Hungary

From Wikispooks
Revision as of 04:27, 18 March 2020 by Samwolfe (talk | contribs) (Uprising is a better term for the events of 1956.)
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Group.png Hungary   Sourcewatch SpartacusRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
EU-Hungary.svg
Flag of Hungary.svg
Capital cityBudapest
LocationEurope
TypeUnited Nations Members.svg nation state
Member ofEuropean Defence Union, European Union, International Criminal Court, International Energy Agency, NATO, OECD, UN
SubpageHungary/Ambassador
Hungary/Member of the National Assembly
Hungary/Prime Minister

Hungary is a nation state in Europe

History

In 1956, the communist government was overthrown, but the uprising was violently put down by the Red Army.

Declaring the events of 1956 a revolution was a political decision after the change of regime in hungary, so the new establishment could deduce itself from the freedom fight of 1956.[1]

By definition the movement was an uprising, not a revolution, because its mainstream demands had no intention to overthrow or modify the communist constitutional order. There were representatives of radicals, like Cardinal Mindszenty, but they weren't influenial to the movement in general. On the other hand, the leader of the 1956 movement was the communist Imre Nagy.

End of communism

Communist rule in Hungary came to an end in 1989.


 

An event carried out

EventLocationDescription
Evacuation from AfghanistanAfghanistanThe evacuation of foreigners from Afghanistan, one of the largest airlifts in history

 

Groups Headquartered Here

GroupStartDescription
Corvinus University of Budapest1920One of the universities in Budapest
Eötvös Loránd University1635One of the largest and most prestigious higher education institutions in Hungary.

 

Citizens of Hungary on Wikispooks

TitleBornDiedDescription
Gordon Bajnai5 March 1968Attended the 2014 Bilderberg as ex-Prime Minister of Hungary
Peter Bod28 July 1951Hungarian central banker who was selected a Global Leader for Tomorrow by the World Economic Forum in 1993.
Lajos Bokros26 June 1954Senior adviser to the The World Bank and professor at George Soros' Central European University who was mooted as Prime Minister of Hungary in 2010. Attended the 2007 Bilderberg meeting.
Frank Furedi3 May 1947Professor of Sociology at the University of Kent.
Sebastian Gorka22 October 1970US/UK/Hungarian who became a public figure in Hungary as a "terrorism expert" after 9-11. Contact of Chris Donnelly.
Péter GyörkösHungarian diplomat
János Martonyi5 April 1944Hungarian Bilderberger politician
Péter Medgyessy19 October 1942Prime Minister of Hungary 2002-2004
Ferenc Nagy8 October 190312 June 1979Prime Minister of Hungary 1946-1947
Piroska Nagy-MohacsiDecember 1957Institute for Statecraft director/trustee
Viktor Orbán31 May 1963WEF-backed Hungarian PM who had a "coronavirus law" passed to allow him rule by decree during the state of emergency for an indefinite period<a href="#cite_note-1">[1]</a>, which CNN termed an "outrageous power grab".
Joszef Peter11 August 18941990Soviet spy in the United States.
Árpád Plesch18891974Hungarian-Jewish lawyer who became rich by fraud during World War 2. Huge collection of esoteric pornography. Mentor of Gianni Agnelli.
John Polanyi23 January 1929Founded the Pugwash Conferences, attended the 1991 Bilderberg
Fidél Pálffy6 May 18952 March 1946Hungarian agriculture minister, executed in 1946
George Soros12 August 1930Financial speculator, Beneficiary of Black Wednesday
Tivadar Soros7 April 189322 February 1968Father of George Soros
György Surányi3 January 1954Hungarian banker. Trilateral Commission, 3 Bilderbergs in the late 1990s
Edward Teller15 January 19089 September 2003Director of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, "the father of the hydrogen bomb".

 

Related Document

TitleTypePublication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:US Ambassador to Hungary: Overthrow Assad, Let in Refugees, and Fight Russia...or Else!article6 May 2016Daniel McAdamsUS requirements of it's European vassals illustrated by the speech of US Ambassador to Hungary, Colleen Bell to the Foreign affairs committee of the Hungarian parliament.
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References