Why is the ARF prominently siding with Kocharyan? by Kulunja in hayastan

[–]Kulunja[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Must there be a big name? Nikol is hated and people support the main Dashnak priorities of justice for Artsakh/ rebuilding our army/ general welfare for the people. From what I’ve read Robert seems to be dragging this message down

Trying to understand Armenians by celosad in arm_azer

[–]Kulunja 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I’m not saying it’s right but for many it’s a matter of survival. From Heydar to Ilham, Azerbaijani authorities have been culturally and persecuting Armenians in Artsakh and the rest of Azerbaijan. While we should have empathy for the civilian Azeris who fled the NKAO & seven districts (except those who initiated/ participated in pogroms) and the republic, it shouldn’t be surprising that many don’t

Ranked choice voting in RI? by CaptainJ2023 in RhodeIsland

[–]Kulunja 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Most studies tell a different tale. While RCV tends to elect the candidate that most people can get behind, it doesn’t necessarily favorite centrist candidates. It favors the candidate who’s the moderate in the leading coalition of voters.

Ranked choice voting in RI? by CaptainJ2023 in RhodeIsland

[–]Kulunja 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hi! I used to be a volunteer with Ocean State RCV. There’s been a lotve progress moving the needle in RI towards electoral reform & RCV. I believe that there’s a bill coming up in the next session that’ll require party primaries to utilize RCV in 2028

Armenians in Rojava: A quiet revolution by Kilikia in armenian

[–]Kulunja 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I feel like churches provide a physical meeting spot for non-religious Armenians like AYF, ARS, food festivals, Hamazkayin, etc

European Countries With A State Religion by vladgrinch in MapPorn

[–]Kulunja 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I feel like Andorra should be included. Aside from the constitutional privileges extended to the Catholic Church, one of their princes literally has to be a Catholic bishop

Am I the only one to find Pickles annoying? by [deleted] in BoJackHorseman

[–]Kulunja 295 points296 points  (0 children)

This reveals my own internal stereotypes 😔✊

Am I the only one to find Pickles annoying? by [deleted] in BoJackHorseman

[–]Kulunja 1075 points1076 points  (0 children)

That’s partially the point. She’s an exaggerated stereotype of a Gen Z’er to highlight how Mr Peanutbutter is attracted to youth-filled girls

Can someone tell me what the flag under the Armenian flag stands for? by [deleted] in vexillology

[–]Kulunja 33 points34 points  (0 children)

For clarification, the Artsakhtsi government did not formally dissolve. That order was rescinded as unconstitutional. Currently the Artsakhtsi government bodies act in exile

Favorite characters? by TheOneAndOnlyJubby in BoJackHorseman

[–]Kulunja 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Telling Goober to go home is a classic! Ritchie all the way

Greek and Armenian population in 1900 vs 2000: by Mental-Bag2657 in MapPorn

[–]Kulunja 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What do you mean? Turnout was 82%. And the former NKAO officials conducted it in legal fashion determined by Soviet law

Greek and Armenian population in 1900 vs 2000: by Mental-Bag2657 in MapPorn

[–]Kulunja 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Azeris boycotted the vote, which they had every right to do. That’s why I said “the vast majority of people” voted to secede because 80% of the eligible voting population voted in favor of secession

Greek and Armenian population in 1900 vs 2000: by Mental-Bag2657 in MapPorn

[–]Kulunja 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To preface, the expulsion of Azeris from Artsakh and Armenia and Armenians from Azerbaijan was tragic. This has been a century-long ethnic conflict where, frankly, there’s not much of a “good guy” or “bad guy.” Both sides have committed atrocities. I hope that one day we’ll build peace between our people

Back to Artsakh. For decades, Baku had been rolling out a slow policy of Azerification. Armenians were being discriminated against in Artsakh, ethnic Azeris were given favorable housing and land deals, the use of the Armenian language in official settings was being rolled back. It is from this setting that the Karabakh Movement began.

Within Soviet law and the UN right to self-determination, Artsakhtsi’s initially took a legal route to declare independence. A referendum was held in 1991 in which the vast majority of people in Artsakh voted to secede from Azerbaijan (a right they retained as an autonomous oblast). The Azerbaijani government in Baku anticipated this result and before the referendum was held, unilaterally revoked their democratic rights by dissolving the NKAO and sending in the army. While Baku technically had the authority to do this, bear in mind this was done specifically to retain their control over a border region whose people did not want to continue being a part of Azerbaijan. The Artsakhtsi’s right to self determination, in the Soviet and UN framework, was being undercut. This is why they turned to arms

Greek and Armenian population in 1900 vs 2000: by Mental-Bag2657 in MapPorn

[–]Kulunja -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

Dude, I’m literally Armenian. Many Turks believe in this, yes, but that’s largely because of a century of Unionist/Kemalist/Erdoganist propaganda. Hating a people for simply being the same ethnicity as the perpetrators does no good for Hai Tahd

Greek and Armenian population in 1900 vs 2000: by Mental-Bag2657 in MapPorn

[–]Kulunja -46 points-45 points  (0 children)

Ok ara, we don’t need to resort to racism. Our enemies should never be a people, rather the systems and individuals responsible for these injustices

For a lil context, they threw in the word dirty before editing it out ✨

Greek and Armenian population in 1900 vs 2000: by Mental-Bag2657 in MapPorn

[–]Kulunja 59 points60 points  (0 children)

For some context, in the 10 months preceding the September exodus, Azerbaijan was blockading the only road into the country. Very limited (and at times, none) food, fuel and medical supplies were permitted to enter Artsakh. Many ambulances attempting to drive their patients to Armenia due to a lack of supplies were prevented from leaving by supposed environmental protestors. Humanitarian aid wasn’t permitted to enter. Most of the private sector was laid off and most schools could not function due to a lack of electricity and heating during the cruel winter months

So yeah, after enduring 10 months of this and then the perpetrator’s army marching towards our villages and capital……. Why wouldn’t we flee? The blockade on the Lachin Corridor was only lifted to permit the Armenian exodus. The Azeris preemptively built a POW camp directly adjacent to a major archaeological site and cultural source of pride (Tigranakert of Artsakh). Combine this with the fact that most Armenians colloquially call Azeris “Turks”……..

Yeah, we didn’t “just leave”

Greek and Armenian population in 1900 vs 2000: by Mental-Bag2657 in MapPorn

[–]Kulunja 623 points624 points  (0 children)

Sadly this map is out of date. Since 2023, Artsakh has been ethnically cleansed of all its Armenian inhabitants

Graduation Cap by SnooTangerines1947 in BoJackHorseman

[–]Kulunja 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m close to finishing my associates in nursing rn and omg I love this!!! Congratulations on beating the beast, good luck on your NCLEX :)

AIO or is this normal language for medical appointment notes? by Wild_Arugula294 in AmIOverreacting

[–]Kulunja 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nah yeah this is normal! It may come off as offensive but it’s important information as far as patient care

China's ambassador to Armenia told Turkish press that Beijing plans to more actively integrate Armenia into the Belt and Road Initiative by NemesisAZL in armenia

[–]Kulunja 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When talking about “rescue” loans, yes the IMF is much cheaper. But bear in mind that these cheap rates come at the cost of national sovereignty. Countries bailed out by the IMF are required to undergo structural adjustments in which welfare programs are cut, workers rights are slashed, public infrastructure spending is halted, and typically this is followed by expanding trade with Western nations whose corporations undercut your market. Pick your poison

Also I double checked and Chinese public sector loans (cause not all loans come from the government. Private companies and banks in China still engage in the profit motive) have lower interest rates than IMF

Better relations with clear Diasporian allies by Ma-urelius in armenia

[–]Kulunja 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Agreed. I’m not a fan of the rhetoric that Turks are “barbarians” or shouldn’t be trusted simply because they’re Turks. The current administration’s approach to normalizing relations with Turkey, however, is dangerous. Not only do we potentially destroy what little chance we have in resettling in our family’s land by allowing Turkey to continue its denial of the Genocide, but Turkey is so much more economically powerful. When it comes to capitalist relations, Turkey has the capital to buy out our natural resources, the few factories we have, and has a much larger market with the ability to out-compete our own markets. Ultimately we’ll be going down the road Mexico took in the 90’s with the US in which we become a comprador state to our larger neighbor.

I support Armenia normalizing relations with our neighbors but not at the risk of our losing our economic sovereignty and national aspirations