Momentum likes to voice certain things in such a tone as if they were clearly the primary conditions for Hungary's ascension to Europe. - writes Zoltán Gergő Varga on the Sunday portal, from which we highlight some thoughts.

Fekete-Győr can't help but emphasize that it doesn't work that workers in the West get the same wages for 32 hours of work a week as they do for 40 at home . I honestly admit, no matter how many times I run into this sentence, I can't get over its content. There is no question of salary calculation in proportion to GDP, but even a loose comparison of average earnings; it seems that Momentum, at the level of the cheapest campaign promises, did not even bother to come up with a program item that would not at least be a breathless, dull initiative in a highly experimental status, either in Germany, Spain or New Zealand.

Of course, they also do not add that in Germany in 2020, the four-day work week was only discussed in connection with the fact that during the biggest coronavirus epidemic, it would not be necessary to lay off workers in the various factories.

Then there is the "we are a country of half a million LGBTQ people" type of suggestion.

LGBTQ rights are not basic human rights. Neither is blood infection, for example.

And just as society has thrown one out of itself in the course of history, saying that it is not possible to build a society on this in the long term, so, thank God, the problem balloon of "LGBTQ rights" is not taken seriously in most parts of the world to this day.

On the other hand, András Fekete-Győr's claim that 500,000 LGBTQ people live in Hungary is simply false.

In Hungary, 2 percent of the several thousand people who filled out the LGBTQ survey identified themselves as some non-hetero type person, and one percent abstained. Whichever way I look at it, even if we calculate with ten times that amount, we still don't come close to the crowd of half a million people on whose boat - boat, raft, whose flag Momentum has planted its flag on.

Using adoption as an example is both tragic and ridiculous.

In Hungary, thousands of families (families in the Christian sense) have been standing on the adoption waiting list for years. Why does Momentum think that adding a few more LGBTQ people to this crowd will solve the problem?

Somehow it is touching that, according to Momentum, the marriage of a handful of people and the weekend idyll spent with their adopted children, extended to three days a week, could be the key to making Hungary "more European".

You can read Zoltán Gergő Varga's entire article here