BUDAPEST, HUNGARY - MAY 1990: A typical Hungarian family photographed watching porn transmitted on Saturday night TV. (Photo by Tom Stoddart/Getty Images)
megtaláltam a világ egyik legjobb képét
Apukát annyira nem érdekli a pornó.
Egyiptomi ellenzéki bloggerek szomorú lemondással veszik tudomásul Schmitt Pál plágiumügyének napi fejleményeit, 2012.március 27.
sad blogger is sad
Kossuth L.
2012 Berlin
Color print
Hipszter Kossuth! - wombatszombat találata
(Source: novakpeterjanos)
Budapest, Hungary
A woman lies on an operating table during a facelift surgery at a private plastic surgery clinic. Hungary, where medical costs are relatively low with high level of service, is a favourite destination for medical tourism, including plastic surgeries (via Reuters.com)
Hírünk a nagyvilágban
Young, Wired and Angry: a Revised Portrait of Hungary’s Right-Wing Extremists
Though largely ignored by the national media, Hungary’s right-wing extremist Jobbik party operates within a surprisingly well-developed and self-sustained online universe. What’s more, recent studies have found that the party’s supporters aren’t the “losers” that many experts thought they were.
For years, Hungary’s right-wing extremists have very effectively utilized the Internet to reach their goals. They use it to disseminate their messages and to organize demonstrations and campaigns — many of which also involve hate speech and incitement. “The Internet has been and remains very important to us,” says Márton Gyöngyösi, a Jobbik member of parliament. He explains that this is “not only on account of our limited access to the traditional media, but also because a major part of our supporters and voters are young people who we can best reach via new media.”
Experts have been observing this trend for some time now. “During the 2010 election campaign, the Internet played a key role for Jobbik,” says Áron Buzogány, a German-Hungarian political scientist who studies social movements in Eastern Europe. “When compared with the other parties, Jobbik had the most up-to-date Internet presence based on Web 2.0 (tools). People visiting these (web)pages could take an active role in helping shape them, thereby becoming part of the campaign themselves.”
Budapest-based political scientist József Jeskó, who has been studying the online activities of Hungary’s right-wing extremists for years, reaches a similar conclusion. “Jobbik is the first party in the history of Hungary to have effectively used the Internet’s advantages for its own purposes,” he says. Jeskó emphasizes, however, that Jobbik neither built up nor controls the online network of Hungarian right-wing extremists itself. Instead, he says, “Small groups with similar convictions, but many different interests, have made contact with the help of the Internet and jointly created a virtual world for themselves.” (via SPIEGEL ONLINE)
A Spiegel nem tud lejönni a magyar szélsőjobbos témáról.
Hate Has No Home In Hungary
On February 23 it was exactly three years to the day that Robert Csorba and his five-year-old son Robert Csorba Jr. lost their lives in Tatárszentgyörgy. Their brutal murder was part of a spree of violent hate crimes against the Roma that swept across Hungary in 2008-2009.
Over 150 memorial services were held, not only in Hungary but all across Europe as Roma and non-Roma remembered the tragic victims. In Matyas ter, in the 8th district of Budapest, about 400 people gathered to pay their respects. Songs were sung, poems and speeches were emotionally delivered as the crowd laid candles and flowers in a touching tribute. (via ROMEDIA FOUNDATION)
Hírünk a világban, sokadik rész







