
When we hear the phrase “AGE OF DANGERS,” we may think of things like the following:
- the Russian–Ukrainian war
- the danger of a Third World War, even a nuclear war (!!)
- a European economic crisis
- migration, mass population movements
- unrest in Iran
- the Gaza Strip, the Israeli–Palestinian conflict
- Greenland
- Venezuela
- the war in Yemen
- Taiwan
- tensions between China and Japan
- renewed fighting in Syria
- the political crisis in Bosnia and Herzegovina
- North Korea’s missile tests
- Islamist terrorist attacks
- tariff wars
- hybrid attacks against European countries
- climate change and increasingly frequent extreme weather events
- etc.
❗️At such a time, it is life-threatening to entrust the leadership of a country to a lying, hot-headed person controlled from Brussels.
What is needed is common sense, routine, experience, and calm—otherwise we will pay the price.
🎯 Core Function (Real Purpose)
The text is not a situational analysis, nor a debate about risk management. Instead, it is:
- global panic accumulation,
- existential fear-mongering,
- pre-emptive delegitimization (“it would be dangerous to entrust the country to anyone else”),
- justification of an authoritarian leadership demand.
👉 The conclusion is not reached at the end; it is given from the outset:
“If we are not in control, we die.”
1️⃣ “THE AGE OF DANGERS” – a total threat framework
The list is deliberately:
- transcontinental,
- blurred across time and space,
- compressing unrelated conflicts into a single psychological package.
🔹 Technique: threat stacking
🔹 Effect:
– the audience does not weigh options
– does not prioritize
– switches exclusively into survival mode
👉 A classic Cold War propaganda tool, updated for the modern news-feed format.
2️⃣ Elimination of relevance – “everything is a threat to us”
The list deliberately makes no distinction between:
- direct national relevance,
- geopolitical distance,
- probability,
- manageability.
Greenland, Venezuela, Taiwan, Yemen, and North Korea are placed in the same weight class as a neighboring war.
🔹 Technique: false equivalence
🔹 Effect:
– every threat becomes “here and now”
– every political decision turns into an existential one
3️⃣ Apocalyptic leap – “this becomes a political verdict”
After the list, there is no analysis, but an immediate moral judgment:
“❗️At times like this, it is life-threatening to entrust the country to a lying, hot-headed person controlled from Brussels.”
🔹 Technique: fear → scapegoat jump
🔹 Trick:
– no evidence
– no causal link
– no specific policy failure
👉 Fear does not explain; it looks for a target.
4️⃣ Character assassination without evidence
Key labels:
- “liar”
- “hot-headed”
- “controlled from Brussels”
🔹 Technique: ad hominem + foreign-control narrative
🔹 Effect:
– the opponent cannot be wrong, because they are inherently unfit
– the debate can be morally closed
👉 Not a political rival, but a security risk.
5️⃣ Presentation of the authoritarian leadership model
“We need common sense, routine, experience, and composure — otherwise we will lose everything.”
🔹 Technique: strongman framing
🔹 Message:
– in a crisis, questions are not allowed
– change is not allowed
– only the familiar hand may hold the helm
👉 Democracy implicitly becomes a luxury “we cannot afford right now.”
🧠 Summary – what is actually happening?
This text:
- does not describe the world,
- but manufactures a psychological state
- in which a change of power equals a risk of death.
👉 The final, unspoken message:
“The world is too dangerous to try anything else.”
This is not argumentation, but fear-based loyalty enforcement —
classic authoritarian propaganda in modern news-feed language,
in the style of Németh Balázs.