
“The key to the Hungarian success: we tell the truth and represent the truth even if half the world attacks us for it. You cannot win halfheartedly. You either give everything you’ve got or play it safe and lose.” —Viktor Orbán
Robert Semonsen —
“The key to the Hungarian success: we tell the truth and represent the truth even if half the world attacks us for it. You cannot win halfheartedly. You either give everything you’ve got or play it safe and lose.” —Viktor Orbán
Robert Semonsen —
Pictures from the day’s events suggest the vast majority of the illegal migrants who managed to reach Italian soil were military-aged men.
Robert Semonsen —
The figures are a stark reminder of the demographic cliff that Germany and the rest of Europe continue to race towards.
Robert Semonsen —
Of the 800 terrorist investigations initiated by the Federal Public Prosecutor’s office between January 1st, 2020, and July 1st of this year, 95% were related to Islamist terrorism.
Robert Semonsen —
“The weapons permits of citizens of the Russian Federation and Belarus will be repealed and new permits will not be issued,” the newly formed government’s coalition agreement states.
Robert Semonsen —
If elections were held today, nearly half of Italy’s electorate would cast their ballots for one of Italy’s three center-right coalition parties.
Robert Semonsen —
Ataman’s appointment has been sharply criticized not only by the centrist and rightist opposition but also by top members of the liberal, pro-business Frei Demokratische Party (FDP), which is one of the three governing coalition partners.
Robert Semonsen —
Buxadé, on behalf of the ECR, ID, and NI groupings, denounced the LIBE committee’s report and slammed the Parliament for fashioning itself as a tool for political activism against Hungary.
Robert Semonsen —
The figures, which compare crime rates between Italians and foreign-born residents in the same age group, indicate that the latter is accountable for a disproportionate percentage of the overall crime rate.
Robert Semonsen —
While EU parliamentarians left an average carbon footprint of 27.7 tons last year, the average EU citizen’s carbon footprint, in recent years, has been around seven tons annually.
Robert Semonsen —
“We want to allow the expulsion of any foreigner found guilty of a serious act … regardless of their condition of presence on the national territory,” Minister Darmanin said.
Robert Semonsen —
Reem Alabali-Radovan, the federal commissioner for migration, refugees, and integration, says the policy will help transform Germany into a “modern immigration country.”
Robert Semonsen —
The rising tide of political violence directed at anti-globalist politicians across Europe should come as no surprise in light of the way in which they’re consistently maligned by the liberal mainstream press.
Robert Semonsen —
More than 23,000 women and girls living across multicultural Belgium have been subjected to the profoundly barbaric practice known as female genital mutilation (FGM); another 12,000 are at risk.
Robert Semonsen —
An expert from an Austrian think-tank has predicted that European gas prices—despite already having skyrocketed across the continent following the onset of the Russo-Ukrainian war—may double or even triple by next year.
Robert Semonsen —
As its middle-class increasingly shrinks, the federal government last year continued to spend an exorbitant amount of its state funds on asylum seekers and integrating newcomers from alien cultures.
Robert Semonsen —
Thousands of sub-Saharan African migrants, most of whom appeared to be military-aged males, stormed the land border between Morocco and the Spanish enclave of Melilla in the early hours of Friday morning, in what was the deadliest illegal border-crossing ever recorded at Melilla.
Robert Semonsen —
In the wake of an unsettling incident last week which saw two large groups of migrant men do battle with one another at a public swimming pool in Berlin, the head of one of Germany’s largest swimming associations has warned parents against bringing their children to public pools this summer, citing safety concerns.
Robert Semonsen —
The Paris Academy, the academic region of Île-de-France, has condemned the death threats and stated that it has “immediately taken all the necessary measures” to guarantee security at the Lycée Charlemagne for the remaining baccalauréat exams.
Robert Semonsen —
A 42-year-old Iranian-Norwegian man has been arrested and charged with murder, attempted murder, and terrorist acts following a shooting in Oslo which resulted in two deaths and 21 injuries.
Robert Semonsen —
Germany’s finance minister has joined a growing chorus of government officials—past and present—and leaders of business and industry who have warned that an economic crisis, the likes of which the country has not seen in many decades, is now beginning to come into view.
Robert Semonsen —
France’s highest administrative court, has rendered a final decision banning burkinis in publish swimming pools.
Robert Semonsen —
The number of incidents related to the wearing of the Islamic veil or other traditional forms of Islamic clothing in middle schools and high schools across France rose sharply in the first half of the school year.
Robert Semonsen —
Official figures have revealed that the number of Syrian nationals granted German citizenship increased by 185% in 2021 compared to the previous year, as many of those who arrived during the migrant crisis of 2015-16 became eligible for naturalization.
Robert Semonsen —
The men were charged with sexually assaulting at least eight girls, including three minors, in Alicante during a yearly festival that celebrates Christian victories over the Moors in the Reconquista.
Robert Semonsen —
That a party—one which enjoys nearly 13% of the national vote—is unable to organize due to threats of violence from left-wing extremists is indicative of the decrepit state of democracy in Germany, according to the AfD.
Robert Semonsen —
As Swedes celebrated the National Day of Sweden, formerly known as Swedish Flag Day, the left-liberal government, led by prime minister Magdalena Andersson, held welcome ceremonies across the country for the record number of foreign-born nationals who were granted citizenship in 2021.
Robert Semonsen —
A group of distinguished interdisciplinary scholars who bridge disparate disciplines of neuroscience, child & adolescent psychiatry, biochemistry, behavioral physiology, and politics & public administration, have lambasted German state television for promoting destructive anti-scientific propaganda to young children.
Robert Semonsen —
Official figures from the Irish government have revealed that female non-Irish national residents—despite composing slightly more than one-twentieth of the total population—gave birth to well over one-fifth of the children born in 2021.
Robert Semonsen —
In a tasteless social media post on Wednesday evening, Karl Pachner, the online managing director of the state-funded Austrian Broadcasting Corporation wrote that it would be a “great thing” if Orbán were to suffer a heart attack.
Robert Semonsen —
The Swedish Police Authority, between 2019 and 2021, registered some 4,500 honor-related crimes.
Robert Semonsen —
In the wake of a building collapse last week that killed 34 people and injured 37 others, incensed protesters took to the streets chanting anti-government slogans, including “death to Khamenei.”
Robert Semonsen —
The meeting focused on issues that will play a pivotal role in the survival and renewal of Western Civilization. In a roundtable discussion, participants zeroed in on topics central to our time—like immigration, national sovereignty, and the importance of the family.
Robert Semonsen —
Europol’s chief has said that the massive quantity of weapons supplied to Ukraine by EU countries could end up flowing back into the bloc, warning that such a scenario could precipitate a level of street violence previously only seen in Latin America.
Robert Semonsen —
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán will impose a temporary windfall tax on banks and multinational corporations who have reaped extra profits from the Ukraine war.
Robert Semonsen —
Frontex, the EU’s border agency, recorded 57,800 illegal entries to the bloc between January and April of this year, representing an increase of 69% compared to the same period last year.
Robert Semonsen —
The WHO is seeking to amend the International Health Regulations and impose a global pandemic treaty, both of which would grant the global health body new far-reaching powers that would allow it intervene in the affairs of nation-states in the event of a future pandemic.
Robert Semonsen —
The proposal—put forward the chair of the German Trade Union Federation—would place rejected asylum seekers on equal footing with unemployed German workers, allowing them to receive 449 euros from the state each month.
Robert Semonsen —
The ring exchange agreement—which was never binding between the two parties—failed to materialize after Germany stated that could not fulfill Morawiecki’s government’s demands for the latest version of the Leopard tank.
Robert Semonsen —
In a display of steadfast national and religious unity, the inaugural ceremony brought together everyday, working Hungarians, principal political leaders, and Catholic, Orthodox, Calvinist, Evangelical Lutheran prelates.
Robert Semonsen —
Rather than adopting the report’s original draft, which underscored the extent of anti-Christian persecution across the globe, the leftist-dominated EP adopted a draft which excised nearly all references to Christianity, characterized religion as a threat to free society, and claimed it’s a primary “driver of conflict worldwide.”
Robert Semonsen —
“Centuries ago the elites took to the battlefield. Now they hide in the Tower of Babel and send Europeans to the slaughterhouse,” VOX MEP Jorge Buxadé said as he excoriated an assembly of globalist parliamentarians in Strasbourg.
Robert Semonsen —
The reverberations of Paludan’s distasteful, but legal, Koran burnings have many Swedes wondering whether freedom of expression and multiculturalism can truly exist alongside one another in a single society.
Robert Semonsen —
Incentives driving the trend, which has been witnessed across Western Europe, include preferential treatment in the form of protection from deportation, increased social welfare benefits, and special rights in criminal cases.
Robert Semonsen —
“When you are in London or New York, you are increasingly and constantly fighting in a very negative and hostile environment. It’s refreshing to come to Hungary and not to have to deal with that.”—Peter Whittle
Robert Semonsen —