With both Turkey and Israel in the news, it is yet again time to examine how far the rise of Thatcher and Reagan-Dubya know-nothingness has dragged most of conservatism, or at least of Anglophone conservatism, away from anything recognisably conservative in the slightest.
Is it conservative to welcome as a brother a country in which the only two viable political options, apart from violent Kurdish separatism of Marxist hue, are secular, militarist ultranationalism and militant Islam, both of which glorify the overthrow of Byzantium and the genocide of the first entire people ever to become Christian?
Is it conservative to be prepared even to destroy the second-oldest civilisation on earth, which has not started a war in modern times and which has reserved parliamentary representation for Christians, merely on the whim of a state created within living memory by resolution of the ultimate globalist institution and as an act of surrender to Marxist, viciously anti-British terrorists, who then proceeded to displace people who had lived there for many centuries in order to replace them with immigrants from the ends of earth who had little or no common culture?
Is it conservative to dance to the tune of the two states that have done, and which continue to do, the most to drive Christianity out of its ancient heartlands of Asia Minor and the Levant, indeed the only two states, as such, to do anything in that cause, and both of which are only too horrifically successful in their remorseless furtherance of it?
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