Quote:
Originally Posted by CliffFletcher
What could the West do? Erdogan was popularly elected, then dismantled the institutions of democracy with the support of most Turks. Secular, pro-Western Turks are a minority. People need to understand that what we consider essential pillars of democracy are not embraced by most people in the world. A free press is seen as backbiting and toxic. Judges who don't hew to traditional religious mores are regarded as leading society into depravity. Some Turks are deeply dismayed at what Erdogan is doing. More are cheering him on.
Turkey has rejected the West and Western institution. It sucks. Turkey was once the great hope for a secular and pro-Western democracy in the Muslim world. But it's better to let the popular will play out than try to install or prop-up a pro-Western regime against the wishes of the people. That hasn't exactly worked out well in places like Iran and Egypt.
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You clearly know very little about modern Turkey or it's history.
Turkey was founded as a secular parliamentary republic by it's national hero and icon Mustafa Ataturk Kemal, which is an important thing to understand about Turkey. Kemal is pretty much all the Founding Fathers of USA, rolled into one person. To many in Turkey Kemals, ideas of secularity and democracy are an inseparable part of the countrys identity much the same way as many in the USA see their constitution. For you to go and say that Turkey has not "embraced" those ideas would be very offensive to many Turks, even those who have voted for Erdogan.
For some more recent history, Erdogan did try to expand his presidential powers through democratic means and he
lost that election, despite some pretty clearly dirty tricks. He has tried to purge the judicial system from secular judges, with little success. He has tried to change the school system before, with only moderate success.
In short, the Turkish society has time and again refuted Erdogans attempts to change the country into a less democratic one. Erdogan is popular, but he is not more popular than democracy or secularity, and there's elections to prove it.
He has also not ruled by democratic means in a couple of years now, as the president of Turkey is actually a ceremonial role. He wanted to get himself voted into dictatorship but failed, so now he's doing it at gunpoint.
That has nothing to do with "the Turkish society rejecting democracy and free press" and all that nonsense.