The Fate of the Land: To Sell or To Defend?
05 Aug 2025
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Don’t Sell Your Land: Don’t Build a Lost Future
Land is not just a matter of ownership; it is the most tangible symbol of culture, identity, and strategic independence. Every inch of land sold for economic gain is essentially a mortgage on our future. Land, which is a critical foundation for food production, shelter, energy resources, and social solidarity, loses not only its physical form but also memory, belonging, and resistance as it changes hands. Cutting our roots is equivalent to silent betrayal that destroys the future of society.
The Silent Cry of Village Houses: Repair, Sustain, Resist
Abandoned village houses are not just made of stone and wood; they are concrete symbols of families, neighborhoods, and solidarity. If left unrepaired, not only physical structures but also social bonds erode. Neglecting houses that could serve as shelters during economic crises or natural disasters means recklessly leaving ourselves defenseless. These structures, brought to life by local craftsmen, are living museums preserving the cultural fabric of the region. Losing them means losing not only the past but also the future and security.
Heirloom Seeds: The Fragile Fortress of Freedom
Under the dominance of international seed monopolies, farmers face increasing dependency. Hybrid and genetically modified seeds may yield short-term productivity but threaten ecological balance and production freedom in the long run. Heirloom seeds symbolize resistance passed down through generations. Using one’s own seeds is not just an economic choice but a manifesto of freedom.
These seeds, adapted to local climate and soil, requiring no chemical inputs, form the foundation of sustainable agriculture. Native and naturally inherited seeds must be preserved against hybrid and GMO seeds. Otherwise, surrender will enslave not only farmers but the entire society.
Planting Fruit Trees: Investment in the Future
Fruit trees require patience and effort but yield returns over years. Tree planting, one of the most effective defenses against threats like drought and food scarcity, enriches ecosystems, improves soil health, and strengthens social solidarity. Every tree planted is a challenge to a bleak future; a lasting investment in nature, economy, and society. Fruit trees create natural platforms that bring communities together and can serve as centers of solidarity in times of crisis.
Preparing for Tough Days: Building Resilience
Global climate change, disruptions in supply chains, political tensions, and economic fluctuations will radically change living conditions. Being unprepared invites not only individual but societal disasters. Reducing dependency on cities and controlling one’s own water, energy, and food resources is essential. Developing individual and collective savings, solidarity networks, and micro-production solutions is the key to survival. Strengthening civil solidarity mechanisms is vital for rebuilding social bonds. Questioning traditional political and economic practices necessitates developing new and sustainable models.
Don’t Surrender to the Shadow of Dark Plans!
Selling land, abandoning village houses, monopolizing seeds, and blocking investment in nature are all parts of a planned strategy. This strategy aims to weaken peoples’ independence, centralize control, and break resistance. This reality can no longer be denied. The time for conscious awareness and action has long arrived. To not remain silent, to not approve the continuation of dark plans, we must break the approaching chain, create points of resistance, and act with collective responsibility.
Final Word: Don’t Sell Your Land, Identity, and Future!
Selling land is not just a transfer of ownership; it is the surrender of identity, culture, and freedom. Repairing village houses, protecting heirloom seeds, planting fruit trees, and preparing for tough days are the strongest and most meaningful responses against global surrender. These steps start locally but form the building blocks of universal awareness. Steps taken to eliminate fragility and stop damage are the fortress walls that rebuild the world’s resilience. Every piece of land, every repaired wall, every preserved seed, every branching tree, and every solidarity network are indispensable building blocks that raise the fortress.
Dr. Erdem ULAŞ