Emberi kapcsolatokat pusztító hatalmi végjátékban még tisztességgel gyászolni sem engedték a Kárpát-medencei magyarságot a századik évfordulón! Kell hogy ennek pozitív üzenete legyen! Nem kell még gyászolni, nem kell még feladni!
Sajnos 100 év múlva már nemcsak a megszállt országrészekben nem lesznek magyarok, hanem a csonka részen sem. Sőt, ha a nemzetellenes gyurcsány jön 22-ben akkor már 50 év múlva is vége. Azt mondom becsüljük meg a hátralévő éveket és tegyünk meg mindent, hogy legalább néhány évvel kitoljuk ezt a számot!
For hundreds of years, Hungarians proved that they absolutely cannot deal with minorities in their own territory (more than 50% of the population). During the Habsburg empire, they vetoed any plan by Austria that would have given more autonomy to the bigger ethnic groups in Hungary. The Entente therefore figured, let's give all the nations their own country, and everyone will be happy, to which Hungarians replied "No, no, this whole territory is ours, as it was given to us by God". The Entente was baffled by the profound disconnection to reality and the insatiability of the Hungarians (who hadn't have a territory of their own for 400 years), and so drew the borders in ways to 1 : Give every nation their own countries, 2 : Not give territories where different ethnic groups were living together to Hungarians. And Hungarians, since then, have kept proving that this was the right choice, showing times and times again that they absolutely can't handle minorities, and are incapable of having a regional foreign policy that would amount to more than simply trolling their neighbors with infinite whines and wails about the Hungarian lost mini-empire.
The boundaries were unfairly drawn. But you know that well too. You're just an envious minority. And your statement is a lie. Already in 1848, we tried to give the nationalities their own autonomy, but this was vetoed by Austria at that time. So it's no use telling lies. And such a worm you must be to comment here your lies.... How dare you???
@@jozsefholtner8339 Read these books (the first two you should be able to find also in Hungarian): - Pál Lendvai, _The Hungarians. A Thousand Years of Victory in Defeat,_ Princeton University Press, New Jersey, 2003. - Oscar Jászi, _The Dissolution of the Habsburg Monarchy,_ The Univ. of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, 1964. - Geoffrey Wawro, _A Mad Catastrophe. The Outbreak of World War I And The Collapse of the Habsburg Empire,_ Basic Books, New York, 2014. - C.A. Macartney, _The Habsburg Empire, 1790-1918,_ London, 2014. - Arthur J. May, _The Habsburg Monarchy 1867-1918,_ Harvard University Press, 1968. - Holly Case, _Between States: The Transylvanian Question and the European Idea during World War II,_ Stanford University Press, Stanford, 2009. - A. J. P. Taylor, _The Habsburg Monarchy, 1809-1918 : A History of the Austrian Empire and Austria-Hungary,_ Hamish Hamilton, London, 1948. - Bruce F. Pauley, _The Habsburg Legacy: 1867-1939,_ Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., New York, 1972. - Alexander Watson, _Ring of Steel: Germany and Austria-Hungary in World War I,_ Basic Books, New York, 2014. - Norman Stone, _Hungary: A Short History,_ Profile Books, London, 2019. - Samuel R. Williamson, Jr., _Austria-Hungary and the Origins of the First World War,_ Macmillan Education, New York, 1991. - John R. Schindler, _Fall of the Double Eagle: The Battle for Galicia and the Demise of Austria-Hungary_, University of Nebraska Press, 2015. - Mikulas Teich and Roy Porter, _The National Question in Europe, in Historical Context,_ Cambridge Univ. Press, 1998. - M. Judson, _The Habsburg Empire: A New History,_ Belknap Press, 2016. - Peter F. Sugar (ed.), _Eastern European Nationalism in the Twentieth Century,_ The American University Press, Washington, D.C., 1995. - Peter Pastor, _Revolutions and interventions in Hungary and its neighboring states, 1918-1919_ Columbia University Press, New York, 1988. - Myra A. Waterbury, _Between State and Nation. Diaspora Politics and Kin-state Nationalism in Hungary,_ Palgrave Macmillan New York, 2010. - Steven Beller, _The Habsburg Monarchy 1815-1918,_ Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 2018. - Edward Crankshaw, _The Fall of the House of Habsburg,_ Viking Press, New York, 1963.
Imádom őket. Magyarország legszínvonalasabb műsora. Ez a rész nagyon nagy hatással volt rám. Remélem a hazajáró útja valóban végtelen........
Mindennap ajánlom megnézni és megkönnyezni.
...és MAGYARNAK MARADNI...
Vesszen trianon!❤🇭🇺💚
Csodálatosak vagytok fiúk szeretünk benneteket Isten áldjon meg titeket és minden magyart a világon összetartozunk mìg a világ világ ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
22:05 Nem határon túli magyarok vagyunk, hanem határtalanul magyarok
Amíg ilyen ifjak járják az ősi földjeinket lesz Magyar !
Emberi kapcsolatokat pusztító hatalmi végjátékban még tisztességgel gyászolni sem engedték a Kárpát-medencei magyarságot a századik évfordulón! Kell hogy ennek pozitív üzenete legyen! Nem kell még gyászolni, nem kell még feladni!
A videóban hallható
Dalriada dal: ua-cam.com/video/Or5l3HovzsM/v-deo.html
Romer dal: ua-cam.com/video/J18cpuuWGFg/v-deo.html
Sajnos 100 év múlva már nemcsak a megszállt országrészekben nem lesznek magyarok, hanem a csonka részen sem. Sőt, ha a nemzetellenes gyurcsány jön 22-ben akkor már 50 év múlva is vége. Azt mondom becsüljük meg a hátralévő éveket és tegyünk meg mindent, hogy legalább néhány évvel kitoljuk ezt a számot!
utálom orbánt és bandáját, s magyar szív dobog bennem.
“Hiszek egy Istenben,
Hiszek egy hazában
Hiszek egy isteni örök igazságban,
Hiszek Magyarország feltámadásában! Ámen”
Ez osi magyar fold Lipot habsburg telepitett be szlavokat, romanokat, szerbeketa magyar teruletekre
For hundreds of years, Hungarians proved that they absolutely cannot deal with minorities in their own territory (more than 50% of the population). During the Habsburg empire, they vetoed any plan by Austria that would have given more autonomy to the bigger ethnic groups in Hungary.
The Entente therefore figured, let's give all the nations their own country, and everyone will be happy, to which Hungarians replied "No, no, this whole territory is ours, as it was given to us by God". The Entente was baffled by the profound disconnection to reality and the insatiability of the Hungarians (who hadn't have a territory of their own for 400 years), and so drew the borders in ways to
1 : Give every nation their own countries,
2 : Not give territories where different ethnic groups were living together to Hungarians.
And Hungarians, since then, have kept proving that this was the right choice, showing times and times again that they absolutely can't handle minorities, and are incapable of having a regional foreign policy that would amount to more than simply trolling their neighbors with infinite whines and wails about the Hungarian lost mini-empire.
The boundaries were unfairly drawn. But you know that well too. You're just an envious minority. And your statement is a lie. Already in 1848, we tried to give the nationalities their own autonomy, but this was vetoed by Austria at that time. So it's no use telling lies. And such a worm you must be to comment here your lies.... How dare you???
Where is your proof? 😊
@@jozsefholtner8339
Read these books (the first two you should be able to find also in Hungarian):
- Pál Lendvai, _The Hungarians. A Thousand Years of Victory in Defeat,_ Princeton University Press, New Jersey, 2003.
- Oscar Jászi, _The Dissolution of the Habsburg Monarchy,_ The Univ. of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, 1964.
- Geoffrey Wawro, _A Mad Catastrophe. The Outbreak of World War I And The Collapse of the Habsburg Empire,_ Basic Books, New York, 2014.
- C.A. Macartney, _The Habsburg Empire, 1790-1918,_ London, 2014.
- Arthur J. May, _The Habsburg Monarchy 1867-1918,_ Harvard University Press, 1968.
- Holly Case, _Between States: The Transylvanian Question and the European Idea during World War II,_ Stanford University Press, Stanford, 2009.
- A. J. P. Taylor, _The Habsburg Monarchy, 1809-1918 : A History of the Austrian Empire and Austria-Hungary,_ Hamish Hamilton, London, 1948.
- Bruce F. Pauley, _The Habsburg Legacy: 1867-1939,_ Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., New York, 1972.
- Alexander Watson, _Ring of Steel: Germany and Austria-Hungary in World War I,_ Basic Books, New York, 2014.
- Norman Stone, _Hungary: A Short History,_ Profile Books, London, 2019.
- Samuel R. Williamson, Jr., _Austria-Hungary and the Origins of the First World War,_ Macmillan Education, New York, 1991.
- John R. Schindler, _Fall of the Double Eagle: The Battle for Galicia and the Demise of Austria-Hungary_, University of Nebraska Press, 2015.
- Mikulas Teich and Roy Porter, _The National Question in Europe, in Historical Context,_ Cambridge Univ. Press, 1998.
- M. Judson, _The Habsburg Empire: A New History,_ Belknap Press, 2016.
- Peter F. Sugar (ed.), _Eastern European Nationalism in the Twentieth Century,_ The American University Press, Washington, D.C., 1995.
- Peter Pastor, _Revolutions and interventions in Hungary and its neighboring states, 1918-1919_ Columbia University Press, New York, 1988.
- Myra A. Waterbury, _Between State and Nation. Diaspora Politics and Kin-state Nationalism in Hungary,_ Palgrave Macmillan New York, 2010.
- Steven Beller, _The Habsburg Monarchy 1815-1918,_ Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 2018.
- Edward Crankshaw, _The Fall of the House of Habsburg,_ Viking Press, New York, 1963.
Vlach=liar