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Year 2016, Issue: 2, 6 - 10, 01.09.2016

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Editor’s View

Year 2016, Issue: 2, 6 - 10, 01.09.2016

Abstract

In the wake of Unity, Turkey decides
to take responsibility over the Middle East and lead the Muslims through a
better future with pleasant living conditions in a peaceful world, where
Muslims have equal rights once more just like on Ottoman times. In fact, it
should be over-expressed that Ottoman Empire ruled the world by the Unity of
different cultures, religions and races. In contrast, today’s powerful states’
unity is based on just religion.

Perhaps, every other person has an
idea or is aware that, in today’s world, the term “Unity” equals to
“Christianity”. The rest of the world is prone to be dismantled. This is the
logic that belongs to “Crusaders”, who started their duty in 1091. They have
been actively doing their best to dig the Middle East and Africa since the
World War I, when the Ottomans, successor of the mainly Muslim unity lost the
control and Republic of Turkey was born from its ashes. The new Turkish state,
after it finally got its freedom from the invaders in 1923, started from the
scratch by building a democratic republic over the last remnants of the Ottoman
Empire. It has never been easy for Turkey to walk the democracy line in harmony
because of either the financial problems or political unrests procreated by the
servants of the invaders. The young state struggled through coups, some of
which successfully completed and some of them were only left as unsuccessful
attempts.





Unfortunately, Turks had to live through a
well-written-scenario on 15 July 2016, namely “Attempted Terrorist Coup in
Turkey”. The so called master-mind, Fetullah Gulen, is just one of the servants
of the crusaders. The country residing such servants is the United States,
which basically is the base and a safe-ground, where the crusaders can legally
clean up their international mess.

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There are 1 citations in total.

Details

Subjects Economics
Journal Section Articles
Authors

Necdet Karakurt

Publication Date September 1, 2016
Published in Issue Year 2016 Issue: 2

Cite

APA Karakurt, N. (2016). Editor’s View. Energy Policy Turkey(2), 6-10.
AMA Karakurt N. Editor’s View. Energy Policy Turkey. September 2016;(2):6-10.
Chicago Karakurt, Necdet. “Editor’s View”. Energy Policy Turkey, no. 2 (September 2016): 6-10.
EndNote Karakurt N (September 1, 2016) Editor’s View. Energy Policy Turkey 2 6–10.
IEEE N. Karakurt, “Editor’s View”, Energy Policy Turkey, no. 2, pp. 6–10, September 2016.
ISNAD Karakurt, Necdet. “Editor’s View”. Energy Policy Turkey 2 (September 2016), 6-10.
JAMA Karakurt N. Editor’s View. Energy Policy Turkey. 2016;:6–10.
MLA Karakurt, Necdet. “Editor’s View”. Energy Policy Turkey, no. 2, 2016, pp. 6-10.
Vancouver Karakurt N. Editor’s View. Energy Policy Turkey. 2016(2):6-10.

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