Shea Bradley-Farrell, an American foreign policy and national security expert, is writing a book about Hungary, in which, among other things, she wants to present the "Hungarian creed" and why it is important to preserve sovereignty and identity. 

Hungary is actually the last bastion of freedom within the European Union, American foreign affairs expert Shea Bradley-Farrell, guest researcher at the Center for Fundamental Rights, said on M1 on Wednesday.

The foreign affairs expert reported in the program that he is writing a book about Hungary, in which he wants to present, among other things, the "Hungarian creed" and why it is important to preserve sovereignty and identity.

He went on to say that Americans currently see Hungarians through the eyes of the media, who are presented as homophobic and fascist. He also noted:

the same media applies the same adjectives to American conservatives.

He believed that the current government of the United States, its ambassador to Hungary, David Pressman, and the European Union "absolutely misrepresent" the situation of the rule of law and the media in Hungary.

According to him, the American leadership is angry because Hungary stands up for certain values ​​even within the EU: it does not allow LGBTQ propaganda into schools and "very strongly" stands up for peace. "I am one of the few people in America who share the same opinion as Prime Minister Viktor Orbán," he said.

Shea Bradley-Farrell also mentioned that Hungary "represents a very good spirit",

like the United States in the 1980s when we "clung to our core traditional values." According to his statement, he was impressed by the way minorities and those fleeing the war in Ukraine are supported in Hungary.

The American foreign affairs expert welcomed the fact that Hungarians put their own country first, and at the same time expressed his belief in the importance of preserving Hungarian identity and sovereignty.

Source: hirado.hu

Shea Bradley-Farrell is an American foreign policy and national security expert, Source: MTI, Photographer: Lajos Soós