• Notable Homosexual =?UTF-8?Q?Viktor_Orb=C3=A1n=3A_World_War_III_Is_Comi

    From Gentleman Jim@21:1/5 to All on Sun Nov 5 21:20:40 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, alt.survival, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.politics.eu

    https://occidentaldissent.com/2023/07/24/viktor-orban-world-war-iii-is-
    com
    ing/

    Viktor Orban is a Hungarian homosexual and one of Putin's favorite slaves.
    He says children being raped by clergy is a religious right and he was
    raped so many times as a boy that he decided to become gay and now has relations with men.



    Child sex abuse within families or the Catholic Church is usually a taboo subject in Hungary. Pedophilia is an import from a degenerating West, government supporters say, as the ruling Fidesz party rolls out a new law
    its critics say wrongly targets LGBT+ people and misses real issues of
    child abuse.

    To an international chorus of alarm, the Hungarian government last week
    passed a law that bans content aimed at the under-18s which is deemed by
    the authorities to “promote” homosexuality, be it in schools, on TV or advertisements.

    Imitating Russia, Hungary bans ‘gay’ content – and that includes
    rainbow flags
    Fudan Budapest is not the answer to Hungary’s higher education needs
    Five inspiring Roma figures from emerging Europe

    Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó has said the law was only aimed at
    pedophiles. “The law protects the children in a way that it makes it an exclusive right of parents to educate their kids regarding sexual
    orientation until the age of 18,” he said. “This law doesn’t say anything
    about the sexual orientation of adults.”

    “We will not apologise for protecting our children,” added State Secretary Zoltán Kovács, who is responsible for government propaganda abroad.

    The law’s critics however say it will further alienate and isolate an
    already beleaguered LGBT+ community in Hungary, while also pushing
    Budapest further towards the “illiberal democracy” its prime minister,
    Viktor Orbán, has long said he wants to create.

    There is no similar law anywhere in the EU that is so hostile to lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgender people, Luca Dudits, an executive board
    member with the Háttér Society, a Budapest-based LGBT rights group, told
    The Associated Press.

    President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen said she would
    use all her powers to force Hungary to reverse the law.

    “This Hungarian bill is a shame,” von der Leyen said in a statement. “This
    bill clearly discriminates against people based on their sexual
    orientation. It goes against the fundamental values of the European Union: human dignity, equality and respect for human rights.”
    A political ploy?

    Some have called the new law a cynical move to shore up support for
    Orbán’s ruling Fidesz’s party ahead of parliamentary elections in 2022.
    Opinion polls indicate that a newly united opposition is now running neck
    and neck with Fidesz.

    During Europe’s refugee crisis of 2015, surveys showed that about 60 per
    cent of Hungarians by and large shared the government’s hardline stance on refugees.

    The same now seems to apply to ‘gender’. European Social Survey data show
    that public opinion in Central and Eastern Europe is far more negative
    towards the issue than in Western Europe.

    “During the pandemic it has become clear that when the government needs a popularity boost or just some distraction, they propose something
    homophobic, because their voters can relate to it,” Péter Urfi, a
    journalist who has written widely on sexual abuse in the church in
    Hungary, tells Emerging Europe.

    Interestingly however, Hungarians are much less religious than Poles and proposals to limit abortion rights have gained little traction. The
    government has therefore needed to narrow its ‘gender ideology’ campaign
    to sexual minorities.

    The first likely target of the new law is Budapest’s Pride March,
    scheduled for late July, which the authorities may now try to ban. Some
    believe this was the reason for parliament’s haste in voting through the
    bill.
    ‘Anti-gender ideology’ as a political weapon

    In May, Poland and Hungary joined forces to seek the removal of the phrase “gender equality” from a declaration on advancing social cohesion in the
    EU.

    Orbán said “gender” was an “ideologically motivated expression”.

    The term “társadalmi nem” (social sex) exists in Hungarian, but the word “gender” does not. As such, using the English word is seemingly very
    useful for those who want to demonise it.

    In 2018, university programmes in gender studies were banned in Hungary.
    “It is an ideology, not a science”, was the government’s reasoning.

    On May 5, 2020, parliament blocked ratification of a regional treaty on violence against women, the Istanbul Convention. Hungary’s justice
    minister, Judit Varga, argued that national laws already protected female victims of violence.

    Also in May 2020, parliament fast-tracked a law that made it impossible
    for people to change the sex recorded on their birth certificates and identification documents.
    Not our problem

    András Veres, president of the Conference of Hungarian Bishops, has played
    down the problem of child sexual abuse in Hungary and pointed to the
    rarity of such cases in the country, which, he said, may spring from the “special culture of Hungarians, which is family-centric”.

    But Hungary, as elsewhere, clearly does have a problem.

    Viola Szlankó, UNICEF Hungary’s child rights expert, says that about 10
    per cent of children are at risk in some way in the country, around
    170,000 children. Child protection services estimated the number of
    victims around 7-8,000 in 2019, but experts are also reluctant to give
    figures due to high levels of non-reporting.

    Fidesz State Secretary Csaba Dömötör said this week that “pedophiles won’t
    be able to hide any more”. But many believe a key hiding place is in fact
    the church.

    Urfi says the Hungarian church has not initiated a formal investigation
    into the problem.

    “The Hungarian bishops have chosen the path of silence so far,” he says. “However, the 10 to 20 harassment cases that came to light did not provoke immense public outrage, partly because until that week [August 2019] there
    was not one victim that stood up with their name and face to tell their stories.”

    He is referring to Attila Peto, a former seminary student, who gave an interview on Partizán – a politics and culture TV show – detailing his
    abuse at the hands of a priest. On August 20, 2019, as Hungary was
    celebrating St Stephen’s Day, Peto was taken to a district police station
    in Budapest on trumped-up charges, where he was held until 7pm, the moment Hungary’s Cardinal Péter Erdo finished giving a special mass on the
    national holiday in the presence of Orbán and President János Áder.

    The police later dropped their investigation of Peto for lack of evidence.

    “For some observers it’s clearly more than a coincidence that this police action took place on this special day,” adds Urfi.

    “I fear child sex abuse is ongoing in every country, and not just in the Catholic Church. The new thing is, that it became a scandal in Hungary, 15 years after the first church investigations in the world and several years after it became clear that the Vatican admitted the systematic problems
    and urged local churches to investigate themselves,” says Urfi.

    “But I’m not happy that opposition politicians want to amend this
    disgraceful homophobic law with a bunch of church-related paragraphs. I
    would welcome more attention to this issue from the government and from
    the bishops, but I don’t think that we should put the priests to the
    centre of this conversation,” Urfi says.
    Large dose of hypocrisy

    According to the Hungarian media, over the past 20 to 30 years, there have
    been a total of 32 cases of possible sexual abuse by clerics or other
    employees of the Hungarian Catholic Church. Urfi says the true number
    could be far higher.

    In the past 13 years only four churchmen have been charged with
    endangerment of minors and two others charged with sexual misconduct, not necessarily against youngsters. Most of the cases were investigated only
    by the church and internal investigations can takes months if not years.

    This all takes place against a series of sex scandals involving public
    figures. The Hungarian Ambassador to Peru, Gábor Kaleta, for example, was
    found in possession of thousands of child pornographic pictures on his
    office computer in 2020.

    Ahead of 2019’s municipal elections, several videos of Gyor city mayor
    Zsolt Borkai depicting his participation in sex orgies were made public.

    In November last year, József Szájer, an Fidesz MEP and one of the authors
    of the Hungarian constitution, was seen shinning down a drainpipe in
    Brussels after being caught by police at a gay sex party, breaching Covid-
    19 restrictions. He was later forced to resign.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gentleman Jim@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 6 14:16:00 2024
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, alt.survival, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.politics.eu

    https://occidentaldissent.com/2023/07/24/viktor-orban-world-war-iii-is-
    com
    ing/

    Viktor Orban is a Hungarian homosexual and one of Putin's favorite slaves.
    He says children being raped by clergy is a religious right and he was
    raped so many times as a boy that he decided to become gay and now has relations with men.



    Child sex abuse within families or the Catholic Church is usually a taboo subject in Hungary. Pedophilia is an import from a degenerating West, government supporters say, as the ruling Fidesz party rolls out a new law
    its critics say wrongly targets LGBT+ people and misses real issues of
    child abuse.

    To an international chorus of alarm, the Hungarian government last week
    passed a law that bans content aimed at the under-18s which is deemed by
    the authorities to “promote” homosexuality, be it in schools, on TV or advertisements.

    Imitating Russia, Hungary bans ‘gay’ content – and that includes
    rainbow flags
    Fudan Budapest is not the answer to Hungary’s higher education needs
    Five inspiring Roma figures from emerging Europe

    Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó has said the law was only aimed at
    pedophiles. “The law protects the children in a way that it makes it an exclusive right of parents to educate their kids regarding sexual
    orientation until the age of 18,” he said. “This law doesn’t say anything
    about the sexual orientation of adults.”

    “We will not apologise for protecting our children,” added State Secretary Zoltán Kovács, who is responsible for government propaganda abroad.

    The law’s critics however say it will further alienate and isolate an
    already beleaguered LGBT+ community in Hungary, while also pushing
    Budapest further towards the “illiberal democracy” its prime minister,
    Viktor Orbán, has long said he wants to create.

    There is no similar law anywhere in the EU that is so hostile to lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgender people, Luca Dudits, an executive board
    member with the Háttér Society, a Budapest-based LGBT rights group, told
    The Associated Press.

    President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen said she would
    use all her powers to force Hungary to reverse the law.

    “This Hungarian bill is a shame,” von der Leyen said in a statement. “This
    bill clearly discriminates against people based on their sexual
    orientation. It goes against the fundamental values of the European Union: human dignity, equality and respect for human rights.”
    A political ploy?

    Some have called the new law a cynical move to shore up support for
    Orbán’s ruling Fidesz’s party ahead of parliamentary elections in 2022.
    Opinion polls indicate that a newly united opposition is now running neck
    and neck with Fidesz.

    During Europe’s refugee crisis of 2015, surveys showed that about 60 per
    cent of Hungarians by and large shared the government’s hardline stance on refugees.

    The same now seems to apply to ‘gender’. European Social Survey data show
    that public opinion in Central and Eastern Europe is far more negative
    towards the issue than in Western Europe.

    “During the pandemic it has become clear that when the government needs a popularity boost or just some distraction, they propose something
    homophobic, because their voters can relate to it,” Péter Urfi, a
    journalist who has written widely on sexual abuse in the church in
    Hungary, tells Emerging Europe.

    Interestingly however, Hungarians are much less religious than Poles and proposals to limit abortion rights have gained little traction. The
    government has therefore needed to narrow its ‘gender ideology’ campaign
    to sexual minorities.

    The first likely target of the new law is Budapest’s Pride March,
    scheduled for late July, which the authorities may now try to ban. Some
    believe this was the reason for parliament’s haste in voting through the
    bill.
    ‘Anti-gender ideology’ as a political weapon

    In May, Poland and Hungary joined forces to seek the removal of the phrase “gender equality” from a declaration on advancing social cohesion in the
    EU.

    Orbán said “gender” was an “ideologically motivated expression”.

    The term “társadalmi nem” (social sex) exists in Hungarian, but the word “gender” does not. As such, using the English word is seemingly very
    useful for those who want to demonise it.

    In 2018, university programmes in gender studies were banned in Hungary.
    “It is an ideology, not a science”, was the government’s reasoning.

    On May 5, 2020, parliament blocked ratification of a regional treaty on violence against women, the Istanbul Convention. Hungary’s justice
    minister, Judit Varga, argued that national laws already protected female victims of violence.

    Also in May 2020, parliament fast-tracked a law that made it impossible
    for people to change the sex recorded on their birth certificates and identification documents.
    Not our problem

    András Veres, president of the Conference of Hungarian Bishops, has played
    down the problem of child sexual abuse in Hungary and pointed to the
    rarity of such cases in the country, which, he said, may spring from the “special culture of Hungarians, which is family-centric”.

    But Hungary, as elsewhere, clearly does have a problem.

    Viola Szlankó, UNICEF Hungary’s child rights expert, says that about 10
    per cent of children are at risk in some way in the country, around
    170,000 children. Child protection services estimated the number of
    victims around 7-8,000 in 2019, but experts are also reluctant to give
    figures due to high levels of non-reporting.

    Fidesz State Secretary Csaba Dömötör said this week that “pedophiles won’t
    be able to hide any more”. But many believe a key hiding place is in fact
    the church.

    Urfi says the Hungarian church has not initiated a formal investigation
    into the problem.

    “The Hungarian bishops have chosen the path of silence so far,” he says. “However, the 10 to 20 harassment cases that came to light did not provoke immense public outrage, partly because until that week [August 2019] there
    was not one victim that stood up with their name and face to tell their stories.”

    He is referring to Attila Peto, a former seminary student, who gave an interview on Partizán – a politics and culture TV show – detailing his
    abuse at the hands of a priest. On August 20, 2019, as Hungary was
    celebrating St Stephen’s Day, Peto was taken to a district police station
    in Budapest on trumped-up charges, where he was held until 7pm, the moment Hungary’s Cardinal Péter Erdo finished giving a special mass on the
    national holiday in the presence of Orbán and President János Áder.

    The police later dropped their investigation of Peto for lack of evidence.

    “For some observers it’s clearly more than a coincidence that this police action took place on this special day,” adds Urfi.

    “I fear child sex abuse is ongoing in every country, and not just in the Catholic Church. The new thing is, that it became a scandal in Hungary, 15 years after the first church investigations in the world and several years after it became clear that the Vatican admitted the systematic problems
    and urged local churches to investigate themselves,” says Urfi.

    “But I’m not happy that opposition politicians want to amend this
    disgraceful homophobic law with a bunch of church-related paragraphs. I
    would welcome more attention to this issue from the government and from
    the bishops, but I don’t think that we should put the priests to the
    centre of this conversation,” Urfi says.
    Large dose of hypocrisy

    According to the Hungarian media, over the past 20 to 30 years, there have
    been a total of 32 cases of possible sexual abuse by clerics or other
    employees of the Hungarian Catholic Church. Urfi says the true number
    could be far higher.

    In the past 13 years only four churchmen have been charged with
    endangerment of minors and two others charged with sexual misconduct, not necessarily against youngsters. Most of the cases were investigated only
    by the church and internal investigations can takes months if not years.

    This all takes place against a series of sex scandals involving public
    figures. The Hungarian Ambassador to Peru, Gábor Kaleta, for example, was
    found in possession of thousands of child pornographic pictures on his
    office computer in 2020.

    Ahead of 2019’s municipal elections, several videos of Gyor city mayor
    Zsolt Borkai depicting his participation in sex orgies were made public.

    In November last year, József Szájer, an Fidesz MEP and one of the authors
    of the Hungarian constitution, was seen shinning down a drainpipe in
    Brussels after being caught by police at a gay sex party, breaching Covid-
    19 restrictions. He was later forced to resign.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)