According to Máté Kanász-Nagy's announcement, the LMP will be honest. It's nice of them, but if this has to be declared as a separate program, something like a specialty, it's at least suspicious. Because we could conclude that it hasn't been so far.

The social politician spoke a few words about his party's election preparations and strategy as a guest of Hír tv's Napi aktuelle program, but most of the time the matter of the battery factories popped out of his mouth like a hiding stream from under the rocks. And it's a battery colony. Being a visual fantasy, I saw before my mind's eye the battery army bent on subjugating our country, enslaving the sons and daughters of our nation with electrical impulses. In front of them, a handful (now there are no more) lined up in resistant LMP crash helmets and with death-defying courage they short-circuit the batteries. Moreover, with the Fekete-Győr method, i.e. put them in the tub water!

I honestly admit, if I didn't know that the party is full of experts, I would get bored of this electrifying battery manufacturing, but when professionally trained politicians such as an economist, two entrepreneurs, an agronomist(?), an expert in public administration and international relations voice their concerns , and not to forget the speaker, a social politician, you can see that they are very much at home in the world of battery factories. Who wouldn't believe them?

Máté Kanász-Nagy condemns the government because they are bringing the technology of the future to Hungary. The technique that green politicians should not only support, but demand, not rail against, if they didn't speak vegetables stylistically. But the Zöldséges found a dead horse, which they saddled and desperately want to force it to gallop. After their referendum initiative submitted in the case of the battery factories was rejected by the Kúria, and even the Constitutional Court filed a complaint against the decision, they continue to spur on the old pacifist. The riots are organized in the public forums where, in principle, the local residents should be informed about the operation and safety of the factories. There should be no information, only protest. They're starting to get really messy...

The action of the LMP somehow reminds me of a scene from the movie Armageddon, in which Rockhound (Steve Buscemi) shouts rhythmically on the asteroid: Down with the atom! Down with the atom!. Sitting on a nuclear charge! As LMP, it would sound like this correctly: Down with industry! Down with the industry! Because there isn't a factory or plant that doesn't harm the environment in some way, right? All human activity is. Shouldn't we act then? Down with the phone because it will break down and become hazardous waste? Down with the TV, because also? Down with the furniture, because part of it (an increasingly smaller part) is made of wood, does it have to be cut? Down with the Christmas tree (now I'm thinking of the holiday, if you want, think of something else), because those pines are also cut down? But also with artificial pine, because many harmful substances are used during their production? So down with everything?

Máté Kanász-Nagy made it clear: whoever wants an electric car should manufacture it at home and take the battery factory there as well. The only problem, Mr. Green, is that you also want electric cars instead of gasoline and diesel-powered ones. Yes, should there be a bus stop nearby, but not in front of our house? that is, let's have an electric car, pay a fortune for it, but not have the profit accrue to us? Eh, as if this thinking is the same as usual in other opposition putty companies, only in a different, pseudo-environmental packaging, i.e. the worse, the better. There shouldn't be anything here that works, that pays taxes, where a lot of people can work for a decent wage. Let it be nothing, then the people will overthrow the evil Orbán's government.

I have some good advice for greenies. If you don't understand something, ask for the opinion of real professionals, not each other. I don't know much either, but when my computer breaks, I don't call a plumber to fix it.

Author: György Tóth Jr

Cover photo: LMP - Green Party of Hungary Facebook