cont. Bernd 10/31/2020 (Sat) 11:22:30 No.40793 del
>>40791
I have to take a detour to Eastern Europe, or rather to Hungary. Here the communist regime was anti-Israel - complying to the brotherly Soviet Unions foreign politics - despite the leading role of Jews in all levels of the government. The Cold War divided the Middle East, Israel is greatest ally with US, and Arab countries about, got backed by the Soviet Union, the rest of the Muslim world was contested by the two powers. Here while Jews themselves were untouchables, anti-Israelism was the norm. Then came the regime change of 1989-90 our government oriented along the expectations of the west (US, and via the US, Israel) and officially the voices criticizing Israel ceased, only parties with no chance of gaining position in the government could continue with it. This is why our far-right parties (Jobbik, Mi Hazánk, earlier MIÉP) are anti-Semitic, and this is why nowadays the westerners can call the Fidesz far-right despite the Fidesz isn't anti-Semitic: compared to their far-right parties, the Fidesz equals to those, pro-Israel to boot. But beside our real far-right parties (whom are really leftist when it comes to economy furthering the point why left-right scale is useless) we can go even more to that direction to find "real" Nazis, some even tried to organize a failed armed rebellion or some such in the 90s.
But anything toward the other direction of the political palette, the Fidesz, the "socialist" parties, the liberals, just like in the west, they cannot raise criticism toward (((the Jews))).