The issue of the purchase of real estate in Slovakia by so-called foreigners (i.e. Hungarians) posed a serious challenge to the head of Slovak diplomacy. Which should be understood as nothing more than the most visceral feeling that always fills the thief when the stolen appeals for his rightful property...
The dilemma lies in the fact that in the European Union, in the land of the "four freedoms", everyone buys real estate wherever they like. None of the basic EU treaties contain that Ivan Korčok should be informed about this in advance. However, it is widely discussed that Slovakia is part of "core Europe". Well, if this is so, then Slovakia, as the core of the EU, can hardly object to natural and legal persons with EU citizenship buying forests, fields and meadows in compliance with the standard EU rules.
Yes, but on the other side there are the visceral things, without which there is no Slovakia: the decrees, and in a broader sense, everything they symbolize, on which the monster state built itself: not a single foot of land for the Hungarians !
That's what the story is about. They exterminated us Hungarians from our property, and packed our ancestors onto wagons, using the worst Nazi methods. In violation of all existing international agreements, resettlement aimed at forcibly changing the ethnic proportions was carried out (and this is still being carried out - in a much more sophisticated way - today). Today's monstrous descendants of this Beneš generation would try to prevent the upheaval: the acquisition of land by the Hungarians with the guilty conscience of a thief.
However, this will not work within the core EU.
Although the EU easily accepts the principle of collective guilt, it will never accept the restriction of property ownership by foreigners, in which the citizens and institutions of the declining West are extremely interested.
Therefore, the fact that the cadastral offices put on Korčok's desk every week the report on how many foreign property rights have been registered is only good for the stupid child to have something to play with: if they don't use double-sided printing, then you can even draw on the other side of the paper ….
Author: Dániel Szűcs/Felvidék.ma