
balazska



We’ve compiled what was said in the Prime Minister’s Friday interview on Kossuth Radio.
Viktor Orbán: We have been attacked, placed under an oil blockade — not yet targeting our people or our cities.
It’s hard to speak when someone’s tongue is stuck up someone else’s ass.
Well, that’s what happened to Péter Szijjártó.
He wanted to say — and from the context it’s clear it was actually a slip of the tongue —
that Ukraine is only defending itself,
not defending us, but defending itself —
but it didn’t come out right.
Watch it, it doesn’t get funnier than this.
The question is very important, I think,
to clarify here.
And that is that Ukraine, in this war, is fighting for itself.
Ukraine is not fighting for us.
We were not attacked — Russia attacked Ukraine.
Russia is defending itself.
But it is defending itself.
It is not defending us.
It is not defending Europe.
It is not defending the European Union.
It is not defending us.
And then of course watch the second part as well, where he says that the war is just
a business model, that Ukrainians are actually living better because of it —
it’s absolutely unbelievable how this guy has the nerve.
Dear fellow Members of Parliament,
the situation is that
in Ukraine, the war has become a business model.
The situation is that from European Union funds, from the European Union, they receive
more money than what the Ukrainian economy could produce on its own.
The situation is that today, because of the war, many people in Ukraine live better than they would in peacetime.
Nice guy, right?
Such a truly Christian mentality.
Disgusting. Truly revolting.

❗️Viktor Orbán has written an open letter to Volodymyr Zelenskyy!
The Ukrainian president has gone too far. Not only have they been trying to drag us into the war for four years, but for weeks now they have been attempting to bring Hungary to its knees by shutting down the Druzhba oil pipeline. In recent years, Ukraine has received Brussels’ support for this — and has also won over the Tisza Party.
Let’s set the record straight: neither Brussels nor the Ukrainian president can decide the fate of Hungarians! We will not allow energy prices to rise because of them. Enough of the blackmail and anti-Hungarian policies!
In his open letter, Viktor Orbán made it clear:
“We Hungarians are not responsible for the situation Ukraine has found itself in. We feel sympathy for the Ukrainian people, but we do not wish to take part in the war. We do not want to finance the fighting, and we do not want to pay more for energy.”
Therefore, we expect Ukraine to immediately reopen the Druzhba oil pipeline and to refrain from any further actions against Hungary’s energy security.
Hungarians stand on the side of peace — but we will not compromise on our security. That is why Fidesz remains the safe choice.
Foreign Affairs
The UN General Assembly adopted the resolution calling for an end to the war and urging a just and lasting peace in Ukraine with 107 votes in favor, 12 against, and 51 abstentions. Hungary was the only EU member state that did not support the draft resolution, investigative journalist Szabolcs Panyi wrote on his Facebook page.
The draft resolution was submitted by Ukraine, so it was not surprising that Russia was among the 12 countries that voted against it (along with other Russian allies such as Belarus, North Korea, Cuba, Iran, and several African countries). Among the major powers, the United States and China abstained, as did India and Brazil. Among EU member states, Hungary cast the only abstaining vote.


👉 A bit of economics: if there are fewer large banks 🏦, the banking system becomes more efficient (it benefits more from economies of scale), meaning it can operate at lower cost.
This can push financial product prices down 📉 and thereby generate stronger competition. 👍
There are international examples of this as well, such as 🇸🇪 Sweden and 🇦🇹 Austria, where fewer than 5⃣ major banks operate.
telex.hu
Márton Nagy named four of the five banks that, according to him, may remain in Hungary


Now let’s set the record straight about what some people in Brussels seem to imagine.
The satirical article in Politico essentially portrays an EU elite openly fantasizing about a multi-tier, quasi-caste Europe where member states are no longer equal, but ranked according to “membership packages” — as if the Union were some kind of premium subscription service.
According to the story, a multi-speed EU is supposedly necessary because they are fed up with the “slower countries” holding back progress (by “progress,” critics would say they mean the aggressive Brussels agenda on war policy, migration, and deeper centralization). Ursula von der Leyen put it this way: the EU too often moves at the speed of its slowest member. In other words, if someone refuses to run with them, they will simply go around them.
The article mocks this mindset by inventing fictional “membership tiers”:
Platinum level – full power, fast-track integration, private chef, helicopter landing pad, a personal commissioner (competence optional, as long as they are part of the elite club).
Business level – voting rights, but fewer privileges, applauding interns at the entrance, one national dish per year.
Basic level – you may sit at the table, but can be asked to leave whenever something important is discussed.
Hungary – nothing.
Yes, that is literally the punchline at the end of the satire: Hungary’s category is “What do you get? Nothing.”
What makes this particularly telling is that behind the satire lies a real political debate. An increasing number of Western leaders genuinely support the idea of a “core Europe” where an inner circle would make decisions on behalf of all member states. The strongest advocates of this approach include the European People’s Party and prominent German figures such as Ursula von der Leyen, Manfred Weber, and Friedrich Merz.
Supporters of the Hungarian government argue that only Viktor Orbán has been willing to resist this pressure. From that perspective, if one believes that Brussels’ direction threatens national sovereignty, then Fidesz represents the safer political choice.

After 1.7 billion forints were stolen and questions were raised, they quickly took out a 2 billion forint loan — then came out claiming there was money in the account… Fidesz 2026, ahhhh.