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Szegedist
01-23-2013, 03:42 PM
So I hear MIÉP is being revived.

Géza
01-23-2013, 03:51 PM
So I hear MIÉP is being revived.

Yes, this is a joke of this week. :picard1: Somebody want weaken the Jobbik.

Szegedist
01-23-2013, 03:58 PM
MIÉP was never a serious political party, more of a gathering of pro-Fidesz extremists, the sort of place Zsolt Bayer would fit in well.

http://index.indavideo.hu/video/Miep

This will benefit Fidesz, and will be bad news for Jobbik.

Géza
01-23-2013, 04:02 PM
MIÉP was never a serious political party, more of a gathering of pro-Fidesz extremists, the sort of place Zsolt Bayer would fit in well.

http://index.indavideo.hu/video/Miep

This will benefit Fidesz, and will be bad news for Jobbik.

This shows how young you. Twelve-Eleven years ago they could mobilize 50 thousand people at 15th of March (a Hungarian National Holyday). This party was the predecessor of the Jobbik. Those times was very different.

Szegedist
01-23-2013, 04:06 PM
Ok I was wrong.

And in former Gömör we did not hear that much about them, and lack of internet made things difficult to follow abroad.

But whatever, you know best, yes I am 7 years old :rolleyes:

Arrow Cross
01-24-2013, 09:25 AM
Divide & conquer. Yet, I don't think there'll be more than a handful of jackasses voting for those transparent traitors and even then, the Left will be more divided.

The problem with democrazy is that at the end of the day, all the other parties serve the same masters; a fact already demonstrated by the "grand coalition" chimping outside the parliament after Gyöngyösi's "controversy". Even if Jobbik would, say, in 2018, actually manage to win the elections, every single band of thieves that call themselves "democratic" would unite against it, pretty much like it happened in France 2002.

Only with an absolute majority (50%+) would they be able to form a government.

Only with a two-thirds majority would they be able to alter the "constitution", principal laws, or even initiate the process of leaving the EU (necessary, among others, to reinstate the death penalty and escape its rabid multiracialist policies).

A collapse and a civil war are more likely to happen first, I'm afraid.

Szegedist
01-24-2013, 05:31 PM
It is not about MIÉP stealing Jobbik votes, but acting as a bait for Jobbik politicians who are becoming disillusioned with Jobbik, or don't believe that they can achieve much in the next elections.

Géza
01-25-2013, 04:30 PM
Divide & conquer. Yet, I don't think there'll be more than a handful of jackasses voting for those transparent traitors and even then, the Left will be more divided.

The problem with democrazy is that at the end of the day, all the other parties serve the same masters; a fact already demonstrated by the "grand coalition" chimping outside the parliament after Gyöngyösi's "controversy". Even if Jobbik would, say, in 2018, actually manage to win the elections, every single band of thieves that call themselves "democratic" would unite against it, pretty much like it happened in France 2002.

Only with an absolute majority (50%+) would they be able to form a government.

Only with a two-thirds majority would they be able to alter the "constitution", principal laws, or even initiate the process of leaving the EU (necessary, among others, to reinstate the death penalty and escape its rabid multiracialist policies).

A collapse and a civil war are more likely to happen first, I'm afraid.


That collapse will start in the USA when they will ban the "assault" guns, and after it the US governement will liquidate the democracy. That strom with the cintemporary recession will run off this tenous balance of peace.