The author attempts to intellectualize populist disruption by framing the erosion of regional stability as a triumph of national integrity. It is a classic example of using academic-sounding rhetoric to justify the destabilization of essential international alliances.
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Trump Didn't Lose Hungary! He Sent Orbán To DESTROY The EUAñadido:
So, we've just had the Hungarian elections and Orban lost. Maybe Trump and the sovereigntists didn't lose Hungary. Maybe Trump has a greater plan to send Orban to destroy the European Union. That's what we're going to talk about in this video. Hey, Steve, thank you so much for making yourself available.
>> My pleasure.
>> It's been a while. And uh I just want to say it's great to have you back on. You lived in Hungary for about 13 years and I sent you a tweet the other day which suggested that this is part of a plot.
>> Yeah.
>> So let me let me just share the tweet the tweet. The tweet I hope it's a treat for >> it. Could be a treat.
>> It could be a treat, right? which is um Cesar Sachetti some that this Peter Majar spent 22 years in Orban's party fedz more than two decades only in 2024 did he leave to start a new party but he wasn't on Soros' radar in the previous years didn't shout too much about the irregularities at the polling stations and then at 40% of the polling done he acknowledged his defeat almost as if he had no interest in raising his voice too much.
Trump wants to send Orban to the European Commission.
Now, you've lived in, like I said, in Hungary for 13 years. You go there regularly, and I understand that the Hungarian political situation is important to you.
>> So, what do you make of this?
>> You know, it would be beautiful if it was true. Um, I can't imagine how Trump is going to influence the EU to get Orban in or who he's got on his side. I know the AFD is on a side, but they're not big enough. Uh, actually, they're big enough. They're just not powerful enough because they have not been given power. Um, but I I just I can't see this happen. Let's look at Peter Majar as the, you know, the ideal politician who shot himself in public on video while on a drug binge.
>> What?
>> Who punched a man who filmed him?
>> He This is This is wild speculative rumor and >> No, no, no. These are videos. These are videos that you can watch, like literal videos of him and not to mention his ex-wife who was a finance minister under Orban. Uh came out with a with an interview stating that he on a drunk binge took one of his puppies and cooked it in the microwave and killed it in front of his kids. He um this is all public knowledge and it's been public knowledge and the Hungarian press has covered it. He also um how do I say this nicely? Sir Steven Steven sir >> strip naked strip naked and pleased himself in front of his minor children while he was drunk. He was on a drug binge and he shot himself in public in Romania. He um he got in an argument when a man filmed him dancing with minors in a disco, punched the guy and then threw the phone into the river. Um so I don't know morals are a big part of what I look at when I look at people and someone who does things like that in a short period of time, which he did. Oh, and he beat his wife too. So, um, you know, it's, uh, it's all documented.
It's all easily, you know, verifiable.
She's on national TV doing an interview about this and telling all these stories. And again, she was a finance minister of of Hungary and he was not politically active until 3 years ago and he was only riding on her coattails and he was with Fedz the whole time and he was standing up to Fedz. But let's then look at what the European Union brought out yesterday. Okay, Stephen, before you before you go to that, right, let me just say something about this. The first thing you told me, maybe there's a second thing you told me that he killed their puppy in the microwave in front of the children.
>> Yes.
>> Now, as >> the children had to go to the children had to go to therapy to deal with that.
>> Okay. So as a as a social worker, I know that that is a really really strong signal of someone who's a child abuser. That is psych psychopathy. So one of one, you know, I have occasionally worked with children who are cruel to animals. I work with a 10-year-old boy who used to spray um what you know those kitchen fluids or whatever in the do in the family dog's eyes.
>> Oh. And and I'm saying to the mom, "No, no, no. This is a psychopath." And that's a function of domestic abuse that he was witnessed to by his father.
>> Yes.
>> Like threatening to throw a k a kitten out of their second story flat in front of the little kids and they're screaming. That that is horrific.
>> Yeah.
>> And and then the the the other stuff. So this guy's a wife batterer, a perpetrator of domestic abuse, a psychopath, a pedophile, >> and he he again he pleased himself naked in front of his children.
>> Yeah. No, no, no, no, no, no. That's okay. And this is a guy who's now everyone's voting for, oh, he's great.
He's better than Orban. He's a he's a man of integrity. Come on. You know, and you know, he's talking about, oh, well, you know, everyone says, no, he's running the same government as Orban, but just with less corruption. Well, anyone who who gets funding from the EU with billions of dollars to sway the election is uh not running a government.
They're running an OP. And the EU just came out yesterday with 27 conditions that he has to accept in order to unlock the 30 billion. And that includes abandoning policies of LGBTQ rights, immigration, border patrol, foreign policy, and policies regarding Ukraine.
And if he doesn't comply, they will not only not give him the money, they will permanently ban further funding.
So, does that sound like someone who's uh, you know, carrying on carrying the torch of conservatism? No, it doesn't.
>> No.
>> Look, let's look at what Orban build.
Look, you know, whether or not he's corrupt, I mean, we every politician is corrupt. We already know that. That's not the point. And the point is this.
The election was ran on hate. We hate Orban, so let's get him out. It was never run on who's coming in, what are we voting for and what are we gonna get.
No one even talked about that, right? It was all about we hate Orban. So, it was a complete hate vote and not a for vote for the nation. Huge problem right there. But Orban, what he built was he built the only conservative infrastructure in Europe with his, you know, with the CPAC and with the Patriots movement and all these things.
He built that. So, that's a lasting legacy that's still there.
>> Okay.
>> They feel like what is CPAC? What's this Patriots movement?
>> Well, the Patriot Movement is all of the uh conservative uh leaders in Europe who come together and they work uh to get policy pushed through in all of their nations. So, it's a European movement and CPAC is is the same uh movement that they have in America. It's a meeting every year or twice a year with conser.
It was just actually two weeks ago in in in in Budapest and all the conservative uh people from the world around the world come there and speak and talk about conservative values talking about taking you know uh taking the world away from the globalists and so he he solidified that that's called urbanism right so Orban is gone but orbanism isn't. So he's really left a lasting mark on Europe. I'm not making him into a hero. I mean, I met him and I worked with his government two elections ago where the same thing happened where um uh Susan Rice and the Hillary Clinton gang went to Hungary and paid the opposition parties uh to come together as one group and um go against Oban. And so they called me, they said, "Look, we don't know what to do because we can't get anything out on social media. It's all blocked. It gets all shadowbanned."
Same thing happened this time. there was like 95% of all posts from anything positive Wuban was just disappeared from social media. Um and it was all just hate Wuban. So they called me in and I I can't do much but I put him in touch with somebody who can and uh you know they won and then they won again and this time Wuban stepped down way too easily. He gave up like I'm done. That's it. Okay, see you. That was it. So I just feel like there's something in in the bush. If this is what it is, what you just showed us, I would be highly pleased but very surprised because you you don't put someone like Peter Majar in power who is a complete leverable useful idiot um and then say we're going to save the country because it's just unless they want to sacrifice Hungary at first in the name of saving the union.
Who knows?
>> Yeah. Okay. Well, listen, thank you for that. And there's a few points I want to make in response which is one how important it is to keep looking at stuff from different angles.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. Uh so I I I was like oh my god please let this tweet be true. But the I didn't know about the background to Peter Majar.
So okay maybe >> you know you know what's funny as well?
His last name Majar is literally Hungary.
>> Yes.
>> That's that's that's Hungary in Hungarian.
>> Yes. Because Maja Majakag Hungary, the nation of Hungary, Majosak, Majar Hungary.
>> Yeah.
>> It just fits. It's like it's it's too pretty. You know what I mean? That's probably why they chose him. Like, oh, he's got a great name.
>> Yep. And and then the other thing uh I think to bear in mind always is that there's so that so many interpretations or perspectives or points of view out there in the information space may be completely fake science like the whole idea of of hating Orban. I mean yeah yeah yeah I can understand why people why Hungarians should hate Orban. He's kept he's preserved the Christian tradition.
>> He's I assume he's allowed small businesses to flourish. Hungary >> was some of the lowest taxes in Europe.
Yeah.
>> Low taxes. That's terrible. And cheap affordable energy. But Russian energy, we can't be having that, right?
>> It's so old. It's so old and tired and boring and dusty. That Russian everything. Every every time I write anything about anything, they call me Vatnik and Russia and Vatnik tears. And it's just it's just so old and boring.
Like come up come up at least come up with something new. Think for yourself.
Quit paring, right? You know, I I love a good debate with someone who doesn't agree with me.
>> But when they just throw out slurs, I mean, and then that's the thing when you look at the supporters of Majar, they were all like >> um what's like punk rock, black makeup, you. Like just that's how they were just randala like just just hooligans basically. Not all of them, but a lot of them when they were doing at the at the it's sort of like in America when you saw left and right sort of fighting, you know, and it's all manufactured. It's all manufactured. These people have nothing to lose. So they they, you know, they get pointed in a direction. They get a little bit of money and then they go do the damage. And every single time the younger population believes it every single time. And it's just it's the same. If you look at the patterns through time, it's always the same pattern. Whether it's America or the UK or you know, it just it just or Europe, it just rolls through the same patterns.
But in the end, for me, it's real simple. Integrity is everything. If if if there's a leader or a politician or or even a manager or somebody, you know, has no integrity, they're worthless because they are leverable. They will give in, they will take money, they will get bribed, they will get blackmailed.
Now, this is why I I wrote the fifth book in the series in the citizen servants leader series, Incorruptible, >> because they tried it with me when I was, you know, running uh um civil coalition in Germany, which turned into the AFD. I they tried hard to corrupt me, not only Germans, but the church, um uh the Americans, um they all tried they all tried to corrupt me. They all tried to get me in. Even now with Take America Back, I get calls from people, "Hey buddy, how you doing?" I'm like, "Who the hell are you?" Turns out it's a well-known billionaire's assistant trying to get me on their payroll, you know, and you're like, why are they doing this? Well, obviously why are they doing it? Because they want control.
They don't want anything that they don't control. And so anyone who has such low integrity like Peter Mar, there's no way he's going to stand tall. There's no way he's going to stand tall. He'll take whatever he gets.
>> Yeah. And so because because he's not going to get into power on the strength of his talents and his conviction.
I mean, it's it's like Karma has no integrity. It was so obvious to me before he became Labour Party leader.
This guy has no integrity.
>> So, the only way for him to get into power >> would be if he was bribed, leveraged, compromised, captured, controlled. Okay, this is this is my chance.
>> Yeah.
>> Right. Well, the remember um um blackmail and coercion and leverage and it's not like, "Hey, here's a million dollars. Go do this bad thing." It's never like that. It's you're already compromised when that happens. What it is is like this, like they tried to get me. They said, "Hey, uh we know you're in the solar industry a little bit there in Turkey. Um we have a project uh that needs your expertise. I never met these people. Never spoke to these people.
Never told them anything about me." Next thing you know, they're offering me a $300 million project. on the phone on the first call. Hey, we really need you.
Great guy. You know, they're ex-military guys as well. Great guy. Let's have a call. And we'll come down and visit you.
And I'm like, this is no, that's how they get you. Then they bring you in and they load you and they compliment you.
They give you money. They give you a project. And then they need a favor and and you're like, well, I don't do that.
I have integrity. And they're like, what do you mean you don't do that? You just took all of our money. That's how they get you. They don't get you like, here's a million dollars. They don't do that, >> right? It's too it's too it's too tricky that way. The same thing when they tried to make me a senator in in uh in Illinois from Switzerland where I was living at the time. Same thing. It was it was just unbelievable. I mean when I tell these stories, people are like, "Dude, who are you? How how's that even possible?" You know, I had Opus Day invite me to their headquarters in Berlin. Opus Day.
>> I was like, "Why?" Right? This is this was back in 2005 or six after we founded the Civil Coalition in Germany. I had the CIA talk to me. I had um operatives from from Illinois talking to me about being a senator. I had these guys talk I mean these they come after me. Why?
Because you can't touch me. I don't have any debt. You can't leverage debt against me. That's one of the biggest weapons they have in the Western world is debt. Weaponized debt. Um they can't touch me there. I can't really lose anything because I I don't own anything on purpose, right? Um and so I'm just I'm sort of a free man and that pisses people off.
>> Okay.
>> So I just talk. I just talk. I don't have a job. I'm self self-employed, you know? I just do what I do and it's working. Joint Tab us has exploded since we last talked.
>> Okay. Okay. Join >> Take America Back. I published seven books in that time since we last spoke.
>> Seven books. The full series is published.
>> Um and um I have even placed 40 people in local seats of government in America um through TAB. And there's 300,000 empty seats in America right now.
Whether it's the mayor, the city council, the school board, the precinct seats, special councils, there are 300,000 empty. And when you have 3,147 counties in America and 3,000 300,000 empty seats, that's like 10 seats per county in every state in America.
>> Wow. Well, Stephen, I'll have I'll have the links in the description below where people can get in touch and also your ex and everything. But what about all the stuff that's in the media about Oruraban being corrupt, about how he's um shaped Hungarian institutions so that they're biased towards his perspective and that he's I'm going to say it, Stephen, Putin's puppet, >> just like you and me are. Right.
>> Yeah. Right. Exactly. Oh, let us know in the comments if you're Putin's puppet and if Putin has made you put in the comments that you're a Putin.
>> I did that before. It's really great.
>> Putin's puppets, please identify yourself.
>> Well, look, when you're a smaller nation, you look to larger um powers in order to stabilize your economy, your politics, you know, your society. And it's the sovereign, it's the right of every sovereign nation to speak to whoever the hell they want to speak to.
And the relations with Putin were were very look in in Pitch, they were building that billion-dollar uh nuclear plant back in 2009 when I was there when I got there. Um so they've always had a good relationship, Putin and uh um Orban, but it was never a problem until all of a sudden the EU said Putin bad, you know. Um so no, he's I don't how you know what I Like it's obviously you have proxy wars like the Ukraine between the US and Russia and then they throw everybody in there into the meat grinder and then they sit back here watching trying to trying to justify it. So I'm sure there's an element to that but in the end you can't deny that the economy of of of Hungary was growing again. Um that people are safe there. I love Budapest, man. Every time I go there I have kids there, right?
>> Every time I go there >> I'm just like wow like this is amazing.
This is how Europe used to be. There is no Europe like that anymore. I've lived in eight European countries. And Hungary is by far the one that's that's sort of stayed and kept its culture and its Christian roots. Whether or not you're Christian doesn't even matter. It's about the vision of something larger that's good. That's what it's all about.
It isn't about a religion. Um and so, you know, courtesy, >> Stephen, it's also not about im uh weaponized immigration. That's what we have movements of people as a weapon. Yeah.
>> Against local peoples, which is completely different to bringing people in because your economy is expanding and you need qual workers who are qualified to do those jobs.
>> Well, he was doing that. He was bringing in qualified workers at a at a large rate. PE people weren't even talking about it, >> right?
>> Because they wanted to call him anti-immigration. I it was it was it was a large amount. I forget how what what the actual number was. It was like 30 40,000 people came in into a small country of 8 million people or 9 million people, you know. um who were all qualified, right? Uh >> vetted interviewed the whole works.
Yeah.
>> Jobs for them. Contrast that.
>> It's the same thing. It's the same thing. I did a video the other day. I did a video the other day about, you know, when the when it broke out in 2015 when all the immigrants went to America, like a million people in a day or whatever it was. It was crazy. Sorry. To Europe. America took the same uh people from the same war zones, many many less.
I think they took like 300,000 in total or 250,000.
But they were integrated. They had places to go. They were spread out across America. They had a job, a work permit on day one.
>> They had programs and training and language training and they've integrated. So all the Syrian refugees, they've they've integrated effortlessly in America. Right. In European Union, they threw them in big ghettos.
>> Well, didn't do anything. Just said, "Go fend for yourself."
>> Well, I just compare from what you said, uh, Hungary's 89 million, which I think is the same as Ireland's 89 million.
>> Yeah, it is. and and both were Ireland was a homogeneous nation largely homogeneous Romanic nation and now it's been completely destroyed by weaponized migration whereas Hungary Eastern Orthodox I think >> yeah Catholic Catholic Orthodox actually it's Catholic more Catholics Catholic orthodox >> but Christian nation preserved its heritage still low crime rate high trust society I imagine compared to Ireland where people just don't know each other.
>> Yeah.
>> They just don't know each other. And you got different groups uh that have no background context to unite them.
They're not united by religion or by nationality or by any sort of cultural context. Yes, some are Muslims, but they're Muslims from Algeria versus Muslims from Pakistan or Muslims from Nigeria, right? all just incredibly heterogenous, unable to mix and communicate.
>> So, you have no you have disunityity.
>> Well, yeah, of course. And they're not even meant to to integrate. They they they're not given the opportunity to make I'm not making excuses for them.
What I'm saying is there's no programs in place to to to help them integrate.
They throw them >> It's the same thing that happened with the Turks with the Turks in Germany back in uh when the in the 60s when they're re rebuilding the cities in Germany.
They put them in two areas in blocks of houses and then wondered why they didn't integrate, >> right?
>> You know, and in America, they spread them families out all over America so that they do integrate. And look, Ireland, I feel really bad for Ireland.
I spent many, many summers in Ireland.
Uh, and I have a lot of friends up there, and I did a post the other day.
It's got like 350,000 views on X. Um, and it's uh it's I've gotten mixed results or mixed uh reviews. Some of the Irish hate it that the American some Americans speaking up for them.
Uh but most of them are very thankful.
But this is their chance um to do something real. I mean their army, how how many how many people are in the army? Like 5,000 soldiers or something or I mean >> it used to be it used to be a neutral nation. I don't know if that's the case now, right? Because of what the WF and the globalists EU globalists are doing.
But I want to go back to back to Hungary.
>> Sorry taking you away.
Well, well, Stephen, I think what one of the things that's really great about you is have you how what you're particularly great at is have you you have your eyes on lots and lots of different spheres arenas and you also bring a certain personal element to it like the emphasis on leadership and on integrity and and looking out for those which is all well and good but we're going to stick to Hungary right now and we are going to have a f a further conversation about some other issues. Right. I'm interested.
>> Okay.
>> Okay. I'll keep it I'll try to keep it in in line. Yeah.
>> So, so but what about Orban's corruption? Was he corrupt?
>> Yes.
I mean, look, when I I'll never forget when I got there 2009. By 200 um 10 or 11, they had built like eight full-size football stadiums in two years. I was like, why the hell are they suddenly building? It turns out it was like a big tax scheme, right? So for all of his his buddies who built who who are in construction, right? And then when I was there, they also privatized the uh public pension plan. So anyone who had a private pension, they they they didn't privatize it. They they uh state made it stateowned. So at the time, my uh girlfriend and then wife uh lost her pension. She had a pension with an insurance company. she was paying every month and then it was all taken and put into the state pension fund and people were freaking out about that. But what he did with that is he paid off the IMF and kicked them out. So that was sort of cool for me, you know, you know, and so I told everybody, look at the big picture, right? Um and he also cut pensions of retirees, which was really really bad in order to pay off that debt. Um, and he he kicked all of the national international banks out and put all of his people as CEOs of these banks, you know. So, there was a big uh coup back in 2000 I guess it was 2010 where they they took over public money. They took over all the banks. Uh they put all the people in charge. So, they there was a a form of of of um uh corruption there. Now, some people call it corruption. Some people call it taking control. Um, and then if you want to get the globalists out, you can't leave them any space, >> right? And you remember Soros was there.
Uh, Monsanto was there. Hell, they they burned the fields of Monsanto and then kicked them out, right? Uh, when they found out there was GMO corn there cuz, you know, it's a it's a big corn uh corn country. They use it to make ethanol.
And uh and so, you know, some people say, well, he needed to do that. he needed to take over the all of the institutions in order to weed them out.
Uh but then you look at his, you know, his mansions and his monies and his Rolls-Royces and all this kind of It's just it's obvious you don't do that if you're a leader of a country. You don't like talk about, you know, saving the people and rolling up in your rolls, you know what I mean? Rolls-Royce just just >> it's just bad taste.
>> Yeah.
>> Um we can't I don't want to judge because, you know, Eastern Europe is different than Turkey is different. I mean, here, you know, in Turkey, right where I am right now, you got people driving Rolls-Royces that have no business driving Rolls-Royces. You know, they're corrupt, but people are like, "All right, whatever." You know, just leave me alone and let me live my life.
And in Eastern Europe, it's a little bit like that. In Western Europe, everyone pays attention to everyone and is is jealous of everyone else and it gets into your business, you know. So, it just depends what the culture accepts and doesn't accept.
>> Okay. But the other thing that he that he has done which has been really important is he's been a block a stop to the um to the Ukraine war expanding and more money being given to to Ukraine.
>> Yep.
>> Now, why has he done that? Cuz doesn't he know Russia bad?
>> Well, this is the thing. He's not following the other sheep.
He's looking and saying what's good for Hungary, right? And also what's good for the EU? Because let's face it, the Europeans, the European Union, Oz Fundine, and our seven dwarfs, they need this war to cover up their entire economic disaster that they've created.
They need this war to blame it on, right? That's why they're so happy right now because they think they can make it happen. Now, um the reason he blocked it also was because they don't want war in Ukraine. I mean, they don't want war in Hungary. Hungary borders on Ukraine.
Small piece of it, but it still borders it on Ukraine. And people forget that the Hungarians took a lot of Ukrainians in when it first started. A lot you know um there was Ukrainians in my kids' schools when the war broke out. And um you know he was trying to protect Hungary and Hungary doesn't really have an army of of any for formidable force.
I I think their nav is like a rowboat with two guys or something but just kidding. But you know it's uh it's not a formidable force. He's trying to protect his people. He knows he needs to grow.
Obviously, when you're looking at the election coming up as well, uh in in a couple years when the war started, he knows that he had to get his his country back to safety.
Also, let's face it, Silinsky is a corrupt puppet who just funnels money away into the coffers of all of his friends. And you know, people talk about corruption all the time. And you have, you know, it's it's funny. I saw a post that said the European Union supports Zinsky, a man who will not hold an election because there's war, won't step down, won't go away even though he's been busted for corruption 100 times. Then you have Oban who's a dictator who steps down within minutes of the election, you know? You know what I mean? So, who's the dictator?
>> Oban is such an authoritarian unlike Zalinski, the Democrat.
>> Yeah. Unbelievable.
>> Yeah. And then you have, you know, Zillinsky talking with his man voice, you know, all the time with his I'm a man voice. I'm a warrior voice. He's a little puppet, uh, like literally little puppet. Uh, who is the the conduit for all of these people making this money worldwide just billions of dollars being lost.
>> Yeah.
>> For personal gain. It's horrible. It's horrible. This is the this is again the local levels. It's all the local levels that feed all that money that get all the corruption in there that get all that money and push it up. and he takes it, distributes it or washes it or whatever he does. And you know, they caught those they caught that van, those two vans in Hungary a couple weeks ago.
I did a video about it. Um, it had I think it had like $40 million euros in cash in the back of the van and like 8 kilos of gold just driving through the countryside. They said they were going to Austria, but they were going in the opposite direction.
they were headed towards uh towards Romania which apparently now they found out there was helicopters and and buses and and you name it that were shipping money back and forth uh to Romania, Ukraine and so and so on. And then they found out that a lot of that money, not a lot of it, some of that money, billions, hundreds of millions were going to the Hungarian opposition. They actually have proof of that. And it's just it's hu and it all came from Ukraine. And then you found that, did you see that video of the Ukrainian soldiers planning a Maidon type revolution in in Hungary at Orban1?
Yeah. They actually have one of the Ukrainian soldiers took a took a a cell phone video in the meeting.
>> Mhm.
>> And they have a map of of Budapest and they're saying, "We're going to put troops here and here and here and if we cause a disturbance here, the police will come and then we got to go." No, they were planning this and no one does anything about it, man. Nobody. And that's the problem. Where there is no integrity, there is no hope.
>> Yeah. Yeah. And then it's always easier for I suppose people with no integrity to defeat and undermine those with integrity like Star did with Corbyn. I consider Corbyn has integrity right whether you agree with his politics or not he can't be captured. I just got to say many many years ago there was a campa there was a scandal in the UK about expenses parliamentary expenses.
You know how the then prime minister David Cameron, multi-millionaire, was claiming thousands of pounds of expenses and stuff and the Daily Telegraph published all the expenses claims from different all the MPs. Jeremy Corbyn £10 for a printer cartridge.
>> How dare he?
>> That was dare.
>> Well, when he Well, he didn't claim more cuz he's an anti-semite, obviously, right?
>> Yeah. Of course. Of course. He's trying to make everyone else look bad. How dare he?
>> Yeah. Now, but what about JD Vance's visit and support from the from from the American administration and from Trump?
>> Why why are people making a deal about that? I didn't see anybody, you know, crying about po about um uh Obama going to Moldova or uh different other different countries to support those countries when they were having the election. I didn't see anybody complaining about that. That's normal.
That's that's what people do. That's what leaders do. They support each other. Just normal. So anyone trying to make a deal out of that is just look, you know, grasping for straws.
>> Well, yeah. I'm grasping at this straw that it was hopefully some sort of insurance or insulation against Orban being toppled. Steven, you're taking away myopium.
>> Um, that was was what it was supposed to be. It was supposed to be a show of support. You know, as you know, JD Vance is a whole another story. He wants to be president in 28 and uh he's vying for position. So, he's putting himself out there. and then his his masters uh you know Peter Teal and those guys uh they're making sure that happens too. So we'll see what happens in that in that front. Let's stay with uh with Orban.
>> Okay. All right. And then and then well what's what how well I don't want to ask this question cuz I don't think the answer is good. What's likely to happen in Hungary politically, economically, socially, culturally?
>> Well, here is the good thing. Um, the mayor is still the mayor. The councilman is still the councilman. The local leaders are still the local leaders. Most of them are conservative, fedz, populist, whatever you want to call it. So, they still have power in their local communities. And if these if the citizens get together, same thing I'm doing in America. If the citizens start leading, citizen servant leaders, if they start leading in their community, lead where you live. Look, everyone worries about these international politics, about national politics, about, you know, immigration, all this kind of stuff. You personally cannot change a damn thing. What can you change? You can change in your community how the community is together, if they're if they're if they're cohesive or not. You can go to your city council meetings. You can go to your schoolboard meetings. Things that you can do potentially. I always say worry about the things that you can change because that's the only way we're going to change. You're not going to change by putting Peter and then Orban and then Zotan and another guy. It doesn't it's not going to change anything for real for the people. The people want change.
They got to be the change. Sounds like I'm not trying to be that individual, but I'm just saying they have to be at the local level. They have to make the change. So that's the benefit in Hungary. But what I see happening according to what we see on the on the screen and what the EU is doing, they've also uh now making it so that smaller countries have no vote anymore.
Fundion said we have to seize this opportunity to shut down basically shut down voting rights for smaller countries under a certain population so that the bigger countries can decide what's better best for Europe. That's number one. Number two is that list that list of um you know uh 27 conditions that Majar has to take in order to um get the money and that's like I said LGBTQ rights which um Orban banned right immigration border control which he held tight foreign policy and of course policies regarding Ukraine which means giving them more money and that'll that'll crush that'll crush Hungary that will crush that'll crush homogyny that'll crush um this the safety of of of of the Hungarian nation and the people who voted for this I don't even know what to call them just cretton um are going to be u very very sorry of course uh many of them will ignore it and pretend that it's not happening like they do in the west uh but it's going to hurt the country it's sad for me because you know my kids were born there and they're >> they're not old enough yet to know um uh but it's sort of scary for me when I see that that >> nations going the way of the And that's why I moved to the east. That's why I moved to Hungary in I moved from Germany to Hungary because of that.
>> And now then now I'm in Hungary and it's like, >> you know, and then and then I moved to Turkey, not full, but I'm here part-time, you know, and here is, you know, calm and peace. Well, at least for now until the Americans started talking last week about Turkey being the boo man. So, we'll see what happens here now. Maybe I got to go even further east. Who knows? I I I went from America to Western Europe to Eastern Europe to Turkey. Now I got to go to China or what?
>> Okay.
Um where is it? Darstan.
So about 3 years ago I you know we've gone off Hungary but I'm allowed to and I want to bring it back to Hungary.
>> You're the host. Are you allowed to do it?
>> Dargas about 3 four years ago I said to my wife we should move to Russia, right? because I could see the way the wind was blowing and stuff and I said Russia will be safe and you know economically vibrant and stuff. The problem is there's nowhere bloody warm in Russia.
>> Yeah.
>> Right. I'm Punjabi. I I once went to ears in November, right? And I step out the hotel, it's -23°. I was in Pakistan in June that year and it was plus 40° in the shade. That's my kind of weather.
What the hell am I doing in Siberia in November, right? This Punjabi. But anyway, then I found somewhere that's actually warm in Russia, Darstan.
>> Really?
>> Just north of Baku, and it's a little strip borders the Caspian Sea. It's warmer than London in the winter and in the summer.
>> So, there you go. You got to go further east and expose yourself as the Putin puppet you really are, Steve.
>> And Russia's looking for people. Well, there's there's thousands of Americans, Brits, UK, uh uh sorry, Irish that have moved to Russia. Thousands. Thousands.
There's a whole group on on X that are on they're a little bit pro a little bit too pro, you know, Putin or whatever, but there's a whole group of them on X and like a chat group. Thousands of them. They're all Westerners living in in in Russia. I I was looking at Georgia, actually.
>> Um great tax taxes, great for business.
uh very welcoming to foreigners. You don't need a visa. You can stay like six months or something without a visa. You can check it out. You know, it's it's uh I have friends that live there.
Actually, a German guy just moved there.
A friend of mine setting up some business there.
>> Okay. All right. Now, back to Hungary.
>> Yeah. The other thing that the European Union will want, they'll want they'll want to deny the Hungarian people cheap Russian energy, >> which is ironic because the European Union spends billions of euros every two months for Russian energy, Russian gas. And then you have the Kazakhstan deal, which is the blend they call it. So I was in the oil and oil trade for a while and there was this always this Kazak blend which is 90% Russian oil and 10% Kazak oil and then they sell it as Kazak oil and call it a blend and because you can't prove it which how much oil is how much they they they buy it. That's all over the world.
The whole world buys Russian oil and everyone knows it. Everyone knows it. Not to mention the European Union paying cash for Iranian oil during the sanctions. I got a friend in in in Europe, put it that way. Uh who came to me one time and his family is um an Iranian family who has an oil refinery, >> right? A few of them, >> very very wealthy. And he said, "Dude, uh do you know how we can move cash out of Europe to Dubai?" I'm like, "I don't know, but I might know somebody. What are we talking here?" A couple hundred thousand. He goes, "No, we got like 1.2 billion in Germany. We got over a billion in in Sweden. We got" and I said, "What do you mean cash?" He goes, "Yeah, like pallets of cash in warehouses." I was like, "Why?" He said, "Because the governments pay in cash, so they don't have to pay the taxes and they're paying a less of a price that they would if they bought it on the open market and then they mark it up, put search charges on there, and then the green tax on their on their on their people and they're making, you know, 40 50% margin on top of the margin that they already have. This is this happens, man."
>> Right. So, so >> obviously I couldn't help him because as an American helping Iranian that would be that that's that's a no. I said, "Dude, I can't help you with that How am I supposed to help with that?"
>> Okay. So, that's what's um going to come to the to the Hungarian people.
>> Yep.
>> Some of them at least are going to wake up and notice it at some point soon and then they're going to start protesting, campaigning, getting involved in politics, I hope. Right. So that when when are the next set of elections, local, national?
>> Well, here's the thing. Um, it's easy to elect a globalist. It's hell of a hard to get them out because once they get in, they replace everybody with loyaltists. Loyalists, right? And and to vote them out, good luck. You know, it's it's got to be like a coup almost to get them out. And, you know, it's like it's like a it's like waving them in. Yeah.
Come on in. And then they they'll never leave.
So, so I can see what's predictable then is that Orban could be replaced as head of the Fidesh party by someone who's a globalist.
>> Yeah.
>> So then people think >> cuz I can see it playing out in the United Kingdom.
>> Yeah.
>> Right. We had Sunnak complete globalist replaced by Star an uber globalist.
Yeah.
>> And now we have the rise of Zack Palanski and the Green Party to capture the left vote. But he's gonna do the same stuff as stommer.
>> The the I think what the if I think what they did in Hungary was probably one of their slickest moves they've ever done, the globalists.
>> Mhm.
>> Is because Peter Majar is labeled as further right than Orban except for the corruption, which we know is And so the left parties all lost massively in this election. Like some of them didn't even get any parliament seats at all. All the left parties, right? So it seems that the globalists may be rebranding themselves as populists.
>> Oh, as left-wing leftwing.
>> No, no, no. As right-wing populists.
Like Peter Majar, >> right?
>> His what he campaigned on was tighter immigration laws, no corruption, basically orbanism a little further right, but no corruption.
That's what he ran on. Basically, he said, "I'm going to do what Orban did, just a little harder with no corruption.
That's what he ran on." That was his message.
>> We know it's >> but it was branding and it was brilliant cuz it worked, >> right? So, maybe that's their new stick.
>> Yeah.
>> They they they know the left is dying, so they're going to talk right to get people in and then they're going to flip it just like they did in Virginia.
>> No new taxes. I'm going to lower the cost. in day one taxes on everything from dog walking to gardening.
>> Yeah. Or like Star did. He said everything that that the Labor traditional left wanted and then changed policies completely as soon as he was in power. But I can also see, Stephen, what they could also do as well is put their puppets into the left-wing parties and promote them as >> they've been doing that. That that's nothing new. Okay, that's nothing new.
and and they're losing then and that's why they're going they're shifting to the right >> because they know that look look at the AFD the AFD is like a 400% increase in votes again this time it's like in in in one of the regions just they're just exploding it's crazy >> now look at even in Denmark the conservatives won and in Holland the conservatives are winning it's like it's it's happening they can't deny it so they need to find a new strategy and if you ask me what they did in Hungary is they took some galumpa jellyfish spaghetti uh and made him look like a a populist.
>> Psychopathic. Psychopathic abusive spaghetti though, Stephen.
>> Yeah, there we go.
>> It's important to describe the spaghetti that way, right? Okay.
>> Now, I've never seen him speak, and I don't understand Hungarian. But would I be right in assuming that he's articulate, well presented?
>> H go figure. It's the globalist playbook. Good-looking, perfect hair, and they can orate like crazy, and they're young. That's always the same.
>> But it's everybody. It's Mandami. It's it's um it's Obama. It was Trudeau. It was Kutz. It was >> Macron Zinski. These are all good-looking, good orators. Uh you know, oh, how can that? Look at him. He looks so nice. How can he do anything wrong?
That's it's their playbook. I've been saying this since co since before CO.
>> This is their little playbook. And every time we fall for it, you know, the older generations like, "Oh, look at this young man. He looks like a standup dog.
You speak so well.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. Okay. All right. Well, Stephen, listen. Thank you so much. We're going to be following this closely, right?
Because it has ramifications for all of Europe, for the entire world, for Russia, for Ukraine, you know, more war coming. So, what people should do to keep up to date cuz you do these really great little snippets, three, four minute videos on X and then through your Patreon, you do longer uh videos that people can interact with. So, go follow him on X. Go check out his work. What was the other? Take America back website.
>> Take America back. Jointab us.
>> Jointab us. You send me the link. I'll make sure. Okay.
>> We post that up. And Stephen, really thank you for coming back on and at short notice and being agreeable to do it at a silly time on Tuesday the 14th of April in the morning. So before I go to my social work job. And thank you everybody who's watching. And this is what I want to thank you for. I want to thank you for watching and subscribing cuz my channel's growing like crazy. I want to thank you for all of you that are subscribing to my newsletter at richdospolitics.com.
Thank you for all of you that are supporting me through my Kofi link.
Really appreciate those donations and thank you for your comments. I read your comments and some of them are really really funny and entertaining. Thank you very very much. This is Rich and Steve signing out. All the best. Bye-bye.
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