The Ószöd bösme tried to make fun of him in a "witty" Facebook post, but again it didn't work out for him. József K. Horváth's article about 888.hu.

"Right side. Conservative. Even if I die.” Gyurcsány highlighted this in his recent Facebook post.

A strange text. Lying in the shoes of Orbán Gyurcsány, he tries to articulate how he thinks the prime minister sees them, the world, and Hungarians.

A cunning choice of form to blur reality and the lies it presents as reality, so that it can show Orbán in the worst possible light. For a self-willed, autocrat who does not tolerate contradiction, who disregards people, only what and only as he wants is good.

"Even if you kill me" Gyurcsány refers to the fact that - like it or not - Hungary remains a Christian, right-wing, conservative world.

Write this as if you were quoting Orbán. It's as if Orbán wants to impose this world on the Hungarians exclusively, in one person. As if it wasn't the other way around. It's as if the Hungarians don't want Orbán for themselves, because he is the person who expresses their heartfelt intentions the most. What country they want to live in. That they can keep their ancient, generations-long customs. To live in a free, independent country, to ring bells in churches and not to be afraid of the black car that, who knows, wants to take someone away.

It is interesting, as if Gyurcsány was afraid of this very freedom. It's as if Böszme feels this, the air of freedom so dear to millions, increasingly suffocating. As if for the world this is synonymous with hopelessness. It is as if he sees more clearly every day that he will not be able to break through the granite castle wall of the human will. It's like Gogol's Diary of a Madman starting to feel like Poprischin, in which the central figure of the tale, a civil servant, gradually descends into madness.

The basis of the post is, of course, spot on: Orbán really hates komčis. Not even a little. It was precisely by defeating them that he, and with him, the country got to where it is now. Gyurcsány writes in the shoes of Orbán, of course about himself:

"I hate komkies. These are also junk. It doesn't matter when they were born, what they do, what they think, because these are the descendants of Béla Kun and Rákosi. He who was a Komic will remain so. Whoever's father was a komci, he is too. Whose grandfather it is, all the more.”

Not to mention Klárika, whom Gyurcsány wants to wash clean these days. But Mrs. Ágnes didn't succeed, she just washed her sheets in the stream, but the blood stain didn't come out of the gyolcs in vain, the crime is there and will remain there in the eyes of the people. Even a sane Hungarian will not like Klárika.

Böszme writes about the difficult situation caused by the sanctions: "Anyone who criticizes is a disruptor of national unity. (…) Gyurcsány's agent."

You can't argue with that either. Just like saying "We are the wheat, the bread, the life. On the right side. Nationally. Conservatively. Really. Even if I die."

Let's nail it down: Orbán never says "Even if you die." Democracy, the existence of the public will, precludes any extreme formulation. And even more actions.

Of course, it may be that this bothers Gyurcsány and his agents.

What did Gyula Horn say in the parliament at the time, when he was confronted with his authoritarian past? "I was an authoritarian, so what?"

So maybe Gyurcsány can be bothered by democracy?

So what?

2022 plus:

If our memory does not deceive us, it does not deceive us, it was precisely Ferenc Gy. By ruining the country, mass unemployment, withdrawing benefits, reducing subsidies, canceling 13th monthly pensions and salaries, increasing energy prices multiple times, selling off the country's economy. The skin of this figure is too thick to speak at all after what happened.

Source: 888.hu

Author: József K. Horváth

(Header image: Hír TV)