Daractenus Profile picture
Oct 2 10 tweets 4 min read Read on X
With about 200 days left before Hungarians head to the polls, I figured it is the perfect time to review Orban's achievements by comparing Hungary to Romania, a comparison that I am sure will hit a cord with Hungarian ultranationalists and Orban fans in and outside Hungary.🧵Image
Despite having about half of Romania's population, in 2003, shortly after Orban's first term, Hungary had a GDP of $85 bil. while Romania's stood at $57 bil.

Today, after too many Orban years to count, Hungary's GDP is about $220 billion, while Romania's hit $400 bil. Image
In 2010, just as Orban started his second reign, the country stood as the 53rd least corrupt country in the world, while Romania was ranked as 75th.

In 2025, too many years of Orban to count, Hungary succeeded in being ranked as significantly more corrupt than Romania. Image
Something Romanians used to admire Hungary for was its highway system, which in 2010 stood at about 1200km, about 5 times bigger than Romania's.

Today, Romania's highway system is more or less on par with Hungary's and, unlike Hungary's, continues to expand at a rapid rate. Image
Pre-Orban Hungary could at the very least pride itself in having a minimum wage about twice that of Romania (or more, at various points in time).

In 2025, thanks to Orban's sovereign economic genius, the average wage in Hungary and Romania stands about equal. Image
Utterly obsessed with traditional values and fertility rates, Orban's highly effective measures brought Hungary's fertility rate to an impressive 1.5.

Romania, whose political class doesn't seem to care one bit about the matter and did nothing about it, stands at 1.7. Image
Every bit the free speech lover Musk is and with his friends and family now owning virtually every media outlet in the country, Orban's Hungary ranks slightly below Sierra Leone in terms of freedom of press.

Meanwhile, the 2024 ranking puts Romania slightly above the US. Image
With the evil EU as his mortal enemy, Orban's Hungary happens to be one of the top recipient of EU funds when accounting for all funds ever received since joining, while the contributions Hungary made so far mainly being vetoes, insults and sabotages. Image
In the early 2000s, it was rather common for Romanians living near the Hungarian border to cross into Hungary for shopping or work.

By 2025, the pattern had completely reversed, with an ever growing number of Hungarians from border areas coming to Romania to work or shop. Image
This post should not be seen and is not intended as a testament of "Romania's economic prowess and development".

This is and should be read as what Orban and autocracy in general does when compared even to a corrupt and far from perfect democratic state. Image

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More from @Daractenus

Oct 2
With Putin now claiming that "Western elites are getting rich by scaring you into believing in the mythical Russian threat", I figure it might be worth it to revisit the simple and meager life led by Russia's pro-war elites. 🧵 Image
Quite a fervent supporter of the war he won't die in, Andrei Bokarev is a great Russian patriot which, like all other great Russian patriots, used to drown his sorrows as far away from Russia as possible and dream of Chelyabinsk from his modest $100 million Saint-Tropes cottage. Image
Every bit a devoted Z man with a fitting name, Iskandar Makhmudov found his "Russian soul" to be most at peace, much like Russian soldiers do, very much outside Russian borders, in a meager $85 million, 24 bathrooms, 16th century French chateau with 1500 acres hunting grounds. Image
Read 10 tweets
Sep 30
With Russian bots and propagandists again spamming all of the internet with the same three fancy looking places in Moscow and St. Petersburg, I figured it'd be a good time to write a continuation to my travel guide to Russia.

Welcome to vol. 2 of "Posh Russian cities"! Enjoy!🧵Image
Boasting one of the largest train stations in Russia, very much a necessity given the population's favorite pastime is leaving, Novosibirsk fields enough sinking and tilting buildings to make the skyline look like it was designed by a drunk architect, which it probably was.Image
Famous for having the world’s largest Lenin head and pretty much nothing else really, Ulan-Ude is highly recommended to those looking to experience a sense of existential insignificance and dread, best appreciated while standing directly beneath Lenin’s unblinking gaze.Image
Read 12 tweets
Sep 28
The voting process in this very much existential Moldovan election has now ended. The counting process will begin shortly.

I will be posting updates regarding the results in continuation of this post. Feel free to bookmark if interested.🧵 Image
Very much relevant regarding the counting process

With a rather gloomy face, the leader of the main pro-Russian bloc made a statement reiterating a call for all "opposition" parties to take to the streets tomorrow, and, in what sounded like a threat, called on the security services not to "provoke the population into violence". Image
Read 17 tweets
Sep 26
With Moldova on the verge of holding what is likely to be the most consequential election in its history this Sunday, one that might unfortunately see it fall to Russian domination, I figured I'd do a short thread on the history of the place to offer some context.🧵 Image
In 1918, in the aftermath of Russian Empire's chaotic disintegration, Moldova succeeds in putting an end to over a century of brutal Russian occupation and, faced with the prospect of being re-absorbed by the new Russian state, votes for unification with the Kingdom of Romania. Image
In 1924, in an attempt to "win over" the Moldovans of Romania and as a first step towards a Bolshevik revolution in Romania, the Soviets decided to create the Moldavian Autonomous SSR out of Ukrainian territory, the first iteration of what is today known as Transnistria. Image
Read 16 tweets
Sep 24
While the political implications of a Russian takeover of Moldova seem to be largely understood, the military threat this poses to Ukraine is largely dismissed. I believe that is not at all the case and we should be quite a lot more concerned about it. 🧵 Image
Currently, Moldova's intelligence service (SIS) applies an extra security filter that, with a lot of effort I might add, turns back anywhere from tens to hundreds of Russian men of fighting age trying to get into Moldova, via air, almost on a daily basis. Image
These "tourists" and "athletes" usually make their way into Chisinau via flights from Turkey. If the SIS checks are removed, hundreds of Russian soldiers can and will arrive in Moldova daily. I'll let you do the math to how much that amounts to in just a matter of weeks. Image
Read 6 tweets
Mar 16
The typical reply to this question appears to be "because America is big", which is a disarmingly stupid answer, given nobody is asking you to protest in the opposite corner of your country.

The population of New York City alone is some 25% bigger than that of Serbia. Yesterday, hundreds of thousands of Serbs took to the streets in Belgrade, a city of less than 2 million.

How many people out of New York City's 8 million took to the streets of New York City, not some far away place, in protest against Trump?
Likewise, another common answer appears to be "he'll impose martial law if we protest in large numbers".

Unlikely, but lets assume he'd do that. What is the plan then, never protest out of fear that might happen? Cause the more you wait, the more likely that scenario gets.
The other popular plan appears to be "we'll beat them in the mid terms" and "the courts will stop him".

Sorry to break it to you, but the man that chose to besiege the US Capitol instead of recognizing an election loss, won't care much for court decisions or free elections.
Read 4 tweets

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