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2012-05-21
Defense And Debt - NATO Leaders Focus On Funding In Chicago

E.U. Summit On Wednesday - Hollande To Confront Merkel On Euro Bonds

Mounting Risks - ECB Increasingly Concerned Over Aid To Greek Banks

President Obama Meets Pakistan President Zardari On Sidelines At NATO Summit

U.S. Nuclear Safety Chief George Jaczko Quits After Tenure Dogged By Criticism

Suicide Bomb Attack Kills More Than 90 In Yemen's Capital

Facebook Shares Down Sharply On Second Day Of Nasdaq Trading

'Sick Conditions' - Why Greeks Will Vote For Tsipris

An Ultimatum For Greece - Europe Raises Threat Level Against Athens

Doubts In Brussels And Berlin - Schauble's Plan To Head Euro Group In Question

Egypt Court Gives 12 Christians Life Sentences, Acquitted 8 Muslims

Qantas Cuts 500 Engineering Jobs

2012-05-20
Presidents Obama And Karzai Outline Post-2014 Afghanistan Vision At NATO Summit

Montana Wins States' Backing Over Citizens United Legal Fight

'Life Over War': U.S. Veterans Return Medals At NATO Summit

Euro-Zone Crisis: U.K. Prime Minister Cameron's Warning To Greek Voters

Chen Guangcheng's Family And Friends 'Still At Risk' In China

Nationalist Wins Serb Presidential Run-Off Election

Convicted Lockerbie Bomber, Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, Dies

Update: Italy Earthquake Kills 5 And Destroys Centuries Of History

President Obama Touts 'Emerging Consensus' On Reviving Europe

Presidents Obama, Hollande Help Tilt G-8's Balance To Stimulus

The Age Of Extreme Oil - 'This Used To Be A Forest?'

Germany Isolated Over Euro Crisis At G-8 Meeting In Chicago

Scientist Who Championed 'Gay Cure' Admits He Was Wrong

At Least 3 Dead As 5.9 Magnitude Earthquake Rocks Northern Italy

Protesters Set Stockades Ablaze In Busy Montreal Streets

2012-05-19
G-8 Leaders End Summit With Pledge To Keep Greece In Euro Zone

President Obama Takes Republicans To Task Over 'Battle' Against Wall Street Reform

Prosecutors: Three NATO Protesters Planned Attack On President Obama's Campaign Headquarters


Young, Wired and Angry - A Revised Portrait Of Hungary's Right-Wing Extremists
2012-02-04 18:21:29 (15 weeks ago)
Posted By: Intellpuke

Though largely ignored by the national media, Hungary's right-wing extremist Jobbik party operates within a surprisingly well-developed and self-sustained online universe. What's more, recent studies have found that the party's supporters aren't the "losers" that many experts thought they were.


Photo by Reuters

The leader of Hungary's right-wing extremists rarely expresses himself so clearly. Speaking before a crowd of a few thousand supporters in Budapest's Sportmax complex on Saturday, Jan. 21, Gábor Vona announced the end of liberal democracy in the world. In the speech traditionally delivered before party members in January, the 33-year-old politician demanded "no compromising" either with or as part of the ruling political system, calling instead for "fighting, fighting and still more fighting." "We are not communists, fascists or National Socialists," Vona said. "But -- and this is important for everyone to understand very clearly -- we are also not democrats!"

Vona's words were met with highly enthusiastic applause. It was the first time that the head of the right-wing Jobbik party ("The Better") -- which received just under 17 percent of the vote during elections in April 2010 -- had made such a crystal-clear rejection of democracy. The speech was only given slender and primarily disinterested coverage in the Hungarian media. Elod Novák, a deputy chairman of the party, claimed that this probably had more to do with organizational priorities rather than a conscious effort to boycott reporting on the event. "We are the second-strongest party in Hungary," he said, "but we hardly play any role in the traditional media."

Although Novák talks of "exclusion," he in no way intends it to be accusatory. Granted -- even though it backs Hungary's exit from the European Union, the party recently sent a letter of complaint to Neelie Kroes, the E.U. commissioner for digital agenda, alleging that it receives too little coverage from the Hungarian media. But the fact is that the party fondly fosters its image of being a media outcast. What's more, in reality, they have absolutely no need for the traditional media.

(story continues below)




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