Many Kurds are anti-pkk though. Actually in Turkey a large majority not in Diyarbakir are. Urfa is a huge Kurdish city yet you won't find a lot of pro PKK sentiment there. why? well various reasons. Some people think they're a racket, others have internalised turkish state propaganda, others simply don't want the pkk acting all maoist gurilla and just wanna get on with their jobs, etc etc. Others still just cannot stand their open atheism, which, it has to be said is still a huge taboo in the east. all of these and other reasons can intersect.
I wouldn't say I'm anti-pkk but nor am I pro either. They are just another movement to make capitalism democratic. If I believed such a thing was possible then I would probably gravitate to a more pro-PKK position. given that I don't believe such a thing is remotely possible (with traditional socialist parties losing their working class support and the utter demise of trade unionism as a political strategy) in 2019, I just tend to advocate a hard class internationalism. Needless to say this means I tend to side more with luke in terms of politics. we can't play their game we have to break it worldwide.
The endnotes/autonomist thesis seems to be that yes, whilst the left is reactionary and counter-revolutionary, through the unfolding of their impossible and reformist demands the struggle will be pushed forward. this just seems to be a nice window dressing for western support for anti-imperialist movements. it's a nice palliative and little else. But actually the left, like the right is being rendered utterly irrelevant by technocratic nationalism. politics to most people these days just looks like naked ambition and little else. And that's always what it was, it's just that parties having huge social bases that would rubberstamp their policies in the 20th century served as a mechanism of the artificial division between head and hand to mystify this.