well, i agree with you about cutting off funding and blocking off maleficent influences. but it's not quite so simple as that when it's the official government of their home country/ethnicity. that raises all sorts of paradoxes about identity in multicultural/pluralist democracies, in general. it really comes down to just how textbook a 'liberal' you are and how much freedom you're willing to grant groups to vote and think as they like. including, yes, to vote in support of illiberal measures or religious beliefs that supersede the official secular ethos of the country. again, we understand this as part of the freedom of choice in western countries already. religious blocs and faith voters are not exactly novel, nor are patriots or nationalists.
the central paradox, of course, is one of 'forced integration' in liberal democracy. good luck puzzling that one out. it sounds like it's already causing you great frustration.
i have no desire to see the west burn and i'm definitely not pro-erdogan, just like i'm not pro-xi. don't know why i have to keep saying this when i'm hardly banner-waving for how brilliant their societies or political ideologies are. you mentioning the voting choices of turks, though, in a discussion about people being beheaded by radicals in france, is pretty conspicuous. nothing about the traditional islamism of erdogan's party makes appeals to that level of fundamentalism. turkish people do not hold those beliefs. how many turkish berliners would cut your head off over a matter of disrespecting islam or drawing muhammad? come on.
Last edited by uziq (2020-10-30 07:29:23)