Before I look at József K. Horváth's opinion article, allow me a brief introduction. Mrs. Gyurcsány, who is the granddaughter of Antal Apró, who as one of the trio of terrorist state leaders defeated the 1956 revolution and took an unprecedented revenge on the revolutionaries in Hungarian history, is now announcing a show of force as prime minister of the shadow government in Budapest. This is distasteful not only because of the blood relationship, but also because Dobrev, one of the vociferous supporters of the internationalist-to-globalist world movement, is still pushing the cart of those who want to nip national existence in the bud as agents of a multicultural world government. Or let's say, as today's communists. Now, her husband, the flamboyant Gyurcsány, is now pleading with Orbán - who was actually beaten a couple of times by the police because he demonstrated against the Kádár Apró Dögei regime - because on October 23rd he is paying tribute to József Mindszenty.

I don't know if the dear reader demands that Ferenc Gyurcsány present himself as a villain in front of the general public every day? Of course, we can't do much about it.

Today, he is making a fool of himself by describing Viktor Orbán as a coward.

Why? Because on October 23, not in Budapest, but in Zalaegerszeg, he will give a speech at the ceremonial handover of the József Mindszenty Visitor Center. However, the opening of the Mindszentyneum is not just any event. We know that Mindszenty is one of the greatest figures of the 20th century in the Hungarian Catholic Church. He was also persecuted by the Communists and the Arrows. As Mindszenty himself said:

"Every individual, every generation of every people must fight again and again for their faith."

Right now, Viktor Orbán is fighting with Brussels for the nation's faith, for the country's independence. In a tougher battle, few would be able to compete with such effectiveness.

In the meantime, he is going to give a speech at the inauguration of the Mindszenty visitor center on October 23, and Gyurcsány will hold him back and simply humiliate him.

Moreover, as usual from Gyurcsány, justified by lies. Claiming something that is simply not true. This is what he writes in his Facebook post:

"The fighter turned into a street coward. (…) I understand that in 2006 it was easier to close the Astoria and send the fans to the barricade than to come to terms with what happened to the country under his leadership. I understand that it would not be easy to listen to the whistling and shouting of the crowd that is now dissatisfied with him, but that is no excuse for hiding."

What kind of barricade is the eye launcher talking about? Wasn't it precisely the Gyurcsányist police who pushed people into the audience of the Fidesz assembly so that all hell would break loose?

And tell me, what really happened to the country under Orbán's leadership? Unbroken and dynamic development! It is true that it started at the edge of the abyss, where Gyurcsány led the country, and for which two-thirds of his regime was immediately removed from the steering wheel. Then Orbán coped with the pandemic, and now, in the midst of the horrors of the war, he is fighting for Hungary to try to overcome the crisis with serious economic consequences for the whole of Europe at the cost of the smallest possible losses. On those acts of war that claimed tens of thousands of human lives, in connection with which Gyurcsány is roasting his own steak in support of Brussels' sanctions policy.

He does not support the Orbán who protects the interests of the Hungarians, and in fact tries to weaken him at all costs, but the Brussels that works against the interests of the Hungarians.

Or let's remember March 2006. At the time, Gyurcsány wanted to scare people away from preparing for the election by announcing that criminal circles wanted to carry out bombings at the election rallies.

After that, who should the disgruntled crowd boo? Or: after this, the question is, which of the two politicians is the coward?

Writer István Benedek writes about cowardice: "A coward is always bad. He doesn't dare to be good even if he secretly wants to be." Do they think that Gyurcsány would ever be able to be a good person?

Source: 888.hu

Featured image: NIF