Sunday, April 19

Ukraine Wants Hungary Exiled and Europe Turned into a War Machine

Zelenskyy’s chief propagandist Podoljak is once again spewing toxic propaganda about what the EU should do. Not surprisingly, he is thinking with a Ukrainian brain: he wants Hungary kicked out of the decision-making loop to let Ukraine’s war machine and corruption run wild.

This blackmail isn’t new news. The EU—the main target of these demands—has been bending over backwards for Ukraine for years. The difference is that while most EU lapdogs comply blindly under the guise of democracy and geopolitics, the Hungarian government refuses to line up and walks its own path against the mainstream. This defiance is met with smear campaigns calling us “Russian puppets,” conveniently forgetting that the European continent has often made disastrous errors in the past—like the migration crisis and the nuclear energy collapse—that the “majority” eventually had to eat crow on.

The smearing happens to any state that refuses to act like a barking dog for the collective. In this “democratic” Europe, you are only a real democrat if your opinion agrees with the mob. EU treaties, designed to stabilize the community, are immediately treated as obstacles if a single state disagrees with the ruling narrative.

In this scenario, the EU leadership sees two solutions: they must change the rules to silence the dissent, or somehow cripple the state (Hungary) from using its veto. Ukraine naturally supports both options, as it clears the path for unlimited funding. This was most recently voiced by Mihajlo Podoljak, Zelenskyy’s top advisor, who stated there is no other way: Hungary must be eliminated.

Podoljak Wants Europe to Switch to a War Economy for Ukraine

In his latest statement, Podoljak declared that the EU needs to accelerate military decision-making processes immediately due to security concerns. His view is that Europe should focus entirely on developing a war industry and manufacturing equipment for modern warfare, rather than the post-war period—which according to the Ukrainian advisor will not arrive within any foreseeable time.

With this, Podoljak essentially exposes the lies spread by Ukrainians and the Western media about winning on the front lines. Anyone with a shred of reality knows the front situation and, relying on sources beyond Ukrainian reports, knows the war is far from over because Russia won’t easily let go of the security zone it controls.

Podoljak openly states the latest Ukrainian demand, which should be part of the EU strategy: Europe must transition to a war economy to ensure Ukraine gets as many high-quality and expensive weapons as possible to fight the Russians.

Podoljak and his peers in the Ukrainian leadership actually don’t care about the future of our continent, nor do they care that European countries won’t have anything left to guarantee their own defense due to supporting Ukraine. Zelenskyy and his team have successfully tricked a large part of Western societies into thinking Ukraine is actually defending Europe and its values—whatever those are—while they have no idea what Ukraine is doing to its own country and its own citizens. The victim role is guaranteed by international law, but the moral and political bankruptcy of Ukraine is undeniable.

It must be admitted that in such a “sui generis” organization, where traditional values are being erased to make way for twisted new ideologies and where leaders have lost their dignity, there is simply room for the dictatorial behavior and mentality dictated by Ukrainian leaders.

Practice confirms this perfectly: Zelenskyy and his team can do whatever they want, with impunity. They wear the moral costume with pride, and the EU even builds the stage for the Ukrainian theater company.

Fully aware of this, Podoljak can confidently state that the EU’s most important task is now securing further financing for Ukraine and increasing decision-making efficiency. regarding the latter, the advisor, who is conveying the Ukrainian leadership’s views—i.e., their demands—states that to increase this efficiency, the EU must get rid of Hungary’s blocking veto, which hinders the realization of Ukrainian—and thus European—interests.

Regarding this, Podoljak stated:

Europe needs to think about how to re-finance Ukraine, and most importantly, how to get rid of the so-called destabilizing veto factor.

Adding that he is talking about Hungary.

So, the Ukrainian leadership isn’t asking for anything more than for the “democratic” European Union to somehow bypass its own legal framework, which was designed precisely to stabilize the community’s operation. All to push a political agenda that has been legally blocked by Hungary. The EU can do this either by playing the rules, or by stripping Hungary of its veto under the guise of political reasons.

Essentially, the EU is preparing to do exactly what it accuses the Hungarian government of doing: adjusting legal frameworks to fit political will, while lecturing member states on the rule of law—while conveniently ignoring the corruption rife in Ukraine itself.

The EU currently demands nothing more from its member states than to subordinate their national interests to Ukraine’s interests, and for the latter to be identified with European interests. We have seen and heard this in the migration case, where Hungary was demonized and put on trial for not wanting to invite migrants and refugees into the country without papers. The Ukrainian case and the attitude toward it are similar, but now even more is at stake. Most people view the world and Europe geopolitically, but we are not only witnessing the shift/twisting of values and the dismissal of reality, but we are also its witnesses. And this is what poses the biggest danger to us.

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