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🤡 Magnificent how liberal propagandists are suddenly defending Maduro 🤡

Two days ago, Maduro was the evil dictator, Putin’s evil puppet.
Today? He’s the sovereign, democratically elected leader of Venezuela — allegedly kidnapped by the evil dictator Trump.

Meanwhile, Robert Fico has magically become a hero, simply because he posted on Facebook condemning the U.S. action.
Yesterday Fico was evil too — after all, he’s a friend of the evil dictator Orbán Viktor.

And of course!
Now Vlagyimir Putyin must also be a hero — and so is the Iranian Ayatollah — since they’re Maduro’s friends, meaning they don’t like Donald Trump.

Sure, sure!
The Iranian Ayatollah has actually been “one of the good guys” for a while now — after all, he dislikes the evil dictator Benjamin Netanyahu, who happens to be a friend of the evil Trump and the evil Orbán.

Perfectly logical, right?!?!

Long live the progressive, liberal geniuses! 🤡

1. Double-key morality (situational ethics)

The core logic of the text is not what happened, but who did it.

The same actor is labeled:

  • yesterday as an “evil dictator,”
  • today as a “sovereign, democratically elected leader,”

depending on whether they:

  • are opposed to Donald Trump, or
  • temporarily align with the interests of the current “enemy’s enemy.”

👉 This is not inconsistency but a deliberate switch:
the moral standard is not universal, but camp-dependent.


2. Enemy relabeling

The text ironically exposes a common propaganda pattern:

  • Nicolás Maduro
  • Vlagyimir Putyin
  • the Iranian ayatollah

are not judged based on their own actions,
but on who they are currently opposing.

“If he doesn’t like Trump → he’s suddenly acceptable.”

This creates a binary worldview:

  • Trump / Orbán Viktor / Benjamin Netanyahu = absolute evil
  • anyone opposing them = automatically relativized, excused, or rehabilitated

3. Moral cascade (chain legitimization)

The text deliberately sketches an exaggerated chain:

  • Maduro → good
  • because he’s a friend of Putin → Putin becomes “less bad”
  • because the Iranian ayatollah is on the same side → he too becomes acceptable

This is logical contamination:

if A is good, and B is A’s ally, then B must also be “less bad.”

👉 This is not reasoning — it is emotional contagion.


4. Selective memory (motivated forgetting)

The phrase “yesterday he was still evil” is crucial.

Propaganda does not deny the earlier claim —
it simply treats it as no longer relevant.

Psychologically this means:

  • cognitive dissonance → not resolved, but skipped
  • the audience is conditioned not to remember consistently

5. Facebook diplomacy as a moral stamp

The example of Robert Fico is particularly revealing:

A single Facebook post:

  • “condemning the U.S. action”
    → moral absolution
    → status change: from “villain” to “king”

👉 This is the overvaluation of symbolic gestures,
where a statement matters more than actual political conduct.


6. Tribalism (us vs. them)

Throughout the text, the underlying mindset is shown to be:

  • not value-based,
  • not law-based,
  • not fact-based,

but tribal:

“The enemy of my enemy is morally usable.”

This is not liberalism —
it is an identity-political reflex.


7. The function of the clown emoji 🤡

The clown emoji is not decoration; it is a rhetorical device:

  • ridicule → shutdown of thinking
  • creation of a sense of moral superiority
  • infantilization of the opponent

👉 The final message is not “they are wrong,”
but: “they are ridiculous, therefore not worth taking seriously.”


Conclusion – what is exposed?

This text does not attack an opinion;
it exposes a mode of thinking:

  • momentary interest → moral judgment
  • actors are interchangeable
  • principles are not stable
  • labels of “good” and “evil” are transferable

That is why it is effective —
and that is why it is dangerous.