Hungary has a population of nearly 9.6 million people, even accounting for demographic decline.
Against that backdrop, 1.6 million responses do not represent:
- “the will of the Hungarian people,”
- a national consensus,
- or democratic authorization for major political claims.
Yet this number is repeatedly used as a political weapon, implying that anyone who questions the narrative is “going against the Hungarian people.”
This is classic manipulation:
- an unverifiable figure,
- presented as unquestionable truth,
- used to silence criticism.
Questioning the Narrative Is Not an Attack on Citizens
Challenging this claim is not an attack on 1.6 million people.
It is a challenge to a non-transparent political instrument.
Democracy does not mean:
“We decide how many you are and what you think.”
Democracy means:
- decisions are verifiable,
- processes are transparent,
- results are independently validated.
None of that applies here.
Why This Matters
This is not a left-right issue.
It is about using unverifiable numbers to justify political decisions,
while the actual views of society remain unknown.
👉 This is not really about peace, taxes, or Brussels.
👉 This is about the difference between reality and propaganda.
And everyone has the right to see that difference.