Hungary is making history of the first order.
Not
since the 1930s in Germany has a major European country dared to escape
from the clutches of the Rothschild-controlled international banking
cartels. This is stupendous news that should encourage nationalist
patriots worldwide to increase the fight for freedom from financial
tyranny.
Already
in 2011, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán promised to serve
justice on his socialist predecessors, who sold the nation’s people into
unending debt slavery under the lash of the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) and the terrorist state of Israel. Those earlier administrations
were riddled with Israelis in high places, to the fury of the masses,
who finally elected Orbán’s Fidesz party in response.
According
to a report on the German-language website “National Journal,” Orbán
has now moved to unseat the usurers from their throne. The popular,
nationalistic prime minister told the IMF that Hungary neither wants nor
needs further “assistance” from that proxy of the Rothschild-owned
Federal Reserve Bank. No longer will Hungarians be forced to pay
usurious interest to private, unaccountable central bankers.
Instead,
the Hungarian government has assumed sovereignty over its own currency
and now issues money debt free, as it is needed. The results have been
nothing short of remarkable. The nation’s economy, formerly staggering
under deep indebtedness, has recovered rapidly and by means not seen
since National Socialist Germany.
The
Hungarian Economic Ministry announced that it has, thanks to a
“disciplined budget policy,” repaid on August 12, 2013, the remaining
€2.2B owed to the IMF—well before the March 2014 due date. Orbán
declared: “Hungary enjoys the trust of investors,” by which is not meant
the IMF, the Fed or any other tentacle of the Rothschild financial
empire. Rather, he was referring to investors who produce something in
Hungary for Hungarians and cause true economic growth. This is not the
“paper prosperity” of plutocratic pirates, but the sort of production
that actually employs people and improves their lives.
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