In this pursuit of envy and hatred, they can always count on the domestic useful idiot teams and the Pharisaic traitors driving them...
In the past few days, the domestic opposition organized a demonstration in front of the parliament against the planned establishment of the outsourced site of China's Fudan University.
The speakers - well-known opposition public figures, members of parliament and the capital's mayor himself, aspirant prime minister - argued that with the installation, communism would come to us, and we would also open up the space for the Chinese's unobstructed, reconnaissance activities. (Most recently, the International Investment Bank was accused of espionage, including Russia and four other EU member states as shareholders)
The demonstration turned out to be modest in terms of the number of people, so the Western media reporting on it were forced to borrow their footage from other events to demonstrate their elemental indignation - not for the first time and probably not for the last time.
The hysteria surrounding the investment in the Paks nuclear power plant, for which the Russians provided a favorable long-term loan, does not want to end either, and will provide the country with an increasing quantity and cheap electricity supply for a long time, so we will not have to buy from the globalist market. In relation to cases, the concept of a useful idiot must first be clarified. According to the content of the term, useful idiots are those who know nothing about the real essence of the issues they came to demonstrate against (or in favor of), or are fundamentally mistaken, but express their opinion with the confidence of the ignorant.
Among the mostly younger age groups listed, those who drop out of most domestic software science training places more than beat this standard, because instead of real knowledge, their instructors provide them with fashionable globalist topos as a guide. As far as espionage is concerned, there is always some local knowledge acquisition going on in institutes operating abroad. It is the duty of domestic intelligence to keep this under control in an appropriate manner. (I am burning with the desire to find out what purpose the huge technical structure on top of the building of the American embassy in Szabadság tér serves.)
In the case of the Fudan case, it is also worth dealing with the danger of communism, as the main speaker, prime minister-candidate-aspirant, is very afraid of this in connection with the establishment of a university. How communist is China today, that is the question? The reality is that they live in a one-party system for the Chinese, and the party is known as the Communist Party. The communist classics, Marx, the editor of the Communist Manifesto, and Lenin, the first adopter, saw private property as completely foreign to communism.
Wherever communism reared its head, Lenin and his followers suppressed it by force. Private property is flourishing in China, what's more. There are more millionaires in Beijing and Shanghai than in the big cities of the United States. China had real communism for a good forty years, namely the harshest possible version, the activists of the "cultural revolution" destroyed their historical legacy under the guise of "erasing the past". The same thing is being practiced today in the West, which is considered so exaltedly democratic by useful idiots, by "cancel culture" revolutionaries equipped with iron rods.
Why should communism be feared in the case of China? In forty years, China radically transformed the well-being of its society, greatly raised the standard of living, lifted its people out of the poverty that led to starvation, and set an example of social care. With the question of what category of social order I would place China in today, I would wait, it would not be appropriate to make a surprising statement that would cause general indignation these days.
It is certain that in the classical sense of the term, China is no longer communism, but in the sense that capitalism is cultivated in the West today, it is definitely not capitalism either. However, the bottom line is that China has become such an unavoidable world power in the past three decades that cooperation with it is a fundamental national interest. Our Pharisees who disparage China receive huge support from the West, the West that is overflowing with Chinese economic and cultural relations.
The West is also dependent on both Russian and Chinese trade. The EU runs a deficit of 16 billion euros a year with Russia, basically due to energy imports, and if there were no Chinese imports, I don't know what would be sold in the stores of the United States. Dozens of Chinese companies are registered in Germany, and the Germans sell most of their most important export abroad, passenger cars, in China.
China has been Germany's largest trading partner for the fifth year running, up to 220 billion euros in 2020. Chinese goods are pouring into Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Hamburg, but if they also reach our country on the high-speed train from Piraeus to Budapest, that will make Western democrats jealous.
In this pursuit of envy and hatred, they can always count on the domestic useful idiot teams and the Pharisaic traitors who drive them. (No Olympics, no paks2, no Budapest-Belgrade high-speed railway, no Fudan University, because communism is coming!) The judgments of Western Pharisees about us are accepted by our domestic Pharisees without criticism. Since they are not at all considered stupid, like useful idiots, they are not only Pharisees, but also traitors, they want to deprive our country of the benefits that others - if they live in the West - have been enjoying for a long time.
Our Pharisees are not patriotic patriots, but treasonous globalists, who are in common with their clients, who view our country's relations with China and Russia through the eyes of competitors. They get their foreign colleagues used to it - if they are in government - that we can only access the Chinese and Russian markets through them. Let's look at Fudan University after that. Not at all a communist creation, it was founded in 1905 in Shanghai, the city where Western and Chinese culture have always been in the closest relationship.
It was established as a private university with the widest educational and research profiles. It was nationalized in 1949, but its abolition or radical transformation was never discussed. In order to refute all rumours, the Chinese communists needed not only propaganda, but also real knowledge, similar to the army of the former GDR, where dozens of former Wehrmacht officers were assigned, or to the German scientist who developed the German V2 rockets, Werner von Braun, who works in the United States in recognition, he even received a state award.
Even during the years of the rampant Cultural Revolution, there was enough determination in some of China's leaders to protect enduring cultural and scientific values. To this day, the university has survived everything, even the years of the most violent cultural revolution. It has branches located in four other cities in China, and cooperates with countless Western universities at various levels. In Shanghai, there are about forty-five thousand students in the various faculties. Its health and medical training is particularly strong, and nothing supports this better than the fact that seventeen hospitals operate next to it as university training hospitals. He conducts doctoral training in numerous disciplines.
It is the university that Ferenc Gyurcsány himself advocated during his prime ministership when he visited China with his wife. This can also be a compelling reason why he and Klára did not pay their respects in the highly enthusiastic but small group of useful idiots held in front of the parliament. Klára and Gyurcsány are aware of the bottom line regarding Fudan, but the need is now for useful idiots and especially for their votes in the spring of 2022.
If, by chance, the whims of the electorate were to blow away the opposition's victory by the time the first visit to China took place, according to the master plan, Kárácson will no longer have to be reckoned with. Now do the obligatory thing. (Mayakovsky also allegedly said before his suicide: "comrades, don't shoot", this wouldn't be the first friendly fire.) And for China, the communication staff will find something acceptable for China (perhaps headed by Kárácson).
Today, only those who stubbornly cling to old topos, such as the political right and left, do not see the changed political map. Today, the former right, which the historic left accused of exploiting the masses of workers, no longer operates within national frameworks, but is above nations. Today, this exploitation takes place on a global scale. He managed to achieve this situation by making private money (dollars) universally accepted - as a result of effective pressures - as a result of which skimming the profits of national economies is a daily routine.
The political squad already organized by the globalist beneficiaries is paving the way for this exploitation on a global scale, mostly, but not exclusively, in parties labeled as left-wing. This is precisely their problem with China and Russia. They are not part of this kind of globalist division, or rather they managed to move away in time and set out on their own path. Of course, the globalists cannot avoid relations with the two powers either, since they would lose useful deals, but they refrain from others doing the same.
If so, then through them, under their control. Since the rational arguments have run out, labeling remains, as we saw in the case of China with communism. The line of labeling is getting longer and longer for those who do not accept migrants, those who do not kneel before the start of sporting events are exclusionary, those who do not stand in solidarity with the oppressed, etc. It won't be over soon. That's why there are Pharisees and useful idiots, to make it last longer.
Imre Boros, economist
Source: Magyar Hírlap
Front page photo: June 5, 2021. Participants march against the establishment of the Budapest campus of China's Fudan University in the capital, on Andrássy út, on June 5, 2021. MTI/Zoltán Balogh