[quote name='Pradeep' date='29 October 2010 - 12:57 AM' timestamp='1288293540' post='109041']
Just visited after a long time. Tried to get to the home page at www.india-forum.com It loads for a few seconds and then the browser takes me to a Turkish blog at byege.blogspot.com [/quote]What, Turkish hackers chose to grace IF with their sudden intervention? Oh way to go IF! At last ya Hindoos, you ticked off some people! Proof of IF visibility, even if not universal popularity (don't let it get to ya, there's no pleasing christoislamania anyway).
But to what do you owe the honour: what did you guys do, I'd like to know? Usually Turkish cyber activists only monitor for and bring down sites covering the Armenian genocide by the islamofascists of what is now called Turkey.
Disclaimer: That's not to say that I have anything against Turks. Odd word that, "Turks". Their predominant genetics appears to be regional Greek and Roman, not of Turkmenistan or Turkestan or wherever - meaning their ancestral religion is Hellenismos. As one knows, Anatolia, next to having been an extension of Greek lands, had early on also exported (what would in time become) the Romans to Rome - from Anatolia's Troy, we're told (or so I remember it, but I could be wrong). Plus, the very Standard Of Heathenism (Julian) was born in Anatolia I think, in no less a city than what is now called Istanbul, in what was in his time (equally unfortunately) called Constantinople. That makes it all a nice Roman re-route back to Anatolia: first and last famous heathen Roman kings/emperors emanated from there: the first held to be the son of Mars/Ares, the last very reasonably considered himself a spiritual son of Helios.
And its Hellenistic ancestry is why Anatolia (called Turkey since last century despite the people not even really being Turks) is chock full of sacred Hellenistic sites: sites where its population used to worship the Olympic Gods. E.g. Anatolia IIRC also contains the famous Greek temple to Goddess Artemis - one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, I think. May try to confirm this.
And so it surprises no one to find out that a fairly decent number of "Turks" (or rather, ex-islamic Anatolians) - upon learning of Hellenismos - discover that they are at home with their ancestral Hellenistic Gods=religion and thus find themselves reverted wholesale to Hellenismos.
But then, they have it in them: all it takes is just their discovery of Hellenismos (their True, ancestral Gods) to bring it out.
(So what are they doing with the alien barbarian religion of christoislamania which was foisted on them anyway? They're not of "Turkey", nor "Byzantium". They belong to the Gods of l'Olympe - their ancestral Gods - as some have started to remember.)
My bright idea/suggestion would be to temporarily redirect IF's main page to ysee.gr's main *English* page. That way the Turks checking up on how their hack is holding up, may benefit from their fatefully crossing paths with you Hindoos of IF.
Turns out I was right about the aforementioned one of the Seven Wonders. Stolen from National Geographic -
Just visited after a long time. Tried to get to the home page at www.india-forum.com It loads for a few seconds and then the browser takes me to a Turkish blog at byege.blogspot.com [/quote]What, Turkish hackers chose to grace IF with their sudden intervention? Oh way to go IF! At last ya Hindoos, you ticked off some people! Proof of IF visibility, even if not universal popularity (don't let it get to ya, there's no pleasing christoislamania anyway).
But to what do you owe the honour: what did you guys do, I'd like to know? Usually Turkish cyber activists only monitor for and bring down sites covering the Armenian genocide by the islamofascists of what is now called Turkey.
Disclaimer: That's not to say that I have anything against Turks. Odd word that, "Turks". Their predominant genetics appears to be regional Greek and Roman, not of Turkmenistan or Turkestan or wherever - meaning their ancestral religion is Hellenismos. As one knows, Anatolia, next to having been an extension of Greek lands, had early on also exported (what would in time become) the Romans to Rome - from Anatolia's Troy, we're told (or so I remember it, but I could be wrong). Plus, the very Standard Of Heathenism (Julian) was born in Anatolia I think, in no less a city than what is now called Istanbul, in what was in his time (equally unfortunately) called Constantinople. That makes it all a nice Roman re-route back to Anatolia: first and last famous heathen Roman kings/emperors emanated from there: the first held to be the son of Mars/Ares, the last very reasonably considered himself a spiritual son of Helios.
And its Hellenistic ancestry is why Anatolia (called Turkey since last century despite the people not even really being Turks) is chock full of sacred Hellenistic sites: sites where its population used to worship the Olympic Gods. E.g. Anatolia IIRC also contains the famous Greek temple to Goddess Artemis - one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, I think. May try to confirm this.
And so it surprises no one to find out that a fairly decent number of "Turks" (or rather, ex-islamic Anatolians) - upon learning of Hellenismos - discover that they are at home with their ancestral Hellenistic Gods=religion and thus find themselves reverted wholesale to Hellenismos.
But then, they have it in them: all it takes is just their discovery of Hellenismos (their True, ancestral Gods) to bring it out.
(So what are they doing with the alien barbarian religion of christoislamania which was foisted on them anyway? They're not of "Turkey", nor "Byzantium". They belong to the Gods of l'Olympe - their ancestral Gods - as some have started to remember.)
My bright idea/suggestion would be to temporarily redirect IF's main page to ysee.gr's main *English* page. That way the Turks checking up on how their hack is holding up, may benefit from their fatefully crossing paths with you Hindoos of IF.
Turns out I was right about the aforementioned one of the Seven Wonders. Stolen from National Geographic -
Quote:The Temple of Artemis, Turkey
Color engraving by Ferdinand Knab/The Bridgeman Art Library/Getty Images
The great marble temple dedicated to the Greek goddess Artemis was completed around 550 B.C. at Ephesus, near the modern-day town of Selçuk in Turkey.
In addition to its 120 columns, each standing 60 feet (20 meters) high, the temple was said to have held many exquisite artworks, including bronze statues of the Amazons, a mythical race of female warriors.
A man named Herostratus reportedly burned down the temple in 356 B.C. in an attempt to immortalize his name. After being restored, the temple was destroyed by the Goths in A.D. 262 and again by the Christians in A.D. 401 on the orders of Saint John Chrysostom, then archbishop of Constantinople (Istanbul).
[color="#800080"](The last was demonstrably ideologically motivated: i.e. it was due to christomania, the possession by the non-existent jeebus.)[/color]
Today the temple's foundations have been excavated and some of its columns re-erected.
Death to traitors.

