'Every Day is 1956': The Hungarian Revolution Today
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
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Friends of
freedom should doff their hats to the Hungarians this week. Fifty
years ago, the Hungarian people bravely expelled Soviet tanks from
Budapest and proclaimed their intention to create a democracy. Shortly
thereafter, the Soviets returned with almost 5,000 tanks, killing
thousands of Hungarians and chaining that nation back into serfdom
to Moscow.
But
at least the Hungarians had the gumption to stand up and sacrifice
their blood to cast off tyranny.
I was in Hungary
shortly after the 30th anniversary of the uprising. There were no
official celebrations then, perhaps because the Soviets still occupied
the nation and were watching warily as the Hungarians made passive
economic reforms intended to make socialism efficient.
The buildings
in downtown Budapest appeared to have different sets of bullet holes
the first from the fierce fighting in 1944 when the Red Army
drove the Nazis out of the city, and another set from a dozen years
later, from when the Soviets crushed the Hungarians demand
for freedom.
I have not
forgotten the row of new black Mercedes cars parked outside Communist
Party headquarters near the Danube River in Budapest. When I interviewed
one of the regimes top trade officials, he was as smug as
the day is long, oblivious to the cascading evidence of Hungarian
economic failure. (The Reagan administration was cozying up to Hungary
at that point, and the experts at the U.S. embassy sounded
like pimps for the Hungarian government.)
Two and a half
years later, it was the Hungarians who, more than any other Eastern
Europeans, brought the Iron Curtain crashing down. In May 1989,
Hungarian government officials cut the barbed wire on the border
with Austria. A tidal wave of East Germans and other Soviet Bloc
serfs were soon stampeding through the opening. The Soviet tanks
did not roll and the rest is history.
The celebrations
in Budapest of the 50th anniversary of the uprising have been riotous.
This is in part because Hungarians again feel betrayed and oppressed
by their government.
The socialist
party the direct descendant of the Communist Party that tyrannized
the country for so long now rules Hungary. The socialists
secured control in elections this past April.
Last month,
a secret tape recording made shortly after the election leaked out.
Hungarians heard Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany summarize the partys
election campaign: We lied in the morning, in the evening,
and at night. I dont want to do this anymore. Gyurcsany
said that the governments claims about the economy were brazen
falsehoods. The government now admits that the government budget
deficit is almost twice as large as it claimed during the election
campaign.
The tapes
release sparked widespread protests that escalated with this weeks
anniversary. More than 100 people have been injured, including many
hit by police rubber bullets. Hungarian state radio reported that
police beat some of the protesters including women
and elderly people with rubber batons, and some had head
injuries, according to the Associated Press.
Tibor Navracsics,
one of the opposition leaders, warns, Hungary is in a moral
crisis. If people are deceived, then they cant make responsible
decisions.'' The opposition is demanding a public referendum within
five months on the governments policies. The government is
scorning its demand.
Gyurcsanys
defenders stress that he recently won a vote of confidence
in Parliament. The fact that weasel-like politicians did not object
to political lying is not exactly a moral clean bill of health for
the government.
So are Hungarians
too immature to realize how much deference they owe lying leaders?
Here in America,
students are taught in school that they are obliged to obey politicians
who win elections fair and square. Then, at some point, an asterisk
pops up and people are notified that they must obey even
if politicians seized power by gross deceit. Unless people can irrefragably
prove that the rulers seized power wrongfully, they are obliged
to submit.
And how can
they prove that the politicians seized power illegitimately?
Only if the
politicians confess. No other evidence can be admitted: the word
must come from On High.
This was the
case in Hungary.
But it doesnt
matter because the socialists refuse to relinquish the power they
wrongfully snared. Regardless of how politicians capture power,
they still supposedly have the right to send police to bust the
heads of people who refuse to submit.
Every
day is 1956 read the graffiti painted by protesters in Budapest
this week. Some of the protests have been violent, as has the governments
response at times. Many commentators are lamenting that the big
anniversary did not spur an uplifting display of Hungarian unity.
But
maybe Americans should look at Hungary more closely. For decades,
Americans have been far too docile to the lies of their leaders.
Whether it is Nixon lying about Vietnam, or George H.W. Bush lying
about Panama, or Clinton lying about Kosovo, or George W. Bush lying
about Iraq and Afghanistan many Americans have responded
as if they were born to be cannon fodder for the ruling class. George
Bush openly proclaimed last year, In my line of work you got
to keep repeating things over and over and over again for the truth
to sink in, to kind of catapult the propaganda. The vast majority
of Americans ignored the comment, if they even noticed it. But if
lying is simply another perk of the presidency, then Americans should
at least have the decency to stop preening about being self-governing.
If
the citizenry does not punish liars, then it cannot expect the truth.
Hungary again reminds us that we do not need to bow down to whomever
manages to capture political power.
October
28, 2006
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2006 The Future of Freedom Foundation
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