"God created a bosom for a heart: thus a country for a man." This is what Kölcsey said, and one is moved by the truth expressed as simply as possible, yet poetically. Recently, Gyurcsány often talks about patriotism. "He who is a patriot is with us," he says, which does not move us at all, because we know very well that this is simply not true. Even Kölcsey would laugh at that.

Gyurcsány is not known for telling the truth. He didn't do it before, nor did he do it earlier this week in parliament. His entire political career was built on the lie of internationalism.

The question is correct, is this person crazy? Still, why do you see the Hungarians? Are you completely stupid? They call themselves patriots because they are opponents of Viktor Orbán. And his opponents because they are patriots. "And the patriots are against you, and they are with us," says Gy. F. This is obviously an urgent medical case, because a patriot is not known by what he calls himself. The patriot lives as his heart dictates. For whom Hungary is the first. The patriot examines what is good for Hungary. What makes the world go forward? Not what is good for Ukraine or what is good for Russia.

"They themselves want Ukraine to surrender. A rags-to-riches thought. Rag behavior. (…) You support the murderer's peace."

"The opposition speaks as if it imagines itself in the place of Ukraine," says Orbán. And isn't he right?

Hungary is on the side of peace, along with most of the world, it does not favor either side. We do not send weapons or ammunition to the Ukrainians, but the refugees receive generous humanitarian aid in Hungary. Meanwhile, we mourn the Transcarpathian Hungarians as sons of a non-Ukrainian nation who fight for Ukrainian interests in the war. While NATO, the West, including Brussels, is providing enormous financial and armed assistance to Zelenskiy, exerting unprecedented pressure on our country so that Orbán also joins the war party. One of its advocates is David Pressman, the United States ambassador to Hungary.

On the other hand, if they did not support the war, it would have been over a long time ago, because Ukraine cannot wage war against Russia on its own. There would be an end to mass bloodshed, no more senseless deaths. And Gyurcsány, who of course – this time again chose to serve the internationalism called neo-Marxism instead of supporting Hungarian interests – supports Ukraine, which is kept on a ventilator by the West, and calls the spectacularly pro-peace Orbán the supporter of the murderous peace. Although he knows that our country views Russia as an aggressor and stands up for the territorial integrity of Ukraine.

And while he is also aware that the energy security of our country depends to a large extent on Russia, he is still able to say things like that the Hungarian prime minister might be an agent of Russia. Disgusting insinuation.

This shows that everything is more important to Gyurcsány, who calls himself a patriot, than serving the national interest. Máté Kocsis also reminded the public of this in the parliament:

“Are you talking about rolling your eyes, dear sir? The situation is that in 2008, Russia carried out a military aggression against Georgia, you were the Hungarian Prime Minister, then you flattened yourself like that certain one in the grass, and even traveled with His Highness on a private visit to Moscow for lunch at a Ukrainian restaurant."

Let's add: he even played the oil industry shares to the Russians.

There is nothing new under the sun. Of course, I didn't say that for a minute. More precisely, Gyurcsány wants to make the Hungarians believe that he is a patriot with this patriotic-sounding, but basically cancerist nonsense. This would make even Kölcsey laugh at the edge of the cloud.

They remember what Gábor Horn said when commenting on the result of the 2008 visit award referendum: "They didn't say that, Feri, they said that you should go to your father!"

According to the Hungarians, the situation has not changed at all in the case of Feri, who calls himself a patriot...

Source: Magyar Hírlap

Author: József K. Horváth

Image: Flag Magazine