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At the end of my way home from Austria the other day, a group of skinheads boarded my train. I looked up and caught the eyes of the last one, and chose to not hide my disgust while I stared at the holder of his c. 800 cm³ brain. Before he left the compartment at the other end, he told his comrade: "Ah, there is another disgusting hook-nosed Jew here in the back, right there!"

I was taken for a Turk in West Germany, so it was no news that racists' racial typology equals seeing what you want; here the extra irony is that my nose comes just from a German lineage of my ancestors...

*Lunatic*, n.
One whose delusions are out of fashion.

by DoDo on Tue Nov 17th, 2009 at 03:28:58 AM EST
So Jobbik boss Gábor Vona had his 'press conference'.

  • He refused to shake hands with local Roma, saying that they first have to prove to be worthy of it. (One has to suppose that all the thousands of others he shook hands with proved it beforehand.)

  • He thinks prisons today are like wellness centres. (He should have no problem to inhabit one with the far-right rioters he defended, I guess.)

  • He trottled out the standard threat that "only those should be afraid who don't keep the law". Then proceeded to propose laws to curb "child manufacture" [ = Gypsies will out-breed us!].

  • He claims he has no problems with Gypsies only criminals, but then proceeded to propose a registering of all Roma and the dissolution of the Roma self-government. And for those who don't like that, he suggested moving away.

  • There was one Gypsy leader present, one who sold out to Jobbik to be its show window Gypsy -- and proceeded to suggest that it's not the Roma but Jews who are the alien body in the nation...

Meanwhile, police showed its colours again: when local Roma wanted to enter the 'press conference', there were first sent home to bring their ID cards, and when they brought those, they were turned away without justification.

:: :: :: :: ::

As I implied in the diary: the state is impotent, society is impotent.

Meanwhile, the interior minister tried to counter-act some police captains' sabotage of his decree about dissolving Hungarian Guard gatherings with a new decree making the wearing of the Hungarian Guard uniform a punishable violation, too.

*Lunatic*, n.
One whose delusions are out of fashion.

by DoDo on Tue Nov 17th, 2009 at 11:56:25 AM EST
[ Parent ]
(Fidesz being the main opposition party, a right-populist outfit led by a narrow cabal of ideology-swapping yuppies only interested in power.)

  • The scandalous mayor of Edelény is also the MP for that region (which is near Sajóbábony in the impoverished Northeast). The one 'punishment' for [generating bad press with] the racist tirades he reportedly got behind closed doors was that he would not be the candidate next time (in 2010). This may still be the case, given that the decision is in the hands of the top leadership; however, the local Fidesz organisations expressed their opinion with an unanimous endorsement...

  • Fidesz leader, once (and future) PM Viktor Orbán said the right things when commenting the events in Sajóbábony -- but not without using the forked tongue method. He said it can't be that 'self-denfense organisations and marching paramilitary units' (in that order!) take over the role of the State.


*Lunatic*, n.
One whose delusions are out of fashion.
by DoDo on Wed Nov 18th, 2009 at 06:36:05 AM EST
[ Parent ]
A few years ago, I traveled to nearby Tiszaújváros, an industrial town a mere 25 km south from Sajóbábony.

I remember a very quiet little town, with pleasant residential areas with public parks and industrial plants at the edge of the city; difficult to imagine large scale urban violence in such a setting; still...

Europeans think a hundred miles is a long way. Americans think a hundred years is a long time.

by Bernard on Wed Nov 18th, 2009 at 09:45:41 AM EST
[ Parent ]
BTW, Tiszaújváros means Tisza [that's the river] New City. Original name: Sztálinváros, for Stalin :-)

*Lunatic*, n.
One whose delusions are out of fashion.
by DoDo on Wed Nov 18th, 2009 at 10:31:49 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Oh yes, I remember a colleague telling me this anecdote. Still I wonder if Sajóbábony is anything like Tiszaújváros since the two cities are close...

Europeans think a hundred miles is a long way. Americans think a hundred years is a long time.
by Bernard on Wed Nov 18th, 2009 at 04:36:30 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Closeness means nothing in this case... but I don't know, I haven't been to either.

Tisza- (ex Sztálin)újváros was built anew on the fields next to a village in the early fifties as a Socialist 'model city', so it has nothing to do with regional city plan and arrchitecture traditions. On the other hand, due to WWII or bad construction or government programmes, other cities and big villages lost much of their older architecture, too, to be replaced by what I guess to be similar 'socialist' architecture, only less flashy.

Additionally, I ask: when have you been to Tiszaújváros? Because, even if I wasn't there, there is the issue that not many of the areas with concrete apartment blocks in the former Eastern Bloc have changed for the better since 1989...

*Lunatic*, n.
One whose delusions are out of fashion.

by DoDo on Thu Nov 19th, 2009 at 09:40:10 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Tisza- (ex Sztálin)újváros

Actually, I messed up completely. Sztálinváros was the other model city, called Dunaújváros today (it's on the Danube). Tiszaújváros was Leninváros ( = Lenin city), but only from 1970, until when it shared the name of the nearby village (Tiszaszederkény).

*Lunatic*, n.
One whose delusions are out of fashion.

by DoDo on Thu Nov 19th, 2009 at 02:24:12 PM EST
[ Parent ]
You're right: Lenin, not Stalin; my bad :)
I suppose we both flunked our exam of great Soviet leaders...

And yes, from my recollection (only spent a couple of nights there -- days at the factory), it really looks like a planned community from the 1970's, with its checkerboard street patterns, small apartment buildings and public gardens, plus a couple of factories from multinational companies at the outskirts that provide employment to a large part of the population, I suppose.

So I guess this kind of towns may be the exception rather than the rule in the region that you described as rather impoverished.

Europeans think a hundred miles is a long way. Americans think a hundred years is a long time.

by Bernard on Fri Nov 20th, 2009 at 10:53:27 AM EST
[ Parent ]
When I was kid, Sztálinváros long became Dunaújváros, while Leninváros was there -- so more a case of failing memory on my part :-)

As for the impoverishment, that is the result of the collapse of heavy industry (and Western private investors focusing their mone in the Western parts and big cities) -- Tiszaújváros was relatively lucky to keep one big industry.

*Lunatic*, n.
One whose delusions are out of fashion.

by DoDo on Fri Nov 20th, 2009 at 02:48:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]

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