The InterNazi Takeover

Our Hungarian correspondent László reports on the save-the-planet NOW ideology that has now engulfed Hungary.

The InterNazi Takeover

by László

Even though I have seen this coming for a long time, the official announcement — and its cynical Communist style — shocked me. When I read the headline quoting a government official: “An Effective Climate Policy is a Christian and Patriotic Duty,” I started to feel a cold stone in my stomach. And no “global warming” can ever heat that stone up. That slogan is a joke.

A ‘fight or flight’ response. Thoughts such as “How am I gonna fight this?” and “Where can I flee from this?” flooded my mind. Nowhere, obviously. It’s the second time (the corona psyop being the first), that I have felt that my family and I are personally in the crosshairs of the globalist predators. It’s one thing to know that your liberty will be taken away at some point in the future, and a completely different thing to see the iron gate closing on you. I know what Communism is; I lived it!

“Christian and patriotic obligation,” my [fundament]! Hungarian patriots have been betrayed. It’s a huge turning point. But I don’t think very many fellow Hungarians get this declaration of war on them.

The announcement took place in the “World Congress of Jurists conference, which this year focuses on the relationship between sustainability and law” — that’s totalitarian Communist tech tyranny, if you translate it from Newspeak. Total subversion of the national legal system. In other words: InterNazi takeover. War.

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Translation of the article from Pesti Srácok:

Judit Varga: An Effective Climate Policy is a Christian and Patriotic Duty

An effective climate and green policy is a Christian and patriotic duty, said [ex] Justice Minister Judit Varga in New York on Thursday at the World Congress of Jurists conference, which this year focuses on the relationship between sustainability and law.

In her speech at the biennial event, the politician said that policy decisions on Hungary’s climate and energy transition will pay particular attention to the framework set by the Hungarian constitution.

She stressed that Hungary’s constitution stipulates that the protection of the country’s environmental and cultural values is everyone’s duty for the benefit of future generations.

She stated that only international cooperation can guarantee national solutions for the preservation of the environment, and that citizens must be regularly informed and consulted in the democratic decision-making process.

The cost of protecting the environment should not be shifted to the poorest countries and the poorest members of societies, but should be borne primarily by the big polluting countries and big business, she stressed.

She added that international cooperation based on equality between countries must not lead to some countries being stigmatised for their actions to ensure the well-being and democratic choices of their citizens.

The minister cited the war in Ukraine and its impact on global energy policy, which — due to its geographical location — particularly affects Hungary, as an example of the complexity of the issue and the seriousness of the challenge. She said that the sanctions imposed by Brussels have driven up the price of energy in Hungary, so the most important goal for Hungarians now is to secure the country’s energy supply and reduce the “sanctions surcharge” on energy.

The Hungarian government aims to protect the people living in the country, support pensioners and families, in particular by setting a price cap for household energy, and: “We will therefore not support any proposal that would directly or indirectly put our energy security at risk or raise energy prices above the affordability limit,” she said.

She told the audience that when they hear in the news that Hungary is criticising the European Union’s sanctions policy in the field of energy, they should remember that Hungary is an energy-poor country with no maritime borders, so it must be particularly careful to ensure both its current energy security needs and the rights of future generations.

Speaking to the participants of the World Congress of Jurists, the Minister of Justice said that Hungary can reduce its dependence on certain exporting countries by expanding renewable energy sources, by using the nuclear energy sources that are expected to be available and by diversifying its natural gas supply, while at the moment Russian energy sources still account for a significant share of Hungarian energy consumption.

She recalled that Hungary has pledged to reduce its carbon emissions by 40% by 2030 compared to 1990 and to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050, and pointed out that Hungary ranks 13th among the world’s countries in the international Net Zero Readiness Index.

For previous essays by László, see the László Archives.

3 thoughts on “The InterNazi Takeover

  1. In my opinion, the environment doesn’t need to be protected. That’s God’s job, and He’s been doing just fine without any assistance ever since He created the earth and ourselves.
    What we are suffering from is God hatred, and unfortunately, the God haters are in the majority and always will be. At least until the Tribulation and the return of Jesus Christ. Then God’s children will be the winners and I wouldn’t like to be in the haters shoes on Judgement day.

  2. You fight this by getting some of that miracle glue the stop all oil crazies use. The one where they cut out a chunk of the road and let you go with it stuck to a hand!

    Find a house with appropriate virtue signaling about climate and energy. Turn off the gas and glue it shut with a blob. Go to the power meter, take it off (small nippers are handy) and goo it up.

    Your new motto is squirt, skedaddle and shut up!

  3. NO true Christian believes in that liar Al Gore’s hoax, because every claim he makes contradicts the Holy Bible. God gave us a Rainbow as a sign that He would NEVER flood the earth again.
    Gore is a type of anti-christ. And btw, NONE of his predictions have come true. Not one. Nada.

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