I have a few questions that I think are important to ask here to discern your position more Mikoto.
1) What lands were the Turks expelled from exactly and why do you think that admitting to a genocide would somehow mean Armenians gets Turkish land?
2) why do you think that would be a bad thing to restore property to the Armenians, whom only lost it due to a genocide and a law that took their citizenship away?
3) why do you feel like the Armenians don't deserve justify because you think Turkish people are being expelled/victims of genocides? Shouldn't that make you more sympathetic to their plight, when your people apparently suffer the same way they did?
Also, acknowledgment of the genocide only acknowledges the systematic suffering of a people by a country's government because they were not Turkish. Admitting to it helps create an environment where it cannot be repeated. By refusing to admit what they did—which the entire world knows they did—it seems as if Turkey is saying it [the genocide] wasn't wrong of them and they don't have any intention of treating Armenians as if they exist and are human.
Still. Through the massacre in Albania by the Ottoman Empire to the mass murder of Bulgarians in Batak by the Ottoman Empire, to even today where it continues its propaganda of "Non-Turks = enemy".
In fact, it is difficult to think of Turkey as a country that
doesn't oppress people by race, origins and religion, when its history is rich in it, and when even today churches or any non-mosque must be granted permits by the government, when non-"real" Turks are mistreated or when the government fights tooth and nail to even reject efforts by the global community to enforce Turkey to protect its minority communities, such as Turkic-Christians. Then there is the fact that in 2005-6 the AKP refused to release Ottoman land registry because they said, and I quote, "
would be against state interests". The full quote goes on to explain that it would be evidence to an alleged genocide and systematic mistreatment of the Armenians, and so must not be released:
The Ottoman records kept at the Land Register and Cadaster Surveys General Directorate offices must be sealed and not available to the public, as they have the potential to be exploited by alleged genocide claims and property claims against the State Charitable Foundation assets. Opening them to general public use is against state interests.
It seems as if Turkey realizes the genocide was ultimately profitable to the Ottoman Empire, and Turkey today, as well as what it deems as "real citizens". Which I can only conclude as a danger, because what stops them from doing it again? When they can destroy evidence or hide it, or convince their people it never happened in the first place?