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Forum Messages Posted by alameda

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Thread: Herkesin Yeni yilini kutlarim.

351.       alameda
3499 posts
 01 Jan 2012 Sun 06:42 am

hayırlı seneler



Thread: Things you hate (or don´t like) about Türks/Türkia

352.       alameda
3499 posts
 30 Dec 2011 Fri 09:49 pm

Sigh, the last time I was there I tried that. I was about crying towards the end. I overloaded on nightshades (patlican in particular) and was sick for months on my return home.

It did something to my system so I could not eat anything, my insides were inside out and I lost ver pounds....and that is a LOT for me. I did look svelt....sort of, but past 30 skinny doesn´t look good, it looks emaciated. I needed medical intervention to reverse things. 

Quoting Elisabeth

 

 

Sometimes I think there is no way to refuse food and not hurt feelings.  I even tried telling people that I have a medical condition where I can´t consume caffeine and people still get hurt feelings that I don´t drink their Turkish coffee and tea.  I guess I decided that I can live with other people´s hurt feelings better than I can live with heart palpitations!  {#emotions_dlg.bigsmile}

 

 



Thread: Things you hate (or don´t like) about Türks/Türkia

353.       alameda
3499 posts
 30 Dec 2011 Fri 11:33 am

I love Turkish hospitality, generosity, and many other aspects of the culture, but I don´t like to eat a lot and don´t know how to refuse food without causing hurt feelings. I also do not want the extra calories, fats and sugars. I don´t like a lot of sweet things, it´s torture to have to eat baklava and many of the other Turkish deserts...they are just too sweet. I´m also concerned about sugar overload, and in fact all those sweets make me ill. Please tell me how to get out of having to eat them without hurting feelings or insulting someone. 



Thread: OLD CHUMS

354.       alameda
3499 posts
 30 Dec 2011 Fri 11:20 am

...........And all the best to you and your precious family, now and always.



Thread: An apology in Turkey::

355.       alameda
3499 posts
 30 Dec 2011 Fri 09:22 am

 

This exerpt is from the Hunchak website in Australia, as one can clearly see, terrorism is a policy and tactic. 

"Ill. The Hunchak program advocated revolution as the only means of reaching the immediate objective. The arena of revolutionary activity was designated as Turkish Armenia. The Hunchaks said that the existing social organization in Turkish Armenia could be changed by violence against the Turkish government and described the following methods: Propaganda, Agitation, Terror, Organization, and Peasant and Worker Activities.

Propaganda was to be directed to the people to educate them toward two goals. The party was to explain to them the basic reasons and the proper time for revolution against the government, thereby indoctrinating them with the basic idea of revolution. This goal, however, was not sufficient in itself. The people had to have a knowledge of the social order that was to be established after the successful revolution.

Agitation and Terror were needed to "elevate the spirit of the people." Demonstrations against the government, refusal to pay taxes, demands for reforms´ and hatred of the aristocracy were part of the party´s agitation campaign. The people were also to be incited against their enemies and were to "profit" from the retaliatory actions of these same enemies.

Terror was to be used as a method of protecting the people and winning their confidence in the Hunchak program. The party aimed at terrorizing the Ottoman government, thus contributing toward lowering the prestige of that regime and working toward its complete disintegration. The government itself was not to be the only focus of terroristic tactics. The Hunchaks wanted to annihilate the most dangerous of the Armenian and Turkish individuals who were then working for the government, as well as to destroy all spies and informers. To assist them in carrying out all of these terroristic acts, the party was to organize an exclusive branch, specifically devoted to performing acts of terrorism."

 



Edited (12/30/2011) by alameda [grammar, spelling]



Thread: Things you hate (or don´t like) about Türks/Türkia

356.       alameda
3499 posts
 22 Dec 2011 Thu 12:26 am

I would like to see more dishes with out the nightshade plants.  Some of those are tomato, potato, bell peppers, onions and eggplant.....which I think make up the ingredients of most Turkish foods....Iman Baylildi in particular. It is delicous, but these ingredients make me ill.

 

 



Thread: Grrrrrrr - What is bugging you today?!

357.       alameda
3499 posts
 27 Nov 2011 Sun 06:42 pm

Hmmm....sounds interesting. Oh well, next year, maybe. 

Quoting Elisabeth

 

 

 They were a little creepy...{#emotions_dlg.shy}

 

 



Thread: Grrrrrrr - What is bugging you today?!

358.       alameda
3499 posts
 20 Nov 2011 Sun 07:49 pm






LIFE, I found myself thinking as a line of Alameda County deputy sheriffs in Darth Vader riot gear formed a cordon in front of me on a recent night on the campus of the University of California, Berkeley, is full of strange contingencies.  The deputy sheriffs, all white men, except for one young woman, perhaps Filipino, who was trying to look severe but looked terrified, had black truncheons in their gloved hands that reporters later called batons and that were known, in the movies of my childhood, as billy clubs.


The first contingency that came to mind was the quick spread of the Occupy movement. The idea of occupying public space was so appealing that people in almost every large city in the country had begun to stake them out, including students at Berkeley, who, on that November night, occupied the public space in front of Sproul Hall, a gray granite Beaux-Arts edifice that houses the registrar’s offices and, in the basement, the campus police department.


It is also the place where students almost 50 years ago touched off the Free Speech Movement, which transformed the life of American universities by guaranteeing students freedom of speech and self-governance. The steps are named for Mario Savio, the eloquent graduate student who was the symbolic face of the movement. There is even a Free Speech Movement Cafe on campus where some of Mr. Savio’s words are prominently displayed: “There is a time ... when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part. You can’t even passively take part.” 


Earlier that day a colleague had written to say that the campus police had moved in to take down the Occupy tents and that students had been “beaten viciously.” I didn’t believe it. In broad daylight? And without provocation? So when we heard that the police had returned, my wife, Brenda Hillman, and I hurried to the campus. I wanted to see what was going to happen and how the police behaved, and how the students behaved. If there was trouble, we wanted to be there to do what we could to protect the students.

Once the cordon formed, the deputy sheriffs pointed their truncheons toward the crowd. It looked like the oldest of military maneuvers, a phalanx out of the Trojan War, but with billy clubs instead of spears. The students were wearing scarves for the first time that year, their cheeks rosy with the first bite of real cold after the long Californian Indian summer. The billy clubs were about the size of a boy’s Little League baseball bat. My wife was speaking to the young deputies about the importance of nonviolence and explaining why they should be at home reading to their children, when one of the deputies reached out, shoved my wife in the chest and knocked her down.


Another of the contingencies that came to my mind was a moment 30 years ago when Ronald Reagan’s administration made it a priority to see to it that people like themselves, the talented, hardworking people who ran the country, got to keep the money they earned. Roosevelt’s New Deal had to be undealt once and for all. A few years earlier, California voters had passed an amendment freezing the property taxes that finance public education and installing a rule that required a two-thirds majority in both houses of the Legislature to raise tax revenues. My father-in-law said to me at the time, “It’s going to take them 50 years to really see the damage they’ve done.” But it took far fewer than 50 years.


My wife bounced nimbly to her feet. I tripped and almost fell over her trying to help her up, and at that moment the deputies in the cordon surged forward and, using their clubs as battering rams, began to hammer at the bodies of the line of students. It was stunning to see. They swung hard into their chests and bellies. Particularly shocking to me — it must be a generational reaction — was that they assaulted both the young men and the young women with the same indiscriminate force. If the students turned away, they pounded their ribs. If they turned further away to escape, they hit them on their spines.


NONE of the police officers invited us to disperse or gave any warning. We couldn’t have dispersed if we’d wanted to because the crowd behind us was pushing forward to see what was going on. The descriptor for what I tried to do is “remonstrate.” I screamed at the deputy who had knocked down my wife, “You just knocked down my wife, for Christ’s sake!” A couple of students had pushed forward in the excitement and the deputies grabbed them, pulled them to the ground and cudgeled them, raising the clubs above their heads and swinging. The line surged. I got whacked hard in the ribs twice and once across the forearm. Some of the deputies used their truncheons as bars and seemed to be trying to use minimum force to get people to move. And then, suddenly, they stopped, on some signal, and reformed their line. Apparently a group of deputies had beaten their way to the Occupy tents and taken them down. They stood, again immobile, clubs held across their chests, eyes carefully meeting no one’s eyes, faces impassive. I imagined that their adrenaline was surging as much as mine.


My ribs didn’t hurt very badly until the next day and then it hurt to laugh, so I skipped the gym for a couple of mornings, and I was a little disappointed that the bruises weren’t slightly more dramatic. It argued either for a kind of restraint or a kind of low cunning in the training of the police. They had hit me hard enough so that I was sore for days, but not hard enough to leave much of a mark. I wasn’t so badly off. One of my colleagues, also a poet, Geoffrey O’Brien, had a broken rib. Another colleague, Celeste Langan, a Wordsworth scholar, got dragged across the grass by her hair when she presented herself for arrest.


I won’t recite the statistics, but the entire university system in California is under great stress and the State Legislature is paralyzed by a minority of legislators whose only idea is that they don’t want to pay one more cent in taxes. Meanwhile, students at Berkeley are graduating with an average indebtedness of something like $16,000. It is no wonder that the real estate industry started inventing loans for people who couldn’t pay them back.


“Whose university?” the students had chanted. Well, it is theirs, and it ought to be everyone else’s in California. It also belongs to the future, and to the dead who paid taxes to build one of the greatest systems of public education in the world.


The next night the students put the tents back up. Students filled the plaza again with a festive atmosphere. And lots of signs. (The one from the English Department contingent read “Beat Poets, not beat poets.&rdquo A week later, at 3:30 a.m., the police officers returned in force, a hundred of them, and told the campers to leave or they would be arrested. All but two moved. The two who stayed were arrested, and the tents were removed. On Thursday afternoon when I returned toward sundown to the steps to see how the students had responded, the air was full of balloons, helium balloons to which tents had been attached, and attached to the tents was kite string. And they hovered over the plaza, large and awkward, almost lyrical, occupying the air.


Robert Hass is a professor of poetry and poetics at the University of California, Berkeley, and former poet laureate of the United States.



Thread: Grrrrrrr - What is bugging you today?!

359.       alameda
3499 posts
 20 Nov 2011 Sun 07:49 pm




Edited (11/20/2011) by alameda [clean up]
Edited (11/20/2011) by alameda [got posted in multiple duplicate]



Thread: Two pennies for your thoughts ....!!

360.       alameda
3499 posts
 20 Nov 2011 Sun 06:41 pm

What, already???? You just got here. Oh well, see you in a year, maybe. 

Quoting TheAenigma

Well all good things must come to an end, and so must my short visit back to TC  Try not to be too sad

See you in a year or so when I shall be back for my annual discussion on the meaning of irony with my good friend Stumpy

Bye Bye......{#emotions_dlg.bye}

 

 

 

 



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