
It’s already a success that so many people sent in development ideas and messages. We will go through all of them—then we’ll throw the Tisza trash away. Well, there are things like torn-up Balázs Németh faces in there too. Stop Tisza!
We even received an advertisement for some “Tisza World” app. We won’t be using that option, because I don’t want my data ending up with the Ukrainians, allegedly.
At the end of Erdőkerül Street, at the bus terminal, it would be good to have a display showing which bus departs when. We’re very sorry that the bank branch on Zsókavár Street was taken away. It would be good to have more low-floor trams, and we would also need more 24-hour shops.
And this here is the original outcome of the “doghouse day.” Gloves were definitely justified here. Just a short message: sadly, I noticed with disappointment how filthy one or two commies can be. What kinds of things are they throwing around? Shameful—this is exactly the kind of style the Tisza has.
The useful, meaningful messages, however, we will include among the promises and plans of our representative candidates. Together, with the people who live here, with their help, we will bring District 15 into motion—and make it a good place to live.
1️⃣ “Useful ideas vs. Tisza trash” – pre-filtering + dehumanization
“We go through all of them, then throw out the Tisza trash.”
👉 Message:
- anything that is not with us is not an opinion, but trash
- it does not deserve to be heard, weighed, or debated
This is gatekeeping propaganda:
it decides in advance what counts as valuable, before examining anything.
2️⃣ Physical destruction as “humor” – symbolic violence
“torn-up faces of Balázs Német”
This is not a joke. It is visual aggression:
- the opponent’s face → something that can be torn up, thrown away, humiliated
- it normalizes the physical erasure of the enemy image
👉 A classic dehumanization cue
From here, it’s only one step to “they deserve it.”
3️⃣ “Our data will end up with Ukrainians” – importing an external enemy
“I don’t want my data to end up with Ukrainians”
❌ No evidence
❌ No connection between the app and Ukraine
❌ No technical explanation
👉 This is xenophobic panic-mongering:
- data theft
- war
- foreigners
→ all packed into one sentence so the brain doesn’t ask questions.
4️⃣ Real local needs → loyalty test
Bus schedules, a bank branch, low-floor trams, shops.
👉 The trick:
- real problems are only taken seriously
- if they don’t come from the “wrong side”
This is not representation, but conditional listening.
5️⃣ “Commies,” “filth,” “Tisza style” – moral contamination
“some commies are such filth”
“this is the same style as Tisza”
👉 Function:
- the opponent is not a political rival
- but a morally corrupt group
This is moral contamination framing:
touch them → you become dirty too.
6️⃣ “We are the good ones” closing – fixing collective identity
“Together, with the people who live here… it will be a good place to live”
This is the classic propaganda closing chord:
- first: hatred and exclusion
- then: warmth and “community”
👉 The brain links:
exclusion = order = safety
🧠 So what is this, overall?
This is not a campaign — it is:
- ✅ dehumanization of the opponent
- ✅ external enemy construction (Ukrainians)
- ✅ fear-mongering without evidence
- ✅ appropriation of local concerns
- ✅ a moral superiority narrative
👉 Assessment:
blunt, open, low-grade propaganda that no longer even tries to appear fair.