Soros, “The Godfather,” and conspiracy theories that aren’t conspiracy theories
The mantra that we are all supposed to believe about Soros and his Open Society network – that he is a philanthropist, that’s all charitable – is false.
The mantra that we are all supposed to believe about Soros and his Open Society network – that he is a philanthropist, that’s all charitable – is false.
“The dollar left is keeping quiet about its 4 billion forints [EUR 10.2m] worth of foreign financing, but the picture is becoming ever clearer,” Fidesz communications director István Hollik said.
A recent report unveiled that George Soros’s charities and organizations fund more than 250 media outlets around the world, manipulating public opinion and bankrolling liberal indoctrination.
The Soros network is already deeply embedded in the U.S. government, with Governing for Impact influencing the Biden administration's decisions down to the level of concrete wording.
Former Open Society Foundation director Andrej Nosko admits to an unfair, biased campaign against Hungary and Poland in a lengthy Skype interview leaked to Hungarian daily Magyar Nemzet.
Judit Varga said financier George Soros is behind fresh attacks on Hungary's government over its record on media freedom.
“George Soros is insulting Hungary again; this time by calling it a mafia state,” Csaba Dömötör wrote.
Many will recall that the Czech European Commissioner said last September that Hungarian people are “not in a position to form an independent opinion” and that, therefore, Hungary is a “sick democracy.” Now, Jourová strikes again.
2020 has been quite the year for Věra Jourová, the European Commissioner for Values and Transparency.
The prime minister said great effort was required to prevent the many billions of euros of damage that George Soros wanted to cause to Hungary. He also asked everyone to make do this year with a small Christmas celebration.
Hungary, said Prime Minister Orbán, ‘opposes with all its might.’
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said "common sense won the day" in the course of the European Council summit last week.
“At last week's summit of the European Council, common sense prevailed; we defended Hungary's sovereignty and Hungarian money,” said Prime Minister Viktor Orbán in his speech in Parliament today.