Search results: Blue Planet

Hungarian Contributions to Space Exploration

At the very dawn of the Space Age, Hungarians laid the foundation for humanity’s first steps above the surface of our world. If we are to ever advance into the stars, no doubt our streets on newly inhabited planets will bear the names of great Hungarians such as Zoltán Lajos Bay, who measured the distance between the Earth and the Moon using radio waves; John Neumann, or János Lajos Neumann, a brilliant polymath who conceptualized self-replicating spacecrafts; or Theodore von Kármán, or Tivadar Mihály Kármán, whom the space border is named after.

The Making of the New World Order 

The naive idealism of Fukuyama is the past, while Huntington’s clash of civilisations has not materialised yet. Instead, we are heading towards a multipolar world of isolation, instability and warfare, which requires some Kissingerian realpolitik to understand. A report from Tranzit 2022.

The Problem with the EU’s Hydrogen Plan

The European Commission approved a staggering €5.4 billion hydrogen subsidy plan last Friday. The ambitious joint project aims to help reach net-zero greenhouse gas emission plans and replace natural gas but is the plan feasible?

REVIEW

REVIEW REVIEW REVIEW Economist Sven R. Larson: ‘Hungary deserves respect, not critique’ from EU ‘Since Viktor Orbán became prime minister, his country has had one

We the Natives

In the age of soft colonization and hybrid neo-colonialism, the war of independence must be fought in the cultural field in the first place.