freedquaker
16 Nov 2008
History / What do Poles think about Turks? [761]
I totally aggree with you "wildrover" though I was referring to the other way around, stereotypes in Turkish people's minds about Western People.
When they meet a woman from the West, they behave totally differently than they would otherwise behave with a Turkish woman or a woman from an Eastern culture, because of their kind of twisted image of Europeans in their minds (expecting them to be promiscious and easy feat!). The addition of anonymity could turn them to jackasses (unleashing the repressed animal in them, lol).
Lack of social pressure has a different impact on Turkish women as well. My words, by no means extend to all women, but a significant number of them, facing no (or very little) social pressure, takes "liberality" too seriously (referring to places where not many Turks exist, or Turks dont have much of a social influence like America), They become quite promiscious, as if avenging from the "repressed past". Then they begin to get trapped in a moral/religious dilemma as well as an ever-existing cultural one.
I totally aggree with you "wildrover" though I was referring to the other way around, stereotypes in Turkish people's minds about Western People.
When they meet a woman from the West, they behave totally differently than they would otherwise behave with a Turkish woman or a woman from an Eastern culture, because of their kind of twisted image of Europeans in their minds (expecting them to be promiscious and easy feat!). The addition of anonymity could turn them to jackasses (unleashing the repressed animal in them, lol).
Lack of social pressure has a different impact on Turkish women as well. My words, by no means extend to all women, but a significant number of them, facing no (or very little) social pressure, takes "liberality" too seriously (referring to places where not many Turks exist, or Turks dont have much of a social influence like America), They become quite promiscious, as if avenging from the "repressed past". Then they begin to get trapped in a moral/religious dilemma as well as an ever-existing cultural one.