Those who saw Monday's Press Club (HírTV) had fun again on the one hand, and on the other hand, you can know the opinion of Ottó Gajdics about the article that appeared in The Economist about Gergely Karácsony. In today's issue of Magyar Nemzet, Ottó Gajdics expresses his opinion even more vividly, from which we quote some thoughts.

"I'm tall and fat.
However, I don't have the confused grin of an insecure person controlled by others in my image. I had to note this before I descend to the level of Gergely Karácsony, into the dark recesses of left-liberal banter.(...) This tall and thin man, known for his powerless physicality, acts as if he is working in a way that is completely detached from reality: he breaks the imaginary pedestal that Viktor Orbán the unquenchable hatred felt for him in the decayed left-wing minds pulled him under the several-story high statue of the "dictator". How funny isn't it? (…)

What are you, Gergely Karácsony?
A stupid fiend pulled on a Brussels wire, a dirty glove puppet on Gyurcsány's sword-hooked fingers, or a corrupt political adventurer who is corrupt to the core and who serves foreign interests out of conviction? I wouldn't be surprised if everything turned out to be true at the same time.

Let's not forget that while the European Union is suffering from the consequences of axed vaccine procurement, the international left can't wait to put the matter of mandatory quotas and the settlement of migrants here and there on the agenda again. Also, they only care about one thing with similar intensity, gender and LGBTQ. Under the leadership of Viktor Orbán, Hungary takes a markedly different position than the EU majority on both issues.

That's why they say we don't have democracy, that's why we don't have the rule of law, that's why corrupt scoundrels talk about systemic corruption in relation to us. And it is clear that all the member organizations of the laundry coalition have joined this chorus, they serve these aspirations more and more unabashedly, because without the help they hope for, they have no chance in the domestic political struggle.