Comrades lie. And I didn't say anything surprising, nothing new, especially nothing high-level, right? This can be said to be an axiom, a well-known feature of them for more than 100 years. However, it has a unique, incomparable, pleasant intoxicating taste and inherent quality when you manage to knock them down crystal clear. This is not rare, of course, but it is a pleasant drug, the addiction of which is extremely high efficiency: it is always enjoyable to listen to and overcome komkies.

I'm only saying all this because what's happening on the left right now shows another great example of the truth of this thesis: they tried an awful lot to cover up how and how their campaign financing was done, but it was obvious from the beginning that this, at least in this form, most certainly cannot be true. Then the events followed one another, and today we are at the point where treason is not a journalistic possibility, but a reality.

The whole cabaret that Korányi Dávidék presented around Action for Democracy was doomed to failure. Starting with the fact that Hungarians living in the diaspora collected HUF 1.5 billion, and then HUF 3 billion, they requested certain information from the donors, such as passport numbers and so on and so forth. The unsustainability of the situation is perhaps best shown by the fact that Telex or 444, which lives from a similar financing circle, has not scratched the core of the scandal so far. On the day after the takedown, Telex tried to interrogate Korányi a bit, who was just as nonsensical and boring as a parody of a 21st-century yuppie, as at any other time - and of course he lied even then - but it didn't take that long for 444. In the 444 universe, the whole thing simply didn't happen.

Well, what a surprise!

You, who are reading this, are probably much more informed about daily politics and public events than the average voter. Therefore, I don't see much need to explain again what made it an incredible explanation, as Korányi and Márki-Zay envisioned hundreds of thousands of donors. Perhaps it is not worth talking about the fact that we know from the Internet history of the Action for Democracy fundraising page that no specific data was requested from the donor, so any amount could be sent with a completely fake name and so on. What's more, we can now omit the outline of the fact that only 11 people on this fundraising interface had any kind of money movement, which, given the amount, how many I should say, somewhat hints that micro-money would have changed hands here.

And I'm really just adding a colorful ending here that, according to Dávid Korányi, the fundraising was basically done on social networking sites. You know, Action for Democracy's Facebook page doesn't even have 100 likes, maybe two dozen posts with 3-4 likes each. And zero calls for donations. Somehow you don't feel it's realistic that there was a collection here, don't you?

But I'll say it again, that's not what's really interesting. A significant number of leftists are not stupid. Many things can be said about them, and of course there are a good number of fools among them, but don't have any doubts, there are also a lot of smart people there.

People who knew exactly that all this could not remain a secret, it was so obviously a foreign intervention in the shaping of Hungarian elections. I'll tell you why they weren't interested in the possibility of losing: because they also convinced themselves that they would win in April. And if this is already there, then all scandals are secondary. Many events can be endured watching from government seats. Plus, then the American support would have been there even earlier for them.

This was the main reason why they were hellbent on making the whole situation even a little less obvious: they had become totally convinced of victory. And this again points to an important feature of the Komchiks: they are initially unscrupulous and will do everything for power, but even if they believe that they cannot be retaliated against, they are willing to cross every single moral barrier.

But the best part is that the show is still not over. Please fasten your seat belts!

Author: Kristóf Trombitás

Opening image: Prime Minister Gordon Bajnai  Dávid Korányi (j) in front of the Capitol after his press conference on the second day of his visit to Washington, December 3, 2009. MTI Photo: László Beliczay

Source: pestisracok.hu