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OPINION

EU Commissioner-designate for Agriculture and Food Christophe Hansen attends his confirmation hearing at the European Parliament in Brussels on 4 November 2024.
  • OPINION, POLITICS

Exiting the Labyrinth: Hearing of Commissioner-designate for Agriculture Provides Grounds for Cautious Optimism

‘Despite his mild demeanour and centrist credentials, what Christophe Hansen offers is a distinctly more pro-farmer outlook than that of the previous quinquennium. The Luxembourgish was adamant in his defence of the CAP during his hearing.’…
  • Stefano Arroque
  • ‎ —‎ 09.12.2024
  • OPINION

Soros Media ‘Investigative’ Report Accuses Hungarian Intelligence of…Doing Their Job

‘It is evident that the international network—of which Direkt36 and De Tijd are integral part of—consistently criticizing the Hungarian government, is essentially accusing the Intelligence Office (IO) of doing its job, however absurd it seems. The true aim of the…
  • Joakim Scheffer
  • ‎ —‎ 06.12.2024
  • OPINION, POLITICS

Trump’s Comeback Victory and Its Electoral Implications

‘Republicans should be especially concerned about their ability in the post-Trump era to retain gains in the Rust Belt, where the president-elect is uniquely popular among white working-class voters. Trump has twice carried Michigan and Pennsylvania, which hadn’t voted for…
  • Michael O’Shea
  • ‎ —‎ 06.12.2024
Arthur James Balfour
  • CULTURE & SOCIETY, OPINION

The Death of an Anglo–Hungarian Painting

Nine months after a savage act of vandalism at Trinity College Cambridge, anger is growing at its lacklustre response….
  • Adam LeBor
  • ‎ —‎ 06.12.2024
Former Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsány casting his vote in the national referendum on dual citizenship
  • CULTURE & SOCIETY, OPINION

A Referendum from the Dark Pages of Hungarian History — Twenty Years Since the Betrayal of the Nation

‘The inconclusive referendum held a few years after the millennium is still a blot on Hungarian social life. Thanks to a section of the Hungarian political elite of the time and a large number of misguided voters, that day became…
  • Artúr Köő
  • ‎ —‎ 05.12.2024
  • OPINION

How ‘the Great Predictor’ Allan Lichtman Completely Embarrassed Himself

History professor Allan Lichtman’s Keys to the White House model predicted Kamala Harris would win the 2024 election, which, evidently, was won by Donald Trump instead. Professor Lichtman can’t seem to accept that his model failed, so he argued that…
  • Márton Losonczi
  • ‎ —‎ 03.12.2024
mother baby
  • CULTURE & SOCIETY, OPINION

Family-Centric Thinking Against Global Population Decline

‘In the East, the communist worldview largely rejected the nuclear family unit, seeing it rather as an economic unit that ideologically furthered capitalist interests. In the West, a notion emerged in the latter twentieth century that largely views prioritizing family…
  • Peter Csillag–Samuel Duncan
  • ‎ —‎ 03.12.2024
  • OPINION

Pope Francis Calls for Investigation of Israel to Determine if It Is Committing Genocide

‘Last year, Pope Francis met separately with relatives of Israeli hostages in Gaza and Palestinians living through the war. His use of terminology such as “terrorism”, and, according to the Palestinians, “genocide”, set off a firestorm. In any case, the…
  • Fr. Mario Alexis Portella
  • ‎ —‎ 01.12.2024
Hezbollah fighters carry out a training exercise in southern Lebanon, on 21 May 2023 ahead of 'Liberation Day', the annual celebration of the withdrawal of Israeli forces from South Lebanon on 25 May 2000.
  • CURRENT, OPINION

Israel’s Ceasefire with Hezbollah: A Strategic Reset Ahead of the Second Trump Presidency

‘The ceasefire is a development that aligns with the Trump administration’s anticipated foreign policy approach, which is expected to support Israel’s military objectives while facilitating diplomatic resolutions to regional conflicts. The ceasefire may also pave the way for expanding the…
  • Dávid Nagy
  • ‎ —‎ 27.11.2024
By Giuliano Bugiardini - Bridgeman Art Library: Object 827682, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=31407241
  • CULTURE & SOCIETY, OPINION

‘The Pope of Chaos’: The Reign and Legacy of Clement VII

‘For Hungary, Clement’s tenure offered little tangible support during one of its darkest eras, while his broader legacy includes the catastrophic Sack of Rome, the expansion of Protestantism, and the Anglican schism. Today, he is remembered not as a leader…
  • Botond Szabó
  • ‎ —‎ 26.11.2024
Former political advisor to US President-elect Donald Trump Steve Bannon (R) at his court hearing at the Manhattan Criminal Court in New York City on 12 November 2024.
  • OPINION

What Is ‘rough Roman justice’?

‘Was Bannon alluding to decimation, whereby as punishment for cowardice or insubordination in the army, one soldier out of ten was picked to be executed, sometimes by their own brothers-in-arms? Would Steve march into the MSNBC newsroom with a dozen…
  • Hugo Martin
  • ‎ —‎ 23.11.2024
People attend a funeral for those killed by suspected Boko Haram militants in Zaabarmar, Nigeria, on November 29 2020.
  • OPINION

Let Us Remember Our Brethren in Nigeria

‘Aside from a rare or every-now-and-then post, hardly anyone in the mainstream media—this goes for our politicians too—speaks to us about the Christian genocide in Nigeria at the hands of Islamic fundamentalists. While Western politicians and certain of our own…
  • Fr. Mario Alexis Portella
  • ‎ —‎ 23.11.2024
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OPINION

Where Transparency Would Be Most Welcome
OPINION

Where Transparency Would Be Most Welcome

As the European Commission threatens Hungary with withholding billions of EU funds, Ursula von der Leyen’s own corruption scandal around the controversial Pfizer deal is growing. Double standards seem to be at the very core of the EU.

Tamás Orbán
21.09.2022
Why Monarchies Still Make Sense
OPINION

Why Monarchies Still Make Sense

What is the point of monarchies? What do kings stand for that presidents of republics do not? 

Gergely Szilvay
19.09.2022
How Misology Threatens Freedom of Expression in Democracy
OPINION

How Misology Threatens Freedom of Expression in Democracy

Freedom of speech is a not a privilege that is conceded by government, but a natural right that comes from God. The tutelage of this right is vital for any democratic political process and the development of the human person.

Fr. Mario Alexis Portella
19.09.2022
The Heartbeat Amendment: A Last-Minute Attempt to Save a Life  
OPINION

The Heartbeat Amendment: A Last-Minute Attempt to Save a Life  

As is customary in Hungary when it comes to the criticism of any government measure, the vehement attacks on the amendment of Hungary’s abortion law misconstrue the facts.

Zsófia Tóth-Bíró
16.09.2022
New York Declares Third ‘State of Emergency’ this Year
OPINION

New York Declares Third ‘State of Emergency’ this Year

The governor of New York has declared a state of emergency over polio, following two other states of emergency over COVID-19 and monkeypox. While encouraging polio vaccinations is important, New York should consider trust issues as well before scaring residents over a single known polio case.

Lili Zemplényi
14.09.2022
Threats Against Giorgia Meloni: The ‘Love is Love’ Lot’s Hating on Right-Wing Women
OPINION

Threats Against Giorgia Meloni: The ‘Love is Love’ Lot’s Hating on Right-Wing Women

Defying threats to her life and a concerted media smear campaign, Giorgia Meloni is set to write history as Italy’s first female prime minister.

Zsófia Tóth-Bíró
12.09.2022
Beyond Good and Evil
OPINION

Beyond Good and Evil

We now stand at the cliff edge of the truth quarry, where mass media and technology have facilitated what Stalin always wanted: ‘engineers of human souls’.

Brian Patrick Bolger
11.09.2022
An Iron Lady She Is Not – Liz Truss’ Record in Moscow
OPINION

An Iron Lady She Is Not – Liz Truss’ Record in Moscow

Moscow sees the UK’s new prime minister as hostile and incompetent as a result of her Russia-related gaffes and warmongering rhetoric.

Ágnes Komáromi
07.09.2022
Orbán’s Holiday
OPINION

Orbán’s Holiday

This year, the unfriendly media has been obsessed with Orbán’s ‘unusually long’ holiday—in reality, three weeks, as has been the case for a long time. Liberal commercial television RTL’s evening news program even asked the dramatic and at the same time rhetorical question: ‘Has Viktor Orbán Been on Holiday for Almost Three Weeks in a Row?’

Zsófia Tóth-Bíró
31.08.2022
On War as an Act of Love 
OPINION

On War as an Act of Love 

Love used to define war, and the love that avoided nuclear war when logic would have held it inevitable seems to have begun to limit the wars that would kill what you love.

George Friedman
28.08.2022
The 20 August Fireworks I Will Never Forget
OPINION

The 20 August Fireworks I Will Never Forget

An announcement was made yesterday that the fireworks will be postponed as a precautionary measure. A responsible decision from a responsible government. This was not always so—in the year 2006, the government did not cancel the fireworks, which resulted in the death of five people.

Zsófia Tóth-Bíró
21.08.2022
How Not to Do Journalism – RFE’s Interview with András Hodász
OPINION

How Not to Do Journalism – RFE’s Interview with András Hodász

This article is not about the András Hodász phenomenon. It is about the media exploitation of the András Hodász phenomenon.

Zsófia Tóth-Bíró
20.08.2022
Monkeypox and Other Words That Offend
OPINION

Monkeypox and Other Words That Offend

Of course, it is hard to deny the reality-shaping capacity of words and phrases. The realities construed through public discourse can in turn influence people’s attitudes, for example attitudes towards vaccination, or voting choices. The way things are spoken about in public may even affect the outcomes of elections, as we have seen time and again.

Zsófia Tóth-Bíró
18.08.2022
Should the West Reintroduce Mandatory Military Service?
OPINION

Should the West Reintroduce Mandatory Military Service?

The Russian invasion of Ukraine forced most NATO members to reckon with the poor shape of their military and left them searching for quick fixes. Countless procurement programmes have been signed for new weaponry, but we’re still short of manpower. Compulsory service, perhaps even for women, may prove to be the only answer.

Tamás Orbán
14.08.2022
Clump of Cells or God’s Image in the Making?
OPINION

Clump of Cells or God’s Image in the Making?

I believe that we were all created in God’s image, and therefore there is that of God in all of us, including pre-born babies. But one need not be a Christian to understand the fundamentally evil nature of abortions.

Zsófia Tóth-Bíró
14.08.2022
The Fabrication of Stereotypes to Promote an Agenda
OPINION

The Fabrication of Stereotypes to Promote an Agenda

It seems like reality and common knowledge do not matter when an agenda is being promoted with noble lies.

Zsófia Tóth-Bíró
11.08.2022
Putin’s War or Russia’s War – The Dangerous Notion of Collective Guilt
OPINION

Putin’s War or Russia’s War – The Dangerous Notion of Collective Guilt

Since the beginning of the tragic war in Ukraine, many have embraced the idea that Russians have collective responsibility for the current events. However, it is crucial to recognise that the notion of collective guilt should not be used to demonise or incite hatred against ordinary Russians.

Ágnes Komáromi
06.08.2022
Beware of the Wounded Dragon
OPINION

Beware of the Wounded Dragon

Despite all the threats made by Beijing, Pelosi landed in Taipei unscathed. However, the fact that the Red Dragon has not struck (yet), does not mean it takes humiliation lightly.

Tamás Orbán
04.08.2022
Blackmailing and Coercion as Ineffective Tools of Diplomacy
OPINION

Blackmailing and Coercion as Ineffective Tools of Diplomacy

It looks like the Biden government may end up not being able to push its anti-growth tax cartel idea through anyway, beside finding that it is very difficult to coerce the Hungarian Prime Minister into doing anything that he does not feel coincides with the interests of the Hungarian people.

Zsófia Tóth-Bíró
23.07.2022
We Stand with Ukraine, but We Stand with Hungary First
OPINION

We Stand with Ukraine, but We Stand with Hungary First

According to Mr. Sakiewicz, Ukraine is now fighting for ‘an ideal that has always connected Poles and Hungarians’, which is ‘the right to preserve its own identity.’ Well said – Hungary has indeed always fought and will always fight to preserve its own identity. We stand with Ukraine, but we stand with Hungary first.

Zsófia Tóth-Bíró
11.07.2022
The Problem with Trans Athletes
OPINION

The Problem with Trans Athletes

No one has suggested that trans athletes should not compete, they should have every right to do so, but in their own category, in order to create as much of a fair playing field as possible.

Balázs Hompoth
03.07.2022
COVID, Crypto, and Climate: We Are in an Increasingly Abusive Relationship with the Idea of ‘The Science’
OPINION

COVID, Crypto, and Climate: We Are in an Increasingly Abusive Relationship with the Idea of ‘The Science’

Science is merely a tool. Tools may be used—and abused—towards this or that end, but they do not determine the end that is chosen.

Calum T. M. Nicholson
11.06.2022
Florida versus Disney: The Business of Politics
OPINION

Florida versus Disney: The Business of Politics

When multi-billion-dollar companies decide to play moral judges in American politics, they rarely expect lawmakers to take a real stand against it. But Florida is different – with a governor who is clearly getting ready for 2024.

Tamás Orbán
24.04.2022
The West’s Nervous Breakdown
OPINION

The West’s Nervous Breakdown

To the old question, ‘Is there a ghost in the machine?’, therefore, we could now answer: no, but there is a consumer. And that consumer selects his new identity, along with its own distinctive pronoun, from the vast range of moral possibilities that the modern world throws up.

John O'Sullivan
22.04.2022
The Forgotten Genocide in Yemen
OPINION

The Forgotten Genocide in Yemen

Why has the majority of the international community criminalised Vladimir Putin, but has for the past seven years refrained from publicly challenging or criticising the US government’s implicit role in the Yemeni genocide?

Fr. Mario Alexis Portella
20.03.2022
Nationalism as Unity Within and Solidarity with Thy Neighbours
OPINION

Nationalism as Unity Within and Solidarity with Thy Neighbours

There is an alternative look at nationalism – as one that is compatible with classical liberalism, which promotes unity within the nation and solidarity with neighbouring countries. 

Lili Zemplényi
20.02.2022
The Structural Failures of Planned Economies III – Living Standards in the Soviet Union
OPINION

The Structural Failures of Planned Economies III – Living Standards in the Soviet Union

Although it always comes as a shock for people from Central Eastern Europe who lived through state socialism, nowadays in the West there are increasingly more young people who identify as Marxists or even Communists.

Lili Zemplényi
23.01.2022
The Structural Failures of Planned Economies II – The Holodomor
OPINION

The Structural Failures of Planned Economies II – The Holodomor

Given the increasingly widespread appeal of Marxist beliefs in Western academia, it is important to remind ourselves of what really happened under Soviet-type planned economies.

Lili Zemplényi
22.01.2022
The Structural Failures of Planned Economies I – No Long Term Economic Growth
OPINION

The Structural Failures of Planned Economies I – No Long Term Economic Growth

While some disappointment with capitalism—just like with any system—is completely understandable, the virtues of capitalism must be acknowledged.

Lili Zemplényi
21.01.2022
Why Do We Tend to Turn a Blind Eye to the Rights of the Most Vulnerable?
OPINION

Why Do We Tend to Turn a Blind Eye to the Rights of the Most Vulnerable?

Abortion was the leading cause of death globally in 2021 which means that nearly 43 million babies were killed in the womb before they could be born.

Hungarian Conservative
15.01.2022
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