If there were a list on the opposition side (I'm not convinced that it doesn't exist), which includes the people they consider close enemies, the writer, journalist and publicist Zsolt Bayer would surely be on it. The outspoken (sometimes he uses a little too vulgar expressions), openly espousing Christian-conservative values, militant colleague is not simply a thorn, but a beam in the eyes of the globalist pack.
The announcement of the first Peace March can be attributed to Zsolt Bayer Before the recent movement commemorating the 65th anniversary of the 1956 revolution and the 15th anniversary of the police terror in Gyurcsány, we talked with him about the first Peace March and the root causes of the current event.
– Can you recall your feelings before, during and after the first Peace March?
"I felt the same rage before as I do now." Primarily because of what they tried to impose from the West on the then still young, otherwise second Orbán government. Even fear was a defining feeling. I remember when with András Bencsik about doing this, we told each other that if 20,000 people came out, it would be a huge success. Because it was impossible to know how many people would respond to our call. Then, during the Peace March, I felt indescribable happiness and satisfaction: Lord God, what have we done? Yes, I could experience bowing before the greatness of the nation. In fact, it was very unexpected. It would be a huge lie to say that we knew in advance. No way we knew! We would have been happy with twenty thousand people like a monkey's tail, compared to this, when we looked back and there were half a million people behind us, we really felt that Jesus, what is this! And then there's the endless satisfaction that it's fantastic. Not only is nothing lost, but everything begins now.
"Let's not forget what was at stake then." It is not an exaggeration, the existence of the democratically elected Hungarian government. As you know, the attack also came from Brussels, only it was more insidious, not as open as it is now.
- I am convinced that the Peace March contributed greatly to the fact that Brussels became quiet. They were also surprised by what happened.
– The first and the current Peace March, if they are similar in purpose, are different in their circumstances. By now, an internal opposition that lies shamelessly and carries out a hate campaign has emerged, which in 2012 only existed in traces. In addition, they can feel the support of the Brussels globalists behind them, which greatly increased their courage and voice and managed to make many people hate them.
- How does Imre Madách write - he was not a bad author - in The Tragedy of Man? "...the crowd is an animal doomed to doom, which will grind every order, because it is created for it. Save him today: he won't win what you throw away, and he'll look for a new master tomorrow." If Madách saw it so clearly in the 19th century, we can't see it anymore either. It is our job and responsibility to convince the masses, as many people as possible, that we are the future, that we are Europe and that this is the right way. A huge crowd stands by the government, which knows and feels this exactly. It is our job and responsibility to try to bring as many people from the other side here as possible.
– It is not an easy task, because decades of hypnosis have achieved the desired effect for many. Let me cite just one specific fact: day after day they proved that Viktor Orbán is the hooved devil himself. I asked anyone who believed this why they hate the prime minister, but none of them could give a concrete answer. At most, say "just".
– Let me quote Madách's words again. How are you doing in Athens? When the first demagogue stands up and says that Miltiades sold the country. And then the woman (Éva) comes and says: "My heart always aches when I see the judgment of a starving people over the great..." This is psychology. And crowd psychology. And the demagogues, the dishonest, the vile have always known how to incite the masses against the greater, the different, the great. You don't even have to be a politician to do this. The Mátyás Rákosi were even capable of trying to deprive a Ferenc Puskás of his nimbus. Later, even Kádárek , simply because he left this country after '56. You have to be able to live with that. The excellent, the great will always be the target of the crowd, the excellent and the great must be able to live with this, but thank God this always has its counterpart, the other half of the crowd, the sane half.
(Header image: Hír TV)