In Budapest last Friday Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán hosted the Mathias Corvinus Collegium (MCC) Summit on Migration. The conference was in English, but after the speakers finished their presentations, Mr. Orbán gave his summary in Hungarian, for the sake of the representatives of Hungarian media.
If Hungary had a population of fifty or sixty million, rather than ten million, Mr. Orbán would be a renowned figure of international standing. His face would appear every night on the TV news, and his name would be in the headlines every day in the papers.
His genial, avuncular style makes his videos a pleasure to watch. I’ve never seen any other intellectual of his stature rise so high in politics. God bless him, and may Fidesz win another two-thirds majority next election.
Many thanks to CrossWare for the translation, and to Vlad Tepes for the subtitling:
Video transcript:
00:00 | If we want to punish someone in politics, we have to make it so | |
00:04 | that he must speak after Mr. President [Nicolas] Sarkozy. | |
00:08 | … Good day, | |
00:12 | distinguished ladies and gentlemen. | |
00:16 | We welcome you here with respect. | |
00:20 | If you do not mind, I will be speaking in Hungarian, | |
00:24 | not because of the audience, because | |
00:28 | you all speak English, but because | |
00:32 | of the Hungarian media. | |
00:36 | Please accept it. | |
00:40 | Thank you to our guests, who arrived from abroad. | |
00:44 | …It is a big adventure, | |
00:48 | so much so that you do not even know how big. | |
00:52 | You are guests of an ancient country. | |
00:56 | Of course this is not our topic; | |
01:00 | I will not talk about it for too long. | |
01:04 | But to sense what a deep and valuable culture | |
01:08 | the country has — where you are guests — | |
01:12 | Let me mention to you three simple linguistic facts | |
01:16 | that may show the depth of the Hungarian soul and its historic | |
01:20 | antiquity. If | |
01:24 | I say of someone who | |
01:28 | has the same mother and father what my relationship to him is, | |
01:32 | which the English call simply “brother”, | |
01:36 | the Hungarian says: “blood of my body” [body-blood “testvér”], | |
01:40 | If I want to say, there is a woman with whom I want to spend my life, | |
01:44 | then I do not just have a “wife”, but she is “my other half”. | |
01:48 | Or, when I want to say | |
01:52 | that I want to live my life happily, | |
01:56 | in good physical condition, then I do not just say “health”, | |
02:00 | but “whole”, wholeness [egészség], | |
02:04 | “wholeness”, or something like this, if it is even possible to translate. | |
02:08 | So this is a particular place in the world, | |
02:12 | and it is always a privilege when we can host some guests, | |
02:16 | because we think | |
02:20 | that it is an honor for us that somebody is interested in us, | |
02:24 | in the life of a country of ten million | |
02:28 | and a nation of fifteen million. I have been given | |
02:32 | the task of summing up what has happened here so far. | |
02:36 | I can only say, in brief, that from everybody | |
02:40 | we got what we expected. | |
02:44 | From the Czechs we got a crystal-clear analysis. | |
02:48 | From the Spanish we got a huge Christian soul. | |
02:52 | From our Australian friends we got | |
02:56 | Anglo-Saxon sanity. And from Mr. President Sarkozy | |
03:00 | we got French elegance. Well, it was already | |
03:04 | worth it. | |
03:08 | Distinguished ladies and gentlemen… | |
03:16 | Everybody mentioned, even if only briefly, | |
03:20 | the particular role that Hungary plays in | |
03:24 | the European migration debate. | |
03:28 | Mostly we received eulogistic words. | |
03:32 | First of all, we thank you for that. On the other hand, | |
03:36 | we are standing with two feet on the ground, | |
03:40 | and we would like to decrease our merits in the name of honesty. | |
03:44 | What has happened? | |
03:48 | Presently Hungary has a leading role | |
03:52 | in the debate about migration. | |
03:56 | Nothing justifies this. | |
04:00 | Hungary is a country of ten million. | |
04:04 | Its army… well, it has quality, | |
04:08 | but looking at its size, it is not of a threatening nature. | |
04:12 | As we speak about the Turks, as Mr. Sarkozy mentioned, | |
04:16 | as we speak about the Turks, we have as many soldiers altogether | |
04:20 | as they have AWOL on an average weekend. | |
04:28 | The GDP per capita cannot be compared with that of the countries | |
04:32 | that spoke before me… and we Hungarians, | |
04:36 | we know that in Europe of course | |
04:40 | “equality” exists, but really, size does matter. | |
04:44 | And everybody has his place in the world. And in this place | |
04:48 | that is ours, it is not preordained | |
04:52 | in any European debate, | |
04:56 | especially in one of pan-European scope, that we would be elevated | |
05:00 | into a leadership role, as we have been in the migration debate. | |
05:04 | The first thing I would like to say is that the situation is unnatural. | |
05:08 | …The second | |
05:12 | thing we must mention is that it is unnatural, but we did not choose this | |
05:16 | for ourselves. This is very simply | |
05:20 | the result of geographical and historical circumstances. | |
05:24 | Because Hungary is a border country. | |
05:28 | A border country on the east | |
05:32 | and a border country on the south. And | |
05:36 | always plays an emphasized role when either from the east or the south | |
05:40 | some kind of danger faces our common home: Europe. | |
05:44 | That is why we ended up on the front page in | |
05:48 | 1956, because the danger was lurking from the east | |
05:52 | and it was our rebellion against that oppression — | |
05:56 | we had no other choice — that catapulted us | |
06:00 | into world fame. And now the situation is the same. | |
06:04 | When the migrants choose dry land, instead of the sea, | |
06:08 | then they end up on Hungary’s southern border to | |
06:12 | get into Europe. Whether we wanted this role or not. | |
06:16 | Whether it’s proportional or not. | |
06:20 | Whether we are in the mood for it or not. We are where we are, | |
06:24 | and we wanted to defend our borders, so we ended up with a European fame. | |
06:28 | Neither Hungary, nor | |
06:32 | Hungarian political leaders, including myself, | |
06:36 | want to play any kind of leadership role in Europe. | |
06:40 | We have an ancient Hungarian world to maintain, | |
06:44 | to work on and to adjust for the future, | |
06:48 | which gives us enough work. But there is nothing we can do, | |
06:52 | if we do not want to again live through — I say this to our guests — | |
06:56 | what we lived through from one day to the next. | |
07:00 | Suddenly, because we lacked border defenses, | |
07:04 | there were four hundred thousand (400,000) people, | |
07:08 | mostly military-aged men. | |
07:12 | True, they were not armed, but in military style | |
07:16 | they marched across our borders and marched | |
07:20 | into Hungary, | |
07:24 | and we had no physical means to stop this, | |
07:28 | 400 thousand, not armed, but a significant | |
07:32 | mass of strength, which we could not stop or handle. | |
07:36 | So that feeling of being vulnerable is what we never want | |
07:40 | to relive again. That is why | |
07:44 | we built a fence, introduced border defenses, | |
07:48 | and turned against the European mainstream. | |
07:52 | And, just as the Good Lord helped us, | |
07:56 | in 2010 and also in 2014, | |
08:00 | allowed us a super-majority, so that without a coalition partner, | |
08:04 | we could have an absolute majority, so He also allowed us | |
08:08 | to have a two-thirds majority without a coalition [the constitution can be modified with 2/3 majority], | |
08:12 | so we could apply the necessary changes to the Basic Law | |
08:16 | required by the migration, which is a luxury | |
08:20 | in today’s situation in Europe. So after the Good Lord gave to us | |
08:24 | the opportunity and the tools, we must use them. This is how we ended up | |
08:28 | in the situation where we organized a conference here today. | |
08:32 | Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, of course I have my own things to say, | |
08:36 | but we may not have time for that, because I would like to comment on | |
08:40 | the thoughts which were presented before me. | |
08:44 | Mr. Foreign Minister of Australia discouraged us | |
08:48 | from those European gestures which sound like | |
08:52 | we can’t do anything. And he | |
08:56 | knows from Australia | |
09:00 | that people do not like this, and such politicians get fired. | |
09:08 | Such naïve innocence! | |
09:12 | Europe does not work this way, Mr. Foreign Minister! | |
09:16 | Europe has a mantra, a dogma, which they have built for thirty years. | |
09:20 | Where this gesture “I can’t do anything” has a positive meaning. | |
09:24 | And maybe the people do not like it, but the next morning the media, | |
09:28 | “the Soft Power” will sing the praises of those | |
09:32 | who say “I can’t do anything”. I will explain this to you now. | |
09:36 | In Europe over the past | |
09:40 | thirty to forty years they built | |
09:44 | the concept that societies, and especially | |
09:48 | the shared European world, must be led by | |
09:52 | institutions. | |
09:56 | Not persons. And the institutions | |
10:00 | will be able to respond to all the crises | |
10:04 | — maybe more slowly than is necessary, but nevertheless | |
10:08 | the institutions will provide an answer. So in European | |
10:12 | political concepts the institution is good — the bigger the better — | |
10:16 | and the strong politician is a bad thing. | |
10:20 | And that is why all strong leaders | |
10:24 | who say: “I will solve it, I will handle the problem” | |
10:28 | that seemed impossible will be viewed negatively. | |
10:32 | At that moment the entire European | |
10:36 | “Soft Power” [MSM], will attack him. | |
10:40 | I am not the one who is the expert on this. Here is Mr. Sarkozy, who | |
10:44 | can explain exactly how a strong leader, | |
10:48 | instead of receiving recognition, will get mobbed by the mainstream media. | |
10:52 | How he automatically earns the title “DANGEROUS”. There are some historical | |
10:56 | reasons as well… The second | |
11:00 | comment is connected to my friend Oreha’s [?] speech. | |
11:08 | We must get rid of our fear. | |
11:12 | “eradicate” — as he said. We must wipe out | |
11:16 | our fear. That is very hard in Western Europe. | |
11:20 | What I say is an estimate, | |
11:24 | I think, of the western part of Europe, | |
11:28 | of the world surrounding politics, which can influence politics, | |
11:32 | Which let’s call for simplicity “SOFT POWER”, | |
11:36 | think-tanks, NGOs, | |
11:40 | universities, | |
11:44 | “public intellectuals” as my Australian friend called them. | |
11:48 | Media. That is the world that surrounds politics. | |
11:52 | 85% of this by my estimation is made up of | |
11:56 | left-wing liberals. And it is capable | |
12:00 | of acting in coordinated manner. That is why, | |
12:04 | whenever a Western politician even thinks the same as a Hungarian, | |
12:08 | and would say something like as a Hungarian, the next morning, | |
12:12 | this 85% majority will tear him into little pieces. | |
12:16 | We are not braver than the Western Europeans. | |
12:20 | The situation in Central Europe is that | |
12:24 | the hard core of power, the politicians, are surrounded by a soft power, | |
12:28 | which has ratio of around 50-50. Maybe even now | |
12:32 | moving a little more in the Christian Democratic direction. | |
12:36 | That is the historical process that is happening now. That is why I can survive, | |
12:40 | those words, which approach, which I use | |
12:44 | here and abroad. Here in Central Europe I can survive, but in | |
12:48 | the West I could not survive. Despite the fact that we are convinced, | |
12:52 | that we are factually correct, we are morally right, too, | |
12:56 | and represent a genuine European interest, | |
13:00 | a Prime Minister and country like myself and Hungary | |
13:04 | have never had such a bad reputation. | |
13:08 | That clearly demonstrates what we fight here. | |
13:12 | As long as we have the 2/3 in the Parliament, we will fight bravely, | |
13:16 | but as I said, this is an unnatural state of things. | |
13:20 | So for Hungary this is a key issue, | |
13:24 | which explains our hope about the Italians. | |
13:28 | So for Hungary it is a key issue that finally there might come a big | |
13:32 | country, not with just ten million, but a bigger, | |
13:36 | a big country, the French, or the Spanish, maybe the Italians, | |
13:40 | perhaps the Germans… but when I look around, there is only one country | |
13:44 | that has a government that speaks the same way we do, | |
13:48 | says it like we say it, represents what we represent, | |
13:52 | exactly because they are a border country, too, from the sea, | |
13:56 | and their interest is to stop the migration on the sea, too, | |
14:00 | and I think that is Italy. But somebody must come, because for a while | |
14:04 | we are able to persevere, but this cannot continue to infinity. | |
14:08 | Simply because we have limited energy [resources], we need a larger country | |
14:12 | from Western Europe that would finally say what we saying. | |
14:16 | Otherwise, no matter how well we hold on here, we Central Europeans, | |
14:20 | we will lose in Europe. That is all | |
14:24 | about the political situation. Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, | |
14:28 | migration is an issue that, | |
14:32 | as Mr. President Sarkozy mentioned, | |
14:36 | attacks our most important strength: OUR UNITY. | |
14:40 | And also provides a serious | |
14:44 | intellectual and political challenge for us. | |
14:48 | Because it is clearly visible that in the matter of migration, | |
14:52 | there is a sharp division between Western Europe and Central Europe. | |
14:56 | This division is sociological in nature. | |
15:00 | It was not our decision. | |
15:04 | What happened in the western countries | |
15:08 | is that a situation arose | |
15:12 | in which beside the original indigenous Christian population a new minority group appeared. | |
15:16 | In the last couple of decades | |
15:20 | there appeared a new minority group, which reproduces in much larger numbers | |
15:24 | than the indigenous people, and they have a stronger cultural consciousness | |
15:28 | and identity. The proportions are continuously | |
15:32 | changing, at the expense of the indigenous population and | |
15:36 | and for the benefit for the newly-arrived, mostly | |
15:40 | Muslim community. That is why in Western Europe, | |
15:44 | the most important question now besides border control, | |
15:48 | a close second, is what has already happened | |
15:52 | — because they are already here — | |
15:56 | how to manage our lives beside them. All of their thoughts, | |
16:00 | around that. All of their principles, ideologies, looking for | |
16:04 | the answer, how to manage | |
16:08 | the different cultures — which very visibly do not want to mix together — | |
16:12 | to live beside each other. I am opening a bracket here: | |
16:16 | There are many indicators available about integration. I do not see them | |
16:20 | as serious indicators; I do not believe in them. For true integration | |
16:24 | there is only one indicator — based on the Hungarian experience — | |
16:28 | and that is the cross-marriage indicator. If we are willing to choose each other | |
16:32 | as partners, then we are integrated with each other. | |
16:36 | If we never choose this way, never or in mathematically insignificant numbers, | |
16:40 | that means we are not integrated, and in Western Europe from this perspective, | |
16:44 | a non-integrated community exists. | |
16:48 | And all of their questions are focused on this issue. | |
16:52 | In contrast, in Central Europe, the situation is the following: | |
16:56 | Here, we do not have such masses. | |
17:00 | That is why we focus zero energy on the issue | |
17:04 | of how to integrate the migrants. Because what we do not have, we do not need to integrate. | |
17:08 | And all of our effort is concentrated on the issue | |
17:12 | of never having migrants. | |
17:16 | In Central Europe there is a situation. Do we deserve this situation | |
17:20 | or not? Are we lucky or not? It does not matter. But there is a situation. | |
17:24 | We do not have huge masses that are culturally different | |
17:28 | — in a civilizational sense — from the local indigenous people, | |
17:32 | in the same country with us. And we want to preserve | |
17:36 | this state. The Westerners are talking about how to live together | |
17:40 | with them, how to integrate them, and we are talking about how to avoid having to | |
17:44 | think about it at all. So European politics has two parts. | |
17:48 | The Western and the Eastern are proceeding separately alongside each other. | |
17:52 | And obviously it requires completely different principles to | |
17:56 | defend our viewpoint that we do not even want such masses, | |
18:00 | and very different principles to explain | |
18:04 | how one wants to integrate them and live together with them. European politics | |
18:08 | in the matter of real political action and the intellectual | |
18:12 | approach are also moving dangerously away from each other. | |
18:16 | About how to bridge this difference — | |
18:20 | because I agree with Mr. President Sarkozy that this issue must be bridged — | |
18:24 | for that, nobody today knows the answer. | |
18:28 | In this struggle — I have to admit honestly — | |
18:32 | we feel morally superior. This might not be nice, | |
18:36 | possibly not all conforming to a Christian humility, | |
18:40 | but anyway, in the debate with the Westerners, we Hungarians | |
18:44 | feel morally superior. The reason for this the following: | |
18:48 | As we see it, they want to force their position and | |
18:52 | their ideological approach upon us. | |
18:56 | We also have an approach, but | |
19:00 | we do not want to force it on them. That grants us | |
19:04 | moral superiority. We do not want to give them advice | |
19:08 | on how to restore that state when they did not have | |
19:12 | migrants in large masses. Because that is their business. | |
19:16 | It’s their principles, their ideology and their integration politics. | |
19:20 | It’s their future. But we cannot accept that, based on their | |
19:24 | experience, they want to tell us how to think. | |
19:28 | And how to mix with those who for now | |
19:32 | we do not need to. This leads | |
19:36 | to a philosophical question of | |
19:40 | whether there is a community — and here I agree with our Australian guest — | |
19:44 | there is a community, a sovereign state with borders, | |
19:48 | that has a population, with a Constitution (Basic Law), so that it is a lawful society. | |
19:52 | And it has a cultural quality, so that | |
19:56 | it has a right to cling to that cultural quality, | |
20:00 | or must it accept the teaching of the Westerners that | |
20:04 | a western multicultural social structure is more | |
20:08 | valuable than our homogeneous structure? That is why | |
20:12 | we must make ourselves multicultural with the tool of migration. | |
20:16 | Does a country have a right to say “No”? | |
20:20 | We can argue about whether multiculturalism, | |
20:24 | at some point in the future, may or may not produce a more | |
20:28 | valuable world than where it started from. | |
20:32 | We can argue about that. The question is not that, but whether it is mandatory for us | |
20:36 | Hungarians to participate in this experiment? Or do we have the right | |
20:40 | to say: “No thank you; we would like to remain like this and not change at all.” | |
20:44 | As we are now. Of course we have faults, which we would like | |
20:48 | to work on, but essentially we do not want to change. | |
20:52 | Does a country have such a right? To the Anglo-Saxon | |
20:56 | mind, this is a meaningless question, because of course it does [have the right]. | |
21:00 | But if you are member of a United Europe, which is a political integration, | |
21:04 | then the answer will not be so simple. And that is what | |
21:08 | causes all the suffering for Hungary in the [political] discourse. | |
21:12 | …Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, | |
21:16 | These were a couple of my comments. | |
21:20 | Now here would come my presentation, | |
21:24 | which I will not present now, because it would be a great discourtesy | |
21:28 | to all of you and to our presenters. | |
21:32 | Perhaps I would like to mention only one thing. | |
21:36 | …that would be the question of | |
21:40 | the time horizon. | |
21:44 | There is a famous scientist, perhaps he lives in Canada, | |
21:48 | a Hungarian demographer, his name is Paul Demeny. | |
21:52 | Whom I have had the luck to be able to consult from time to time, | |
21:56 | and who taught me a lot. He is an older gentleman. | |
22:00 | And he said that the reason migration does not get | |
22:04 | the necessary attention is because | |
22:08 | the time horizon of politics is short, while the migration’s | |
22:12 | is long. And it is true. | |
22:16 | As in every one of our lives, so in politics as well. | |
22:20 | There are always some urgent problems to solve | |
22:24 | …the most important for the | |
22:28 | voters and most important for the politicians. | |
22:32 | Urgent problems, which need to be taken care of. Such as a Brexit, to mention a bigger bite. | |
22:36 | The nature of migration is different. | |
22:40 | The time horizon of migration is measured in decades. | |
22:44 | I will tell you some numbers here. | |
22:48 | I am a 56-year-old man. | |
22:52 | If the Good Lord helps me, I will be alive in 2050. | |
22:56 | Those who are forty years old now | |
23:00 | will be alive in 2060. | |
23:04 | Those who are twenty years old almost certainly will be alive in 2080. | |
23:08 | Those who are ten years old — I am sure you have a 10-year-old child — | |
23:12 | will be alive in 2090. | |
23:16 | The ones who are born while we are talking here | |
23:20 | have a great chance of reaching the 22nd century alive. | |
23:24 | And we are all belong to the | |
23:28 | same community. We belong to the community of | |
23:32 | living Hungarians. So our responsibility also exists — | |
23:36 | of course for everybody, for their own age — but as I previously | |
23:40 | stated, the groups mentioned there have | |
23:44 | a common responsibility for the future. Those who | |
23:48 | sit here will see how Europe will look twenty, | |
23:52 | thirty, and forty years from now, and twenty, | |
23:56 | thirty years from now they will talk about what the European decision-makers | |
24:00 | missed today. | |
24:04 | This is what we have to understand, we politicians, that there is always | |
24:08 | some problem to take care of that is more urgent than the migration, which has | |
24:12 | dangers in a ten- to twenty-year perspective, but we must make decisions now, | |
24:16 | otherwise twenty to thirty years from now | |
24:20 | our descendants or perhaps we ourselves will have to face such consequences | |
24:24 | that we will be sorry about it. | |
24:28 | I usually work from UN data. | |
24:32 | The UN says nothing less than that — | |
24:36 | in their 2017 estimate — by 2030 | |
24:40 | Europe population will have decreased by a couple of million, | |
24:44 | and by 2030, the population of Africa | |
24:48 | will increase by 448 million! | |
24:52 | In thirteen years, only thirteen years, | |
24:56 | the population of Africa will increase by half a billion! | |
25:00 | That is why Mr. President Sarkozy was talking about it: | |
25:04 | the population increase in Africa in a bit more than decade | |
25:08 | is almost as much as the present number of the entire population of the EU. | |
25:12 | …That will happen such a way, my dear friends, | |
25:16 | that in the meantime the difference between the | |
25:20 | African and the European standards of living will not decrease. | |
25:24 | If things progress in the same way, it will rather increase. | |
25:28 | Consequently the pressure coming from Africa towards Europe | |
25:32 | will only increase, because they will want to come here, | |
25:36 | I can say with the certainty of nature’s laws | |
25:40 | that the pressure will increase. | |
25:44 | And all that mass will drop on Europe. | |
25:48 | Then another forecast: | |
25:52 | from 2010 to 2050, when we will still be alive, | |
25:56 | The Muslim population from the present forty-something million | |
26:00 | will increase to at least to seventy million, and the number of | |
26:04 | Christians in parallel with this will decrease by 99 million. | |
26:08 | And with this I did not calculate the masses of newcomers. | |
26:12 | …Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, this means | |
26:16 | that if migration is not handled with the seriousness | |
26:20 | it deserves — as we did today — if European politics | |
26:24 | does not put it on the agenda and make decisions now, | |
26:28 | immediately, then the sort of processes will start | |
26:32 | that cannot later be stopped. | |
26:36 | Mr. President Sarkozy is right: Africa cannot be developed five years from now; | |
26:40 | we must start it now, to bring the help there | |
26:44 | and not let the trouble come here. We must restore | |
26:48 | East-West unity on the issue of migration now, not later. | |
26:52 | We must find a modus vivendi, because later it will be impossible. | |
26:56 | With respect to EU unity, border defense and the issue of migration, | |
27:00 | we must act now. Finally, I would like to welcome | |
27:04 | Mr. President Sarkozy’s suggestion for | |
27:08 | a possible solution, which states it | |
27:12 | perhaps less philosophically than the way I phrase it. | |
27:16 | In politics, the most important thing | |
27:20 | is to admit failure. Of course, winning is | |
27:24 | not easy, but it is possible there is such a thing. | |
27:28 | …to live with victory | |
27:32 | is an easy thing. The ability to accept loss, | |
27:36 | to admit failure, is | |
27:40 | the most important in politics, especially in international politics. | |
27:44 | And here in front of our eyes is a huge fiasco. From 2015 | |
27:48 | for the past four years, we must admit — | |
27:52 | it is very uncomfortable, but we must admit — that the leaders | |
27:56 | of the EU, the present structure of the European Union, | |
28:00 | have been unable to solve the problems | |
28:04 | of migration and border defense. | |
28:08 | And if they were unable to do anything in the last four years, | |
28:12 | there is no reason to believe they will be able to do it tomorrow. | |
28:16 | So we must adjust the system. As Mr. President Sarkozy told us, we must reach into | |
28:20 | the system and, as in the interest of the currency they created | |
28:24 | Council of Financial Ministers to handle the currency union, | |
28:28 | in the same way the countries belonging to the Schengen zone | |
28:32 | must create a new organization [council] composed of | |
28:36 | the countries’ Interior Ministers. | |
28:40 | The right to migration [control] and border defense must be taken away from | |
28:44 | the European Commission and given back to the member states, | |
28:48 | and the member states should delegate those rights to a new plenum | |
28:52 | via their Interior Ministers, so that together the Interior Ministers | |
28:56 | Might give answers to the questions about migration | |
29:00 | and border defense. If we could at least get that much after the EU elections, | |
29:04 | then it will have been worth it to stage-manage the European Parliamentary elections. | |
29:08 | Thank you very much for your attention. |
Orban is a plain-speaking, educated man who simply chooses to be honest with his citizenry and also in his dealings with the foreign media. He also has foreign policy spokesmen who are so intelligent and articulate it makes me ashamed of the intellectual calibre of the politicians of my country. BTW, the PM or Foreign Minister of Poland was asked by a BBC or Guardian journo “Don’t you think Poland has a human rights obligation to accept refugees from X?” He answered “No.” She was stunned.
I wish there was some way that we could clone Viktor Orban because he is truly one of a kind, the “man on the white horse” as they used to say.
I am also interested in reading whatever it was that Sarkozy said which Orban keeps referring to. I especially like the idea of bringing help directly to Africa so that the hordes may be kept over there rather than being allowed to invade and destroy Europe.
Merkel and some of the others should be brought up on charges of crimes against Humanity and dealt with accordingly. GOV has meticulously documented over the years the death and destruction that has been caused by the barbarians aka Culture Enrichers.
There must very quickly become a focus on the truth, rather than the false topic of immigration.
Look, since 1965, every population of European humans, and only European humans, have been subjected to coordinated, state-sponsored mass invasions unlike any in human history. Just in the United States, a European founded nation, a nation with 90% European children for the 1st 400 years, has decreased the share of European children from 90% to 48% between 1965 and 2015. Even if all illegal immigration were stopped…an impossibility under the current regime…the European children will be decreases to 25% within another two decades of legal immigration alone.
This is self-evidently state-sponsored. All expressions of care for European humans, even the slightest grumbling about their demographic destruction, is brutally repressed; the individual fired, tormented, and banned from the public square.
Therefore proposed, the bravest leaders among European people’s must SPEAK the truth about the greatest ethnic cleansing in human history. They MUST form the International Eurocide Tribunal. Non-European leaders must also demand protection for this 8% of the Human Family which is being so ruthlessly destroyed by their own leaders.
Al Hope, Committee for International Eurocide Tribunals
I am happy there are still leaders left in Europe who care about our European people and their future! The current demographic crisis is of utmost importance and must be addressed with full seriousness.
I am doing my little part, spreading the word and encouraging my friends to have children, 3-4 or even 6. That is the only way that we can hope to come out of this crisis without disappearing from the face of the earth, with our western culture, unique customs, and languages.
Do not disappear quietly into the night. Do not become the next Romans, Hellenes, Visigoths, Gauls, Celts… All of them died the same way – through demography and cultural decline. Take this as a goal of a lifetime to prevent the fading of a marvelous civilization.