same as some right-wing Turk going on and on about the Greeks invading Turkey in 1921 as a justification for some present-day emotion.
And in specific terms, that poster is not a person that even most Armenians would want to identify as being "Armenian", and (in my opinion gained from face-to face experiences with him) he is not someone who can genuinely feel the emotions he says he feels. Remember that here, as everywhere, not everything is as it appears.Plenipotentiary meow!
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Originally posted by Jade View PostYou misunderstand. I said "both sides" because right now neither side can decide on a single idea. I am not saying that there are "both sides" to a truth. I wouldn't want to comment on that in one way or the other. I am simply saying that there are two opposite sides that oppose each others ideas about this issue. And I feel it my duty to look at both sides before I can comment on it or develop ideas about it. Would it be fair, do you think if I were to simply take the Turkish opinion (only because I am a Turk) and ignore the Armenian opinion? This is a common past, and since two parties were involved, wouldn't it be only just if both the sides were listened to?
Look at Turkey - from the viewpoint of Dink's assasin there were two sides - those for Turkey and those against it. But the tens of thousand who marched in protest at Dink's murder would not divide Turks into such simplistic divisions. Sides are for fanatics - believe what they say and you get further from the truth, not nearer it. There is not a "Turkish opinion" or an "Armenian opinion". And neither Turks nor Armenians "own" the history of the Armenian genocide.Plenipotentiary meow!
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Dear Bell, perhaps you are right, personally I would rather think that the Armenian Genocide didn't happen at all (afterall it puts my country into such a bad light) but my personal feelings hardly matter at all do they? I read once that the Armenian genocide was "indeed a genocide" but that no such term existed when it was committed. This may indeed be the case. As for the "poster", I can only get information through what each member posts therefore I cannot form any valid opinions about their personalities, only informations that they may reveal about themselves. I will remind everyone here, again, that I have not come to this forum with any set idea about the issue but only to gather some information where I can, and some opinions about the matter before I can decide for myself, therefore I will refrain from making any comments. Your opinions are valuable to me as now I know for a fact that not all people (except the Turks) believe that the Armenian Genocide happened for real. But wait...Maybe you are a Turk? Would it be too personal for me to ask you your nationality?
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Originally posted by bell-the-cat View PostBut, Jade, what do you mean by sides?
Look at Turkey - from the viewpoint of Dink's assasin there were two sides - those for Turkey and those against it. But the tens of thousand who marched in protest at Dink's murder would not divide Turks into such simplistic divisions. Sides are for fanatics - believe what they say and you get further from the truth, not nearer it. There is not a "Turkish opinion" or an "Armenian opinion". And neither Turks nor Armenians "own" the history of the Armenian genocide.
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Originally posted by Jade View PostDear Bell, perhaps you are right, personally I would rather think that the Armenian Genocide didn't happen at all (afterall it puts my country into such a bad light) but my personal feelings hardly matter at all do they? I read once that the Armenian genocide was "indeed a genocide" but that no such term existed when it was committed. This may indeed be the case. As for the "poster", I can only get information through what each member posts therefore I cannot form any valid opinions about their personalities, only informations that they may reveal about themselves. I will remind everyone here, again, that I have not come to this forum with any set idea about the issue but only to gather some information where I can, and some opinions about the matter before I can decide for myself, therefore I will refrain from making any comments. Your opinions are valuable to me as now I know for a fact that not all people (except the Turks) believe that the Armenian Genocide happened for real. But wait...Maybe you are a Turk? Would it be too personal for me to ask you your nationality?
(Me? I'm just a cat, who wanders and wonders about Turkey a lot.)
Plenipotentiary meow!
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Originally posted by Jade View PostYou know you may indeed be quite right...I will think hard about that...It is just that so far, it has always been the majority of the Turks who denied the genocide while the majority of the Armenians (from what I can gather) said it happened. That's why I had divided it into "two sides" because it seemed to me that there were "mainly" two sides that "opposed" the other side's idea. But perhaps it was wrong of me to do that. What do you suggest I should do then?
Hey, it's not "the majority" of Armenians who will say the AG happened - 99.999% of Armenians will say it happened!The diagreements come from what should be done about the reality of it having happened.
Plenipotentiary meow!
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Originally posted by bell-the-cat View PostI find it hard to believe that anyone can seriously say that the Armenian genocide did not happen? Saying "I have no opinion of the subject" is valid I suppose, and saying "I do not know enough to come to a conclusion" would be valid for those who know next to nothing about the subject. But you really would have to know next to nothing for the latter to be true. The evidence is so overwhelming, so in-your-face obvious, that you need very little effort to come to the conclusion that it happened. OK, some people can believe all sorts of nonsense, but there are limits for even them: those that say it did not happen mostly have ulterior motives, I think. They know it did happen, but are saying it didn't. Exploring those motives would be interesting. I think the biggest reason (for Turks in Turkey) is that they think it's not worth the trouble.
(Me? I'm just a cat, who wanders and wonders about Turkey a lot.)
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Sorry, I didn't make that clear - when I said "not worth the trouble" I wasn't meaning it to sound as if the issue was not unimportant. I meant that the amount of trouble that someone could find themselves in if they said in public that they recognised that there had been a genocide would be too great to make it a worthwile thing to do.
But that is pre-Dink's assassination - now maybe things have changed. Before, people would talk about anything but the things that should be being talked about. Maybe that has changed permanently, I hope it has. It's so sad though that someone has had to be killed for that to happen.Plenipotentiary meow!
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