Many people are attacking Ágnes Kunhalmi because of her ATV interview, in which she said the other day that when the left-wing politicians talked about the opening a few weeks ago, they were not really calling for the opening, because that is impossible, the virus is still here. Clear, isn't it? According to one of the presidents of the MSZP, if they demand an opening, they don't even demand an opening. Máté Kocsis wrote an article about the lies of the left-wing coalition on his Facebook page.

However, there is nothing to be held accountable for, Ágnes Kunhalmi said nothing surprising. Everyone would really know: if the left-wing politicians say or do something that turns out to be stupidity, a lie, a crime or something similar, then they didn't mean it that way, they didn't mean it that way, and it wasn't that way. In such cases, in order to solve the situation, they usually lie to such an extent that the wall of ATV's studio reveals the other.

There are thousands of versions of this, let's see some leading examples:

  • If András Fekete-Győr throws a smoke grenade into the police queue wall = he just dropped a small harmless smoke candle at the feet
  • Krisztina Baranyi talks about a "dirty Jewish investor" = stands up for Judaism
  • If Csaba Lackner, a socialist representative from Kispest, dries cocaine at a house party and gives a lecture about the 100 million stolen money = we are not sure that Lackner is in the picture.
  • If Bertalan Tóth attacks the CSOK, but later he also hires him for his many properties = why, everyone benefits, right?
  • If Mayor András Pikó paralyzes an investment, the deadline will be missed, so the money received from the state must be returned = the government will loot the district
  • If Gyurcsány threatens Attila Vidnyánszky with the fact that he will become a scumbag = you have to speak the language of love
  • If Zsolt Legén ends up with a trunk's worth of smuggled cigarettes = I don't know how it got there, I didn't buy it.

Their lies could be continued ad infinitum, and knowing them, Ágnes Kunhalmi did the only thing she had to do: she denied the undeniable.
As the others used to. So "please, don't beat me to death" for that!

Source: Máté Kocsis Facebook