At a certain point during the last world war, Admiral Horthy was clearheaded enough to see the light.
It was shining brightly enough by 1944 to draw the right conclusion and to seek what today is known as the “off ramp.”
But in last Sunday’s elections, the majority of the Hungarian electorate have failed signally to see that blinding light.
As Hungarian election results demonstrate rather depressingly, that country’s brief flirtation with relative sovereignty has failed to firmly impress the critical mass of Hungarian voters.
Heavily propagandised, and on top of that ruthlessly blackmailed by Brussels which capriciously withheld billions of their money pending proof of voting booth subservience, Hungarians have overwhelmingly chosen to bend the knee. Like the Argentines, they may soon get exactly what they unknowingly voted for.
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Unlike their Hungarian neighbours, according to every public opinion survey the majority of clear-eyed Serbs already have seen the light and have repented of their former European illusions. They want nothing to do with the dark and seemingly exitless tunnel which the European Union is. But Serbia’s Admiral Batista does not see that light at all. Under his auspices and of Serbia’s myopic bought and paid for rulers, who care not for the commoners’ opinions, Serbia is relentlessly hurtling toward that tunnel.
The electoral massacre ofVictor Orban’sFidesz party is giving rise to a multiplicity of comments.Whilst welcoming virtually any replacement for the detested Victor Orban, collective West opinion makers, such as the Swiss Die Weltwoche,are now cautioningthat his presumptive successor Peter Magyar might not turn out to be ideal.
With his less than brilliant analytical record, in aplatitudinous reflection, Francis Fukuyamathrows caution to the wind when it comes to Hungary’s recent political turn-around.Fukuyama effusively praises the electoral victory of Peter Magyar and his Tisza party as the long awaited triumph of “liberal democracy.”
Source: Global Research