Page 34 - The Dark Clan
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The Dark Clan
As seen, the way of life, essential for the existence of this
clan-like group is defended by them and is in total opposition
to the morals of religion.
Religious morality demands loyalty, honesty, fairness,
devotion, to be just and to uphold and defend the truth no
matter what. The dark clan on the other hand, requires peo-
ple to be egotistic, ruthless, greedy, cheating and deceitful be-
cause this is how its system perpetuates itself. Each member
of the clan has found his place in this rotten structure and can
only survive in this way. Some profit and live by the proceeds
of bribery and corruption, others by exploiting the labour
and resources of the innocent, and others by the income gen-
erated by the prostitution and drugs trade. The continuity of
their system requires the presence of people in their environ-
ment who can be bribed or who can bribe others, people who
can be coerced into prostitution, drug use and drug dealing,
but most importantly, that no one dares to fight these injus-
tices and sickening practices on an intellectual level.
Religious morality destroys this corruption and leads to the
rise of a people who will put up a strong ideological fight
against evil, which in turn would mean the collapse of the
dark clan.
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A ADVICE TO BUSINESSMEN FROM
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n occasion, people who have witnessed the activi-
ties of the clan from within have articulated what
O has been so far outlined about the system of the
dark clan. One of these "confessions" is the book Genc Bir
Isadamina (To A Young Businessman) which raised a few eye-