Germans are fleeing to Hungary for political reasons, German public television pointed out

The reporter covering Hungary, Anna Tillack, put it this way:

In the meantime, there is a growing German community on Lake Balaton, and the demand is growing

– at least that’s what he learned from real estate agent Barbara Herold, who sells Balaton properties to Germans. “They no longer feel at home in Germany, things are not as they would like,” Herold tells the reporter in the material.

Tillack also visited the Rebs; the Bavarian husband, the Berlin wife and their child moved from the Rosenheim area to Lake Balaton because safety was important to them. The head of the family, Stefan, says in the report: “we feel safer here”, and at home he did not dare to let his wife and child go alone to the nearby city because of migration. He also praised the foreign policy of the Hungarian government:

What Viktor Orbán is doing in terms of foreign policy, I simply consider it good that the Hungarians come first here, and that’s fine

The reporter adds: “There is hardly any migration in Orbán’s Hungary. It is Christian, heterosexual – and most of all white”. (Hungary’s many non-white residents were not mentioned in the report.) The short film ends in a market in Balaton, where the German public TV crew did not find any multiculturalism, but they kept hearing German and met other emigrants. A lady told the reporter: “I will not go back, I will not visit Germany again. Germany makes me sick.” And one man indicated that “I don’t like green politics, I don’t like red politics, I don’t like that all the money goes abroad”. However, he considers one thing good about German politics: his pension.

It is feared that those working in the real economy will not be able to enjoy German prosperity for much longer, like the pensioners who migrated to Hungary – Bloomberg recently put on a graph that

the US state of California recently surpassed Germany in gross national product, while in 2011 they still had half the economic performance of the Germans.

Meanwhile, California’s population is less than half that of Germany – that is, in terms of gross national product per capita, they have long since left Europe’s strongest economy.

Cover image: Demonstrators with the sign “Germany first” (Photo: AFP)



Source: magyarnemzet.hu