highduke
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Post by highduke on Nov 20, 2008 18:58:53 GMT -5
IN LIGHT OF EULEX GETTING DE-AHTISSARIFIED, JUST ASKING...
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highduke
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Post by highduke on Nov 20, 2008 19:17:23 GMT -5
I voted for the Anatolian option just to get the ball rolling lol Yeah, now that I got a top of the line cellular I'll be logged on 24/7. Youll get used to it eventually as I demoralize you over the coming months with my caustic observations of your impending destruction, of which EULEX is the 1st betrayal...lol
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Post by captainalbania on Nov 20, 2008 22:11:17 GMT -5
Hey hajdut,
we don't need al-Kaeda or the west. We can kick your sorry Serbian asses all by ourselves.
Try to invade Kosovo now....oh wait i forgot you can't, you dont have the manpower or the resources and your country is now the poorest in Europe, right under Moldova, the biggest exporter of prostitutes.
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highduke
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Post by highduke on Nov 20, 2008 22:26:24 GMT -5
..as for our army's shortcomings...much like western support for Pristina, that will change as the years go by. you should know all about how things can change over the years. oh yeah, in terms of you kicking our a$$ 1 on 1, that has never happened because you kept calling in outsiders because you couldnt handle it: Turks, Austrians, Germans Italians, Chinese, Americans & the EU.
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Post by engers on Nov 21, 2008 7:50:44 GMT -5
Highduke you need a menthal treatment
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highduke
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Post by highduke on Nov 21, 2008 8:38:03 GMT -5
Why? the question i asked & the options I suggested are matters Albanians will eventually have to consider. ignoring them is a sign that YOU need mental treatment.
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Post by Duke John on Nov 21, 2008 11:03:42 GMT -5
Who in the right mind would post someting like this? lol
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rex362
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Post by rex362 on Nov 21, 2008 12:07:39 GMT -5
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Post by epiroti on Nov 21, 2008 16:46:48 GMT -5
This poll was created by highduke and his 'siberian' think-tank.
Actually, that would be wrong to say, because your russian brothers don't seem to care about you as much as they led you to believe initially. They were happy to use Kosova as a justification for the aggression towards Georgia. So my question is, what will YOU do now? Looking for a new sponsor? Are you going to turn to Sudan for political advice on how to handle separatists? China would be ideal for you, but they charge too much for their protection - is costing Sudan a lot of oil to keep them as a 'Security Council patron'.
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highduke
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Post by highduke on Nov 21, 2008 18:02:58 GMT -5
If they compromised Kosovo for Georgia, we wouldnt have tens of thousands demonstrating in Kosovo over EULEX being de-ahtissarified lol so dream on because the West sold you out to keep Bosnian Serbs from seperating.
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Post by epiroti on Nov 21, 2008 18:12:05 GMT -5
No-one is dreaming here mate. EULEX is not the product of Russian interference. Russia using Kosova's case as an argument for entering Georgian territory however is a known fact by now. Diplomatically, you were abandoned. EULEX might be an attempt to make Spain happy, but hardly anything else. And all this at a moment of gobal crises when the big boys are not paying any attention to this issue. I don't think the US and UK will let all the effort they put into Kosova be ruined.
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highduke
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Post by highduke on Nov 21, 2008 19:00:27 GMT -5
They will because They have come to terms with the New Geopolitical Reality developing for the last 8 years: the EU buys half its energy from Russia now & knows that in 10 to 15 years China & India will match the EU's energy consumption & Russia will be able to sell to Asia without losing money, so backing out on Kosovo is an attempt to score points after Russia gave Srpska the green light to threaten seperation. You can dream on but most albs are not that deluded.
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Post by Emperor AAdmin on Nov 21, 2008 21:19:01 GMT -5
Some filtered out some 'noise'. (unrelated replies)
It appears that the question here is...
In case West fully abandons Kosovo will Albs turn to more fundamentalist Islam (such as Wahhabi in Saudi Arabia)?
Personally I do not think so as Balkan Islam was always mild in comparison to Arab one thus the two do not correlate... ever.
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highduke
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Post by highduke on Nov 21, 2008 22:17:41 GMT -5
What?! How? The dzizija & harc were also used by Arabs? Pravilo prve bracne noci must have been 'mild' compared to Arabs? they never did that to Arab Christians. Impaling live men through the rectum (nabijanje na kolac) is not Arabic either & I'm sure you'd enjoy that, so it's no surprise you'd call Balkan Islam 'mild' compared to Arabic one' when it wasn't. Arabs never had Janicari, either & Im sure the idea of kidnpped young boys to being trained
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Post by Emperor AAdmin on Nov 21, 2008 22:50:24 GMT -5
1) "Right of first night" or "ius primae noctis" "Droit de seigneur (pronounced [dʀwa d(ə) sɛɲœʀ]), French for the lord's right, is a term now popularly used to describe an alleged legal right allowing the lord of an estate to take the virginity of the estate's virgins. It is also spelled droit du seigneur ([dʀwa dy sɛɲœʀ]), but native French prefer the term droit de cuissage or droit de jambage. A related term is ius primæ noctis (also jus primae noctis) (IPA: /juːs ˈpriːmaɪ ˈnɒktɪs/), Latin for law (or right) of the first night.[1][2]" "There is good reason to assume that this relation goes back to the early medieval period and has its roots in the legal condition of unfree people and Gaelic marriage customs" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droit_de_seigneurAppears to have existed across medieval feudal western (still Latin speaking) Europe and perhaps it is Celtic in origin. ----- 2) Impalement. The use of impalement as a form of execution in civilizations of the Ancient Near East, is evidenced by carvings and statues from the ancient Near East. According to Ancient Greek historian Herodotus (3.159), Darius I impaled 3,000 Babylonians when he took Babylon: their execution is also recorded in the Behistun inscription. In ancient Rome, the term "crucifixion" could also refer to impalement. Ancient authors also report the use of "crucifixion" (which may have meant impalement as well) in Carthage, where it was used for extreme cases of treachery and failure on the battlefield, usually combined with other forms of torture.
Impalement was frequently practiced in Asia and Europe throughout the Middle Ages. Vlad the Impaler, who learned the method of killing by impalement while staying in Constantinople[citation needed], the capital of the Ottoman Empire, as a prisoner, and Ivan the Terrible have passed into legend as major users of the method. From the 14th to 18th century, impalement was a traditional method of execution for high treason in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Used in middle East as well as Europe (Romanian Vlad the Impaler made the method famous through his own infamy). Romans had their own version of it. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impalement------- 3) Janissary" The Ottomans were the first state to maintain a standing army in Europe since the Roman Empire. The Janissaries have been likened to the Roman Praetorian Guard and they had no equivalent in the Christian armies of the time, where the feudal lords raised troops during wartime.[1] A Janissary battalion was effectively the soldier's family. They lived in their barracks and served as policemen and firefighters during peacetime.[5]" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janissary Again compared to Romans and nothing else. *Ottoman early state was called Sultanate of Rum ("Roman Sultanate") as they conquered only remaining Roman Empire (known now as Byzantine). Basically Turkized 'Romans'. ----- 4) Balkan Islam as 'mild' BektashiBektashism (Turkish: Bektaşilik) is an Islamic Sufi order (tariqat), considered to be a distinct branch of Shi'a Islam. It was founded in the 13th century by the Islamic saint Hacı Bektaş Veli. The Bektashi order was greatly influenced during its formative period by both the Hurufi missionary Ali al-'Ala (15th century) as well as the Qalandariyah Sufi movement, which took on many forms in 13th century Anatolia. The order was reorganized by Balim Sultan in the 16th century.
The veneration of Imam Ali is central to Bektashi faith, common with Alevi Shi'a and Twelver Shi'as.
Bektashism is considered to have blended a number of Shi'a and Sufi concepts, although the order contains rituals and doctrines that are distinct unto itself. Bektashis have always had wide appeal and influence among both the Ottoman intellectual elite as well as the peasantry.
Bektashism and Alevism are closely related in terms of both philosophy and culture. In present-day Turkey, they are generally regarded as parts of an integrated Alevi-Bektashi culture. In post-Ottoman Albania and Kosovo, Bektashism has evolved over the course of the 20th century into more of a distinct Islamic sect vis-a-vis Sunni Islam rather than remaining a traditional Sufi order. ------ Modern Alevi theology has been profoundly influenced by humanism and universalism. During the 1960s, many younger Alevis came to conceive of Alevism in non-religious terms, with some even relating it to Marxism. The 1990s brought a new emphasis on Alevism as an ethnic or cultural identity. Alevi communities today generally support secularism after the Kemalist model, partly out of mistrust of majoritarian religiosity. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AleviAll in all VASTLY more liberal in comparison to Wahhabism.
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Post by Emperor AAdmin on Nov 21, 2008 23:39:32 GMT -5
I mention (200 year old) pseudo-Islamic Wahhabism as that is the main inspiration for this radical modern fundamentalist Islam which is light years BEHIND from much older enlightened and philosophically inspired Golden Age of Islam from 1000 years ago as it existed in Moorish Spain's Al Andaluz (which together with escaping Byzantine intelligentsia were main precursors to European Renaissance) or then contemporary Mesopotamia. The Islamic Golden Age, also sometimes known as the Islamic Renaissance,[1] was traditionally dated from the 8th century to the 13th century C.E.,[2] but has been extended to the 15th[3] and 16th[4] centuries by recent scholarship. During this period, artists, engineers, scholars, poets, philosophers, geographers and traders in the Islamic world contributed to the arts, agriculture, economics, industry, law, literature, navigation, philosophy, sciences, sociology, and technology, both by preserving and building upon earlier traditions and by adding inventions and innovations of their own.[5] Howard R. Turner writes: "Muslim artists and scientists, princes and laborers together made a unique culture that has directly and indirectly influenced societies on every continent."[5] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_Golden_Age
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highduke
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Post by highduke on Nov 22, 2008 9:55:59 GMT -5
Who cares whether impalement & the right of first night were used in W Europe? These were also tools of Balkan Islam. I was right that Arabs never had Janisaries. Who cares about theological differences behind Bektashism & Wahbism? Just like KANE, the standards according to which you judge something, are flawed because they are too theoretical & don't take into account the practical, real world application of eg: Balkan Islam to non-Muslims. Albs are versatile, so al Qaida is their next ally
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rex362
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Post by rex362 on Nov 22, 2008 14:49:29 GMT -5
Highduke's Greater Serbian Homepage: Trying to bring down Albanians on the Internet for: TEN YEARS 1998-2008
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Post by Novi Pazar on Nov 23, 2008 0:07:24 GMT -5
Honestly, in my opinion, the Albanians need to be close with their traditional allies.....USA is a passing one.
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Post by ilirdardani on Nov 23, 2008 9:01:40 GMT -5
And who is the traditional ally?
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