Via the gulen Propaganda Machine
The timing on this piece of propaganda from Gulen’s newspaper, Today’s Zaman is not only timed to divert attention away from the current ongoing anti-Gulen protests, but likewise is a failed attempt to do what the Gulenists do best – shift the blame to others. In this case, Gulen “warns,” his brainwashed cult members – also known as “volunteers of Hizmet,” to be vigilant about his opponents “placing illegal materials in houses and institutions affiliated with the movement.”
It’s comical how Gulen describes the Hizmet volunteers as a “social movement known for its cultural and educational activities.” Gulen forgot the rest of his cult's description – which would be better described as a “social movement known for extortion, corruption, money-laundering, intimidation, discrimination, and deception, led by a bevy of brain-washed groupies."
It’s fascinating how the great Imam knows exactly what kind of “illegal materials,” like drugs, ammunition, and guns” could be used in order to initiate a “smear campaign” against his cult members.
Gulen should know what to use to falsely accuse dissenters; his organization has mastered the “set-up a criminal” scheme.
We know of one Gulen dissenter whom when he refused to sign some false documentation exonerating Gulen’s organization from illegal activities that are currently being investigated by United States' federal agencies was set up and arrested during a Gulen orchestrated drug bust. While visiting his family in Turkey and the day before he was scheduled to return to the United States’ embassy for an exit visa to the United States, the Gulenists planted a substantial amount of drugs in a garbage can near his home with a fake identification card with his photo on it (a photo taken from his H1-b immigration packet that was in the possession of one of the US Gulenist charter school administrators who just happened to have been in Turkey at the time), and a cell phone that did not belong to the accused – but allegedly used by the accused to transact drug deals (a fact that was later proven to be untrue).
The former Gulenist was facing life in prison for drug smuggling. He was jailed for two weeks and it took over two years and thousands of dollars in legal fees before he was finally found innocent of the Gulenists’ trumped up drug charges. But much to Gulen’s chagrin, he is now safely living back in the United States and still working with the feds to expose the criminal activities that the Gulenists are engaged in.
So it looks like the Gulenists are getting paranoid – and maybe they should be.
But here’s the difference between them and us. We do not need to lie, fabricate, and plant false evidence against them because the Gulenists are working towards their own destruction without our help. It’s only a matter of time before their true agenda is exposed to both Turkey and the rest of the world. So let them continue to falsely imprison innocent people, because eventually the tide will turn and they themselves – through their own deceptive actions – will find themselves sitting in American and Turkish prisons.
Below is Gulen’s propaganda article from Today’s Zaman:
http://www.todayszaman.com/news-325486-.html
5 September 2013 /TODAYSZAMAN.COM, İSTANBUL
Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen has warned volunteers of Hizmet, a social movement known for its cultural and educational activities around the world, against possible plots aiming to portray the movement as a criminal network by placing illegal materials in houses and institutions affiliated with the movement.
With Turkey going through a turbulent time regarding reverberations of the protracted conflict consuming Syria and other related problems in Turkish domestic and foreign policy, Gülen warned against plans that aim to cause entrenched problems in Turkey's socio-political landscape by creating deep polarization among social and political actors.
"For instance, some people could place weapons or drugs at houses and institutions [affiliated with Hizmet] to pave the way for legal probes and an enduring smear campaign against the movement," Gülen said, in an implicit reference to the efforts of clandestine organizations targeting the Hizmet movement.
A plot allegedly devised by an illegal group within the Turkish military and uncovered in 2009 suggested that the group planned to discredit the Gülen movement in ways similar to those described by the scholar.
An indictment concerning the Action Plan to Fight Reactionaryism, which prosecutors say also targeted the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party), revealed that according to the plot, religious communities were to be framed in the public eye as “terrorist organizations” through subversive plans.
Members of the military were to plant unlicensed weapons, ammunition and narcotics in homes, schools and other institutions owned by the followers of the Hizmet movement. Police raids at these houses would result in the arrest of those individuals. The public would then start believing that religious communities had “terrorist intentions,” according to the plot.
Retired Col. Dursun Çiçek, who had his signature on the plot, was sentenced to aggravated life imprisonment on Aug. 5 in the trial of the Ergenekon terrorist organization on charges of plotting to overthrow the government.
It’s comical how Gulen describes the Hizmet volunteers as a “social movement known for its cultural and educational activities.” Gulen forgot the rest of his cult's description – which would be better described as a “social movement known for extortion, corruption, money-laundering, intimidation, discrimination, and deception, led by a bevy of brain-washed groupies."
It’s fascinating how the great Imam knows exactly what kind of “illegal materials,” like drugs, ammunition, and guns” could be used in order to initiate a “smear campaign” against his cult members.
Gulen should know what to use to falsely accuse dissenters; his organization has mastered the “set-up a criminal” scheme.
We know of one Gulen dissenter whom when he refused to sign some false documentation exonerating Gulen’s organization from illegal activities that are currently being investigated by United States' federal agencies was set up and arrested during a Gulen orchestrated drug bust. While visiting his family in Turkey and the day before he was scheduled to return to the United States’ embassy for an exit visa to the United States, the Gulenists planted a substantial amount of drugs in a garbage can near his home with a fake identification card with his photo on it (a photo taken from his H1-b immigration packet that was in the possession of one of the US Gulenist charter school administrators who just happened to have been in Turkey at the time), and a cell phone that did not belong to the accused – but allegedly used by the accused to transact drug deals (a fact that was later proven to be untrue).
The former Gulenist was facing life in prison for drug smuggling. He was jailed for two weeks and it took over two years and thousands of dollars in legal fees before he was finally found innocent of the Gulenists’ trumped up drug charges. But much to Gulen’s chagrin, he is now safely living back in the United States and still working with the feds to expose the criminal activities that the Gulenists are engaged in.
So it looks like the Gulenists are getting paranoid – and maybe they should be.
But here’s the difference between them and us. We do not need to lie, fabricate, and plant false evidence against them because the Gulenists are working towards their own destruction without our help. It’s only a matter of time before their true agenda is exposed to both Turkey and the rest of the world. So let them continue to falsely imprison innocent people, because eventually the tide will turn and they themselves – through their own deceptive actions – will find themselves sitting in American and Turkish prisons.
Below is Gulen’s propaganda article from Today’s Zaman:
http://www.todayszaman.com/news-325486-.html
5 September 2013 /TODAYSZAMAN.COM, İSTANBUL
Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen has warned volunteers of Hizmet, a social movement known for its cultural and educational activities around the world, against possible plots aiming to portray the movement as a criminal network by placing illegal materials in houses and institutions affiliated with the movement.
With Turkey going through a turbulent time regarding reverberations of the protracted conflict consuming Syria and other related problems in Turkish domestic and foreign policy, Gülen warned against plans that aim to cause entrenched problems in Turkey's socio-political landscape by creating deep polarization among social and political actors.
"For instance, some people could place weapons or drugs at houses and institutions [affiliated with Hizmet] to pave the way for legal probes and an enduring smear campaign against the movement," Gülen said, in an implicit reference to the efforts of clandestine organizations targeting the Hizmet movement.
A plot allegedly devised by an illegal group within the Turkish military and uncovered in 2009 suggested that the group planned to discredit the Gülen movement in ways similar to those described by the scholar.
An indictment concerning the Action Plan to Fight Reactionaryism, which prosecutors say also targeted the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party), revealed that according to the plot, religious communities were to be framed in the public eye as “terrorist organizations” through subversive plans.
Members of the military were to plant unlicensed weapons, ammunition and narcotics in homes, schools and other institutions owned by the followers of the Hizmet movement. Police raids at these houses would result in the arrest of those individuals. The public would then start believing that religious communities had “terrorist intentions,” according to the plot.
Retired Col. Dursun Çiçek, who had his signature on the plot, was sentenced to aggravated life imprisonment on Aug. 5 in the trial of the Ergenekon terrorist organization on charges of plotting to overthrow the government.