A Hungarian tourist should go through the famous Zeil shopping center in Frankfurt just once in the evening! And when the stores are already closed. Which, of course, has not yet been destroyed, just like the Galeria Karstadt department store a few months ago. You will see pipers everywhere, in front of department stores.

We are making a huge mistake if we let the foreign-funded "Hungarian" opposition take politically agitated masses to the streets and use it to put pressure on the ruling parties in the parliamentary majority. Because these movements are used only for this.

Do you still remember the 2012 Hunger March?

"The hunger march has started, the organizers want to draw attention to the problems of low-wage workers. The event is organized by the Public Workers' Union, with the cooperation of MSZP politicians."

HírTv announced at the time.

Then reality hit:

"the 2012 hunger march was attended by the former deputy president of the MSZP, Simon Gábor, who was later found to be hiding hundreds of millions of forints in foreign banks".

It was not about poverty, but more about politics.

Of course, some people can say that this Gábor T. Túri is talking into our affairs from "outside", since he cannot even know what kind of situation some people have found themselves in here. But this is a mistake. I am home in Hungary often enough to know this. I know very well.

At the same time, I also know - and not only based on the news of the Hungarian newspapers - but from my own experience that

Germany, the world's leading export power, is also experiencing a huge decline.

But it can only be experienced, not seen. This is not shown by the so-called "free media", German TV, and little or no newspaper coverage. Why not? It is a difficult question, if we accept the German mantra that there is freedom of the press in Germany. Yet this is the politically correct, "official" view.

And lo and behold - "he shouts, whose house is on fire" - they are the ones criticizing us Hungarians, accusing us of this lack of media freedom, and for quite a long time already. At least since the national conservative government took power in Hungary and has a parliamentary majority.

The fact that unemployment is high here in Germany was already admitted on February 6, 2011, by an expert in a morning program of the German TV-1 (ARD). And also that the statistics are cosmeticized.

In fact, the number of unemployed is much higher than is commonly known. The so-called for example, the elderly were excluded from the statistics, even though they are still close to retirement, and their unemployment rate is certainly over 16 percent. The data is also embellished by the fact that there are people who work only 1-2 hours per day (in the context of here, for a starvation wage, which is 4 EUR/hour, i.e. 8 EUR per day). And according to statistics, they are not unemployed either.

How to impoverish a once rich country?

Hooray, cheers, unemployment is falling! - even then they believed that they were German residents.

However, at that time there was no migration crisis, hundreds of thousands of economic refugees did not arrive in Germany without control, and Covid did not rear its head (as a result of which countless small businesses were ruined) and Germany was not hit by the energy crisis and inflation due to the war in Ukraine.

A Hungarian tourist should go through the famous Zeil shopping center in Frankfurt just once in the evening! And when the department stores are already closed (the ones that haven't gone bankrupt yet, like the Galeria Karstadt department store a few months ago). You will see pipers everywhere, in front of department stores. However, it is a very long shopping street, with lots of entrances. And in front of them, the unfortunate homeless are really fighting for the best places. Because where the ventilation openings of the underground garages are, a little warmth comes up from below during the winter. Then they pull their little baty under them in fear, because one steals the other at night, and that's how they try to find peace. In the meantime, the "still-owning-apartments" cross them with a grimace and hurry on with their heads turned away. This has become a common sight around here.

It's just "not appropriate" to talk about it.

As well as those who cannot get the medicine that I prescribe for them as a doctor from the pharmacy. Unfortunately, I know all these situations because I live and work near them, in the reality of everyday life.

What do I mean by this?

Of course, I don't want to make the Hungarian reader cry, but just to show that if this is the situation in Germany with a population of 80 million, then in the case of a much smaller country of ten million, the crisis can similarly cause economic problems. Especially now, after Covid and during the war conflict in Ukraine. The consequences of European sanctions are well known, the smaller ones are hit harder, so it's no wonder that a lot of things have affected us as well. And there is only one explanation for this, namely that there really is a CRISIS. And this is not the side talk of the ruling party.

Can we be sure that this problem would be better solved - by now united - by the opposition parties "aligned" with the DK?

You just have to listen to them attack the governing parties in the parliament. How they sputter, how they make accusations without even once making any constructive (and well-thought-out) proposal.

in his interview with ATV on July 10 ?

Nothing specific really, just criticism. According to him, there is no crisis, it was only during his prime ministership, and the current situation is caused solely by Orbán, he is responsible for all the problems.

But if the members of the opposition raise some kind of proposal in the parliament, it would only put the country even more in debt.
They would take out a loan from the European Central Bank, maybe even get the billions of forints that are owed to us and withheld until now. Why? Well, they would suddenly open the southern border lock, in the same way as the school gates to the gender frenzy. And they would deliver weapons to Ukraine. Everything would really change. For some, it might even be better, of course, only until the loan is approved.

In the meantime, the "liberated" Hungarian newspapers would also sing about the sudden prosperity, but then the country would suddenly find itself sinking even more into debt-slavery. We would get to where Greece once was. Or maybe Jobbik would better solve the problems that have arisen? Their response to this is: "at least you should try."

To this I ask: "Do we have time for such experiments?"

Do we have time for the possible new government to erase all the achievements of the Orbán government? Then - in the midst of hate speech - build your own structure, which has already been badly tested in the country?

Because in addition to the fact that its effectiveness would be very doubtful, there would also be the fact that with the new elections to be held in four years, everything would start all over again, because the Hungarian voters would suddenly wake up, as they did at the end of the previous Gyurcsány administration.

Meanwhile, the country would stagnate in one place, or rather, it would sink together with Europe, and faster and faster. Well no. We need to get together!

National unity is needed here and now!

Until now, despite their Hungarian citizenship, the representatives of the opposition voted for packages against Hungary one after another in the EU parliament! If they came to power, the "meat grinder" would start quietly and unnoticed, in which Hungary would be the stuffing. Then it will slowly disappear from the front pages of Western newspapers, it will become one of the many gray countries, whose management was taken over "in the name of Europe" by a few large European countries.

Let's notice all this and think: do we really want this?

Let's rather give time to our government elected by a large majority, give time like the speed swimmer who has to come up above the water from time to time to breathe. Don't push it back because it will suffocate. It is not achieving its goal, the goal which, if it were to be achieved, would benefit everyone in the country. For both young and old. Even for the participants of teacher demonstrations.

(TTG)

Featured image: Angelika the young homeless beggar, 24 hours a day on the street. Germany - Photo: Bild