"First mayor, then county, if the government goes back in time at this pace, it will even become a kingdom... I'm saying now: the mayors will certainly not be serf judges," Gergely Karácsony begins his Facebook post.

One would be surprised if the mayor had not responded to the suggestions of the county and chief lord. At the same time, we can be sure that Karácsony will never become mayor, since he cannot lead Budapest either. In the midst of chaos, it is therefore easier to criticize the proposals of the governing parties from the seat of the mayor.

In fact, to compare it with other things. Because in this post, he also complains that "according to the government's intention, priority public squares in the capital will be taken from Budapest without compensation, they will first be nationalized, and then Vörösmarty Square, Széchenyi Square and Podmaniczky Square will be passed to the V. district with a Fidesz majority. Why? Just. This has nothing to do with the interests of the people of Budapest. Private interests have something to do with this (again), and Tiborcz's new hotel has something to do with it, and it has something to do with the practice of real estate utilization in the V. district, when valuables are sold to friends for a bargain."

Then he writes:

"If someone takes someone else's property, that's what we mean in Hungarian: theft. When he does this by force, it is robbery. This is robbery, if a law is made about it, then it is legalized robbery. Who's next? Whose property will the government take next?”

Gergely Karácsony just doesn't notice that the chair has been pulled out from under him a long time ago, only the seat in front of his home computer remains so that he can write his posts. Without self-criticism, of course, because you should first find an answer to why such proposals are made? Then, when he mentions theft and robbery, he should first look around his own house. Then, as a next step, you could ask yourself why I wasn't outraged when my EU friends in principle seized the assets of the Russian oligarchs to finance the restorations. Yes, that's not robbery, that's democracy!

Opening image: Attila Trenka / Mandiner