yeni
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Post by yeni on Apr 21, 2009 13:18:31 GMT -5
R.I.P. i didn't like Eduardo's incoherent anarcho-nationalist ideas, but he was a hero of the Croatian war of independence, defended the Cro-Hun village of Szentlászló/Laslovo for 152 days against the Serb agression, he deserves the respect for that. this was his main blog eduardorozsaflores.blogspot.com/And don't forget the other murdered Hungarian (Székely), Magyarosi Árpád and the Irish victim, Michael Dwyer. may they rest in peace. It seems they were all simply executed by Bolivian commandos. And there are two persons in Bolivian custody Tóásó Elõd (Székely too) and Bolivian-Croat citizen Mario Fardig Astorga Tadic.
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yeni
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gulash freak
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Post by yeni on Apr 16, 2009 11:16:08 GMT -5
I think the problem would be solved with 4-5 mosques in Transilvania. At least Anittas would be happy. this is a good start in Kolozsvár/Cluj, www.islamcluj.ro/ ;D i have been there, i met only with some Arab folks (they were all very kind ppl) but they said there are also some Romanians and Huns.
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yeni
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gulash freak
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Post by yeni on Apr 15, 2009 8:24:42 GMT -5
Károly Róbert was the great-grandson of Stephen V (V. István) of the Árpád dynasty so he was a direct descendant of our Árpád. He also had some cuman blood too as Stephen V's wife was a Cuman princess this is a popular misconception (in Hungary too). The Petrovics is a south slavic name but Petõfi's paternal ancestors were from the Felvidék (todays Slovakia) they can be traced back there since the 17th century. And Petõfi's family was Lutheran (most popular among Germans and Slovaks and there were many Hun and Cro converts especially in the 16th century). most likely Petõfi's paternal ancestors could be Croats who migrated to Upper Hungary sometimes during the Turkish wars, then those assimilated to the local Slovaks or the Hungarians. Petõfi's mother was Slovak. Petõfi himself was Hungarian, his native tongue was Hun there isnt info if he could speak Slovak at all. But he was certainly not Serb.
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yeni
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gulash freak
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Post by yeni on Apr 14, 2009 10:19:42 GMT -5
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yeni
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gulash freak
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Post by yeni on Apr 5, 2009 18:30:06 GMT -5
Nu, meu bun old friend translate.google.com helped me. There are more ppl in Chisinau too than in Gagauzia, but they still have their autonomy. I trust the Gagauz folks, they will protect it, or at least try to do it. And in this case you either respect their constitutional right recognized by Moldova or try violent method in this sensitive region to disband it, but im not sure our masters in Brussels would support the second alternative (not to mention Kiev, Moscow..). So really, thats the easiest way to guarantee Gagauz autonomy in the unified ’Greater Romania’ (and give precedent to the Transylvanian Hungarians for a Hungarian Autonom Territory ).
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yeni
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gulash freak
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Post by yeni on Apr 5, 2009 14:42:58 GMT -5
regional identities was always stronger among Romanians (and actually this is true for most ppl in Europe, Latin, Germanic and Slavic speakers, its often only a political decision where one ethnicity ends and where the other starts), we probably stick together more because of our isolated language. we are happy if anybody understands us. I haven't decided if i should support Ro-Moldova unity, it would have advantages and disadvantages too. the percentage of Huns would decrease but the number of minorities total would slightly increase in Greater Ro + it would strengthen regionalism in Romania and R. Moldova recognize the concept of territorial autonomy (Gagauzia) so maybe we could profit from it.
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yeni
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Post by yeni on Mar 28, 2009 16:20:43 GMT -5
end Albania-Hungary 0:1 sorry folks thx to that Albanian player who helped the Hun score
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yeni
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Post by yeni on Mar 28, 2009 6:15:31 GMT -5
It seems that the next Hungarian Premier might be a Romanian citizen J anos Takacs, a Hungarian businessman born in Sibiu in 1960, could become Prime Minister of Hungary, after his name was proposed at a meeting of the Socialist Party (MSZP) held Friday, inform portfolio.hu. The idea belongs to even the current chief executive, Ferenc Gyurcsány, portal Index.hu reported, quoted by Mediafax.its unlikely that he will be the pm, he is one of the 8-9 persons whose name was mentioned as possible candidate but the liberal party (SZDSZ) said they won't support him.
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yeni
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Post by yeni on Mar 23, 2009 10:34:28 GMT -5
If i remember correctly , Gyurcsány wasn't loved to much anyway by the Hungarian public. yes thats true www.politics.hu/20090319/poll-finds-gyurcsany-least-popular-hungarian-leader-since-system-changeMarch 19, 2009, 9:30 CET news Poll finds Gyurcsány least popular Hungarian leader since system change By Hungary Around the Clock Some 48% of Hungarians believe that parliamentary elections should be brought forward, while the popularity of Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsány is lower than that of any head of government since 1990, according to a Medián survey commissioned by HVG. Gyurcsány's approval rating of 18% is the lowest on record, as József Antall's poorest rating was 25%, Péter Boross's was 39%, Gyula Horn's 29%, Viktor Orbán's 40% and Péter Medgyessy's low was 37%. In addition, 91% of respondents said the country is going in the wrong direction, exceeding the previous high of 80% polled when the Bokros package of austerity measures was introduced in 1995. Only 6% said they are optimistic. The survey found that 66% of decided voters support Fidesz, compared to 23% for the Socialists. The Democratic Forum and the far-right Jobbik registered 4% each, while the Free Democrats have only 2% support. Some 31% of respondents did not express a party preference. The survey of 1,200 people was carried out March 6-10.
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yeni
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Post by yeni on Mar 22, 2009 13:45:40 GMT -5
www.nytimes.com/2009/03/22/world/22hungary.html?_r=3&scp=1&sq=gyurcsany&st=cse"Hungary’s Premier Offers to Resign Sign In to E-Mail Print Reprints ShareClose LinkedinDiggFacebookMixxMy SpaceYahoo! BuzzPermalinkBy NICHOLAS KULISH Published: March 21, 2009 BERLIN — Hungary’s prime minister, Ferenc Gyurcsany, offered Saturday to resign so that a new government could lead the country out of the recent turmoil that has made it among the most troubled economies in Europe. Skip to next paragraph Enlarge This Image Tibor Illyes/European Pressphoto Agency Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany of Hungary, shown at a Socialist Party meeting on Saturday, has no clear heir apparent. Mr. Gyurcsany’s announcement, at a meeting of his Socialist Party this weekend, surprised even seasoned political observers in Budapest, the capital, who were trying to sort out whether it was a serious resignation or a ploy by an unpopular politician to shore up his position in a time of crisis. Either way, the latest upheaval reinforced the sense of instability in a nation that was once a magnet for investment among former Communist countries and had fallen on hard times even before credit markets began to seize up and the world stumbled toward recession. “I hear that I am the obstacle to the cooperation required for changes, for a stable governing majority and the responsible behavior of the opposition,” Reuters quoted Mr. Gyurcsany as saying at the party congress on Saturday. “If so, then I am eliminating this obstacle now. I propose that we form a new government under a new prime minister.” Governments in both the small Baltic nation of Latvia and Iceland have fallen this winter as a result of the economic setbacks those countries faced, and Hungary appears poised to join them. Mr. Gyurcsany asked his party to come up with a new candidate for prime minister within the next two weeks, but said that he wished to remain the party’s leader. There are no plans for new elections in Hungary. Agoston Samuel Mraz, director of the Perspective Institute, a research group in Budapest, said the result would most likely be a politically weak leader, with a term of office lasting barely a year before the next election. However, he did not rule out the possibility that Mr. Gyurcsany would ultimately remain in office. “If there is nobody who is ready to do this job, Mr. Gyurcsany will strengthen his position and he will be the winner,” Mr. Mraz said. “I could imagine it.” There is no clear successor waiting to take Mr. Gyurcsany’s place. He and his Socialist Party have been criticized for raising taxes and cutting benefits to rein in the country’s budget deficit. Mr. Gyurcsany has ruled in a minority government since the Free Democrats, who propose even deeper spending cuts and economic changes, quit the governing coalition last year. The ballooning budget deficit, which rose to 9.3 percent of the gross domestic product in 2006, left the country burdened with debt, roughly a third of which was in foreign currencies. As a result, Hungary was one of the hardest-hit countries as capital began to flee emerging markets last fall. The more money investors pulled out, the weaker the country’s currency, the forint, became and the more expensive those debts were to repay. The government’s problems played out in miniature, but no less painfully, for people who had taken out mortgages and car loans in euros and Swiss francs. In October, the country’s government was forced to turn to the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the European Union for a $25 billion rescue package." This is the first good idea of Gyurcsany since he came to power but he should already do it in 2006. but we need new parliamental elections as early as possible, not another lame MSZP government. They proved their incompetency with two failed prime ministers (Medgyessy and Gyurcsány) why do they think a 3rd one can do smthing good for the country
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yeni
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gulash freak
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Hi
Mar 19, 2009 16:58:57 GMT -5
Post by yeni on Mar 19, 2009 16:58:57 GMT -5
i also love HoI 2 ;D
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yeni
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gulash freak
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Post by yeni on Mar 5, 2009 6:39:50 GMT -5
multumesc Happy railwayman and Diur
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yeni
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gulash freak
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Post by yeni on Mar 3, 2009 9:16:08 GMT -5
is it known which is that non-allied state?
Mother Russia?
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yeni
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gulash freak
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Post by yeni on Mar 3, 2009 9:13:57 GMT -5
Oszkár köszi lvl u must be masochist to listen Hun nationalist rock music
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yeni
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Post by yeni on Mar 3, 2009 3:37:57 GMT -5
yes they settled in the Nagy Alföld (Great Plains) Here is a map which show it (Kunok in Hungarian).
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yeni
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Post by yeni on Mar 3, 2009 3:14:25 GMT -5
multumesc lvl, hvala Novi i Shonic (lvl are you a Kárpátia fan? ur sig "Egy az Isten,egy a nemzet!" is the title of one of their song, no? )
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yeni
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gulash freak
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Post by yeni on Mar 1, 2009 18:19:00 GMT -5
I think their motive was to take power over their Gypsy tribe, probably some sort of Cigany royal conflict cause by different royal factions. well currently the suspects denies that they commited the crime but the relatives of the victims says they had a conflict because of a dog, the victims' dog went to the suspect's garden and they wanted to take a ravange for that index.hu/bulvar/2009/03/01/egy_kutya_miatt_robbantottak_pecsen_/its really hard to believe this led to the murder but who knows...
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yeni
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Post by yeni on Mar 1, 2009 18:08:40 GMT -5
thx Aadmin, Ruse, wbb and szõröstalpu one quarter century old ;D 25
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yeni
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Post by yeni on Feb 28, 2009 4:30:26 GMT -5
yes i read it on Kuruc.info, as for Bogdan Jeno and Bogdan Janos it's interesting that they regard themselves a Roma, because they dont look Roma at all, they are a bit of white coloured skin. The grenade they used is of Yugoslav product. the Bogdan family name is very typical among Romas, especially among the "beás" gypsies, who speak an archaic Romanian dialect. But they seemed to be normal more or less integrated ppl im curious what was their motive to do this. nah i don't believe in conspiracy theories and forget that Arkan thing it was myth started by a Romanian newspaper but the parents of Sesum denied the allegations, the father is an economist who works for an agricultural company... and there wont be civil war, the worst thing what could happen is probably a few anti-gypsy pogroms in some villages but i even doubt that. Hungarians are very peaceful and patient ppl. and how would that retard Gyurcsany benefit from a civil war? he is just an incompetent idiot i think you expect too much from him. you just have too active imagination, thats my opinion
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yeni
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Post by yeni on Feb 27, 2009 22:36:01 GMT -5
Grenade attack kills two in Hungary Budapest - A Roma couple were killed in their sleep when a hand grenade was thrown through the window of their house in southern Hungary, authorities said Wednesday. A 37-year-old man and his 31-year-old wife died in the blast late Tuesday in the town of Pecs. Two of their three children were slightly injured. Police were quick to dismiss the idea that the attack was racially motivated. The case was probably a Mafia-style revenge killing, county police spokesman Peter Zsobrak said on Hungarian television. He said police had found no evidence of a link to a November 3 attack in north-eastern Hungary that left two Roma dead. In that case, a man and a woman died in a hail of gunfire after petrol bombs were thrown into two houses in the village of Nagycsecse. Roma, or Gypsies, make up about 7 per cent of Hungary's population of 10 million. Anti-Gypsy sentiment has risen over the past two years, most visibly with marches through Roma communities by the extreme nationalist Hungarian Guard, a uniformed paramilitary organization. www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/....in-hungary.html[glow=red,2,300]19 November 2008.[/glow] The police captured two suspects yesterday in relation to this case in Pecs. it seems they had some personal motives, racism is unlikely... since they are Roma too (two brothers) and one of them is a former policeman the other was a member of the gypsy minority local government (cigány kisebbségi önkormányzati képviselõ) in his town. havariapress.hu/index.php?menu=hir&hir=29346webcast.tv2.hu/tenyek/index.php?m=video&video_id=390846
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