

If he does that, he will lose the support of his whole party. We’ve done that once before, that’s how we ended up in this mess.


If he does that, he will lose the support of his whole party. We’ve done that once before, that’s how we ended up in this mess.


That’s my point, the only easy thing to do is the platform they have the mandate for. They have basically unlimited power to do so.
Usually a heterogenous party is achieved by diluting your message and doing “big tent” and making conflicting promises. Tisza did the opposite, they sharpened their message and made barely any promises, taking great care to limit them to what the whole electorate actually 100% agrees on.
Which includes wealth taxes for the richest and anti-corruption.


The thing is that the only parties I’d trust with that are the ones that stepped back before the election. The only three others on the ballot were the ultranationalist Mi Hazánk, the collaborator DK, and well, MKKP. If that scenario happened with any one of these, they could be paid to be obstructionists.
There is no getting around it, the people will have to keep them to account to implement term limits and the anti-corruption measures they were running on themselves.


It’s actually a good question, he wants wealth taxes and term limits, but waves Hungarian flags around and quotes Reagan.
He’s a hardline pro-EU nationalist who likes socialist policies and hates rich people.


Magyar confirmed in his victory speech that he will in fact start those cases.
Or rather the independent juicidary and the new “National Wealth Reclamation Agency” will.


Not really, there is no oligarch base behind him to speak of, and his party is very heterogenous. Imagine LGBT activists and hardline nationalists together. It would be a miracle - not of the good kind - if he was able to get away with not enacting the anticorruption agenda he got elected on.


It’s more like relief.


Since it’s a 2/3 blowout, all of those can be simply removed.
The biggest danger going forward is Tisza becoming corrupt by either not going through with removing them, or becoming like Fidesz was.
They state they won’t.


And the loss is basically a wipeout. They are practically irrelevant in Parliament, and Tisza, unlike in Poland, can just boot out any of their appointees as they have a supermajority.


They campaigned on wealth taxes, term limits for every member of parliament, an independent prosecutor’s office, joining the EPPO and so on.
They have unlimited power right now, but are dependent on an extremely heterogenous voter base that would implode if they look the wrong way.
Nothing is certain, but it could not look much better right now.


There can be one largest one. I’ve never said that others should be off the hook.
Putin gives zero fucks about Iranian children, he was perfectly fine killing Russian civilians to get into power.
Shaheds on the other hand…


I’d say that they’ve been outcompeted by Epstein’s friend group


Who bought the nonexistent gold?


Standard TLS, I think, but what else would you need?


Aren’t Tomahawks cruise missiles and not ballistic?


They can ban payments from the EU to Pornhub


If you think any European country will take millions of foreign immigrants, you’re in for a surprise mate.
I actually did an experiment on doing just that. For context, I’m an experienced software engineer, whose company buys him a tom of Claude usage so I had time to test out what it can actually do and I feel like I’m capable of judging where it’s good and where it falls short at.
How Claude Code works is that there are actually multiple models involved, one for doign the coding, one “reasoning” model to keep the chain of thought and the context going, and a bunch of small specialized ones for odd jobs around the thing.
The thing that doesn’t work yet is that the big reasoning model has to still be big, otherwise it will hallucinate frequently enough to break the workflow. If you could get one of the big models to run locally, you’d be there. However, with recent advances in quantization and MoE models, it’s actually getting nearer fast enough that I would expect it to be generally available in a year or two.
Today the best I could do was a tool that could take 150 gigs of RAM, 24 gigs of VRAM and AMD’s top of the line card to take 30 minutes what takes Claude Code 1-2. But surprisingly, the output of the model was not bad at all.