On one side stand powerful forces: multinational corporations, taxpayer-funded disinformation networks, and governments aligned with mainstream media, intelligence agencies, and politicized judicial systems.
They exclude dissenting candidates, ban opposition parties, and imprison critics to protect their influence. On the other, the “free media”—independent blogs and outlets funded by donations—face censorship, restricted access to bank accounts, and harassment from state-backed groups.
Yet, these underdogs persist, exposing uncomfortable truths and empowering voters to think critically.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, speaking at the Mathias Corvinus College (MCC) Festival in Esztergom, highlighted this struggle.
For 15 years, he has defended Hungary’s sovereignty against what he calls an “ecosocialist” agenda. He identified three major threats to democratic freedom: the Soros-funded Open Society network, the EU Commission’s NGO machinery, and remnants of the Obama/Biden-era USAID “Deep State.”
These networks, Orbán argues, orchestrate disinformation to undermine conservative governments, using tactics like the “Russiagate” narrative to smear leaders like himself, German AfD leader Alice Weidel, and France’s Marine Le Pen.
The “Russia card” is a recycled tactic. Originating in the 2016 U.S. election to discredit Donald Trump, it falsely painted him as a Kremlin puppet. Recent U.S. investigations, including a grand jury probe ordered by the Attorney General, reveal alleged involvement of the CIA, FBI, and Department of Justice in this hoax, dwarfing even Watergate’s scandal.
In Europe, similar smear campaigns target conservative movements, accusing them of Russian ties to discredit policies like border control or resistance to EU federalism. Hungary’s intelligence and Sovereignty Protection Office have uncovered evidence of these manipulations, often funded by Soros-linked groups and amplified by compliant media.
The free media play a crucial role in countering this. They expose hidden financial flows supporting left-wing activists, reveal unconstitutional government actions, and highlight the consequences of policies like unchecked immigration or censorship. Despite facing threats—financial deplatforming, legal harassment, and even violence—these outlets encourage independent thought and support for parties dismissed by the mainstream.
The EU and Soros-funded campaigns mirror U.S. strategies, with Germany’s intelligence agencies reportedly complicit in spreading false narratives. Yet, as U.S. investigations unravel the “Russia hoax,” Hungary’s findings gain credibility, exposing a global pattern of disinformation aimed at conservative voices.
The fight against state-sponsored disinformation is far from won, but the free media’s resilience offers hope. By shedding light on these networks, they challenge the information monopoly and defend democratic principles. The door to freedom, as Orbán noted, has opened a crack—sustaining it demands unwavering commitment.
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Author: Carl Friedrich
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