Мултикултурализмот.
Мора да успее само до таму до каде што е Европа и Америка. Верува ли воопшто некој искрено во тоа, и може ли искрено да се верува ако не се применува насекаде (туку само на Запад)?
Јасно е кон што се движат и "брачава преко пута".. Преко Стамбола, де.
У скоро време и официјално ќе се с***т на секуларноста.
Court fines Turkish President Erdogan for calling Armenia peace monument a 'monstrosity'
ANKARA, Turkey – Turkey's state-run news agency says a court has ordered President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to pay 10,000 Turkish Lira (US$ 4,000) in compensation to an artist for
calling his sculpture — meant to promote reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia — a "monstrosity."
Erdogan expressed his dislike in 2011 of Mehmet Aksoy's giant "Monument to Humanity," which was being erected in the eastern city of Kars, prompting local authorities there to dismantle it. Aksoy then sued Erdogan for "insult."
Anadolu Agency said the court ordered Erdogan to compensate Aksoy for the mental anguish caused.
Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic ties and are at odds over the mass killings of Armenians under Ottoman rule.
Next month, Armenians mark the 100th anniversary of the start of what experts deem to be genocide.
Turkey blocks website of its first atheist association
It took less than a year for a Turkish court to block the website of the country’s first official atheism association.
The Atheism Association, the first of its kind in any Muslim-majority country, was officially founded in Istanbul’s Asian-side neighborhood of Kadıköy in April 2014. However, the Gölbaşı 2nd Civil Court of Peace in
Ankara has finally moved to block the association’s website, according to the group’s statement on March 3, 2015.
As of March 4, Turkish internet users could not access
www.ateizmdernegi.org without using tools to bypass blockings, such as a VPN.
The court ruling cites Article 216 of the Turkish Penal Law, which forbids “provoking the people for hate and enmity or degrading them.”
The association has issued a statement to criticize the blocking. “Three months ago, the European Space Agency managed to put Philae on a one-km wide comet named 67P, which has a speed of 135,00p km/h, after a 3,907-day-long journey to a location 500 million km away. Meanwhile, courts in Turkey are still busy blocking websites, citing laws with vague expressions and trying to make a certain belief dominate the others,” it stated.
The Atheism Association also described the court’s decision as “a historic example of accumulating legislative, executive and judicial powers in one hand,” claiming that Turkey is “drifting away from the level of modern civilizations as fast as its judiciary system drifts away from reason.”
The association had recently declared in a statement that it was officially recognized by the
European Union and invited by universities and think-tanks to speak at their events. Morgan Elizabeth Romano, its vice president, had stressed in her recent addresses that Article 216 is seriously harming freedom of expression in Turkey.
In an interview with daily Agos last year, the founders of the association, Tolga İnci and Ahmet Balyemez, said they thought there should be a place to provide legal support to people facing problems as atheists.
Only three weeks after its foundation, the association had to install a panic button, which is directly connected to the police center near its headquarters in Istanbul, due to death threats.
In the past, the Turkish government or the courts blocked access to a number of popular websites, including YouTube and Twitter. More than 66,000 websites are still blocked in Turkey.