What European politics is doing today is politics that is completely alien to reality, a policy that completely ignores even the most basic existential interests of its own constituents - declared László Kövér, the Speaker of the Parliament in Martos in the Highlands, where he participated in the opening forum of the Esterházy Public Camp , on Wednesday.
László Kövér said about the ongoing European debate on the future of the EU: the aspirations behind this debate are not about what the structure of the EU should be or how Europe can meet the challenges, but about how Europe should position itself in a way that meets America. "How can we be the allies and auxiliary forces of the United States, which is struggling with the challenge that the world will not be unipolar, but rather moving in the direction of more power centers," declared László Kövér. He added: the question that will decide the future of humanity will be whether cooperation or competition will dominate between these centers of power.
The Speaker of the House stated that the real reason for the war in Ukraine, which was also classified as provoked by Pope Francis, is not to be found in Donbass, nor in the tensions between Ukraine and Russia, but in the American strategy stated after the Second World War, according to which "America must be inside, Russia outside, and Germany below keep."
He pointed out: the reason for the situation that has arisen is that the United States is dangerously close to losing the title of the world's number one power, as China will overtake it economically in the foreseeable future.
László Kövér said: there is an American nightmare, which is that a unified economic area will be created from Portugal to East Asia, where those in it will create the center of the world economy as a free trade area. "Undoubtedly, the intention is to separate Europe from this economic region, the fault line of which runs between Russia and the areas further west," asserted László Kövér.
more about the forum in Magyar Hírlap .
Featured image: MTI/Csaba Krizsán