(0:00) Which one would you choose?
(0:03) The answer seems obvious, but in Brussels they decided that this is what you must choose.
(0:09) This is because the European Parliament would, through an unlawful resolution, ban all member states from purchasing Russian gas and oil.
(0:16) For Hungary, this would mean the end of the utility cost reduction scheme.
(0:20) If it were up to Brussels, the utility costs of every Hungarian household could rise to as much as three times their current level.
(0:25) At the vote, representatives of Fidesz fought to protect the low utility prices that safeguard Hungarian families.
(0:32) Representatives of the Tisza Party, however, chose the most cowardly path: they sneaked away and did not even take part in the vote, because they cannot vote against Brussels’ plans.
(0:41) If it were up to them, would they let Brussels wipe out cheap utilities in Hungary with a single stroke of the pen?
(0:47) Does such a Hungarian person really exist who would want this?
(0:50) Yes: Bód and Krisztina.
What is this 200 HUF vs. 600 HUF “water” shown under the video?
Short answer: it’s a classic propaganda and psychological conditioning trick, not information.
1. A false choice is created
The video opens with:
“Which one would you choose?”
You see two prices:
- 200 HUF
- 600 HUF
Your brain reacts instantly:
“Obviously the cheaper one.”
➡️ This is not reasoning — it’s an automatic reflex.
2. Emotional conditioning (price → politics)
That instinctive choice is then emotionally transferred onto a political issue:
- water price →
- utility bills →
- Russian gas →
- Brussels →
- political enemy
The implied message is:
“If you don’t support us, you want the 600 HUF option.”
⚠️ This is emotionally effective but logically false.
3. Deliberate oversimplification (infantilization)
The real topic is complex:
- energy diversification,
- EU legal competences,
- sanctions,
- long-term price effects.
Instead, it’s reduced to a supermarket-style choice between two bottles of water, so the viewer:
- doesn’t think,
- only reacts emotionally.
4. Legal distortion
The video claims:
“The European Parliament would, through an unlawful resolution, ban all member states from buying Russian gas and oil.”
In reality:
- the European Parliament
cannot unilaterally ban member states from purchasing gas, - there is no EP resolution that automatically ends Hungary’s utility price scheme.
➡️ This is political narrative, not legal fact.
5. Scapegoating with a name
At the end:
“Yes: Bódos Krisztina.”
This is a textbook scapegoating technique:
- personalizes the “enemy,”
- provokes anger,
- diverts attention from real decision-making mechanisms.
One-sentence summary
The 200 vs. 600 HUF water is not evidence — it’s an emotional lure designed to steer viewers toward a pre-selected political conclusion.