Journalist Andrea Földi-Kovács and secret service expert László Földi spoke about the work of the Protected Society Foundation, the child protection referendum and the LGBTQ lobby, among others, at the Scruton Belváros event.

Taking the world of technology as a basis, László Földi compared the Open Society Foundations with the ideology of the Protected Society Foundation. According to him, while the former are in a stand-by state and can react immediately to processes in any case - albeit in a very expensive way - it goes much slower for normally functioning people due to their "switched off state".

He emphasized that Open Society Foundations are able to influence the world in an economic, financial and political sense.

He gave examples of the 2008 economic crisis and illegal migration, the persecution of Christians or the treatment of the traditional family model, as well as gender theory. He emphasized: such organizations either incite these processes or use them for their own interests in order to gain even greater influence. The tool for this is networking, on which NGOs are also built. They are also capable of influencing politics, i.e. they acquire very serious power.

In this regard, Andrea Földi-Kovács spoke about how the Open Society Foundations have invested billions of dollars in recent years in drug liberalization, the wide spread of euthanasia, the liberalization of abortion, they spread LGBTQ and gender ideology, and they also support illegal migration. He pointed out that they claim to be human rights organizations, yet they engage in anti-human activities. And those who finance these openly declared that they have financial and power interests, although many of their colleagues did not even know this at the beginning.

The journalist said that, on the other hand, the

The Protected Society Foundation aims to protect life, the possibility and right of children to healthy physical and mental development, the traditional family model, freedom of religion and conscience, territorial sovereignty and integrity, and the protection of national cultures and traditions, because these are under attack.

László Földi emphasized that the Open Society Foundations use the power of money to influence. As an example, he mentioned that the Budapest multis can oblige their employees to participate in Pride even if they don't want to. Or, since the Child Protection Act does not allow children to be sensitized in kindergartens and schools, they carry out their activities at universities as part of teacher training. He said that the Protected Society Foundation has no money, but it is important that the network can fight against the network. That's why I want to connect already well-functioning civil organizations and tradition-preserving circles, because the value is in small local communities.

According to László Földi, if the left won the elections, the above ideologies would be introduced immediately. Hungary, on the other hand, went against this in the last twelve years, because the people stood behind the prime minister and chose normality.

Source and full article and image: magyarnemzet.hu