balazska

Those who want order, peace, and stability should vote for Fidesz on April 12!

Let me show you something interesting from the 8th district. This is what it looks like when the filthy streets of the 8th district under the local liberal left-wing mayor meet the world of Tisza — trash scattered everywhere, Tisza newspapers all over the place. But honestly, the whole area has looked disgusting ever since there has been a left-wing mayor here in the 8th district.

Anyone who wants order, anyone who wants peace, anyone who wants stability will of course vote for Fidesz on April 12.

There is no other solution. Oops!

1️⃣ Order–Chaos Framing

Excerpt

“Whoever wants order, peace and calm should vote for Fidesz.”

Technique

The political choice is simplified into two extremes:

  • Fidesz = order, peace, stability
  • the opponent = chaos

This is a classic binary framing technique.

Goal

To turn the election into a moral choice, rather than a debate about policies.

Effect

The reader may feel that:

➡️ anyone who does not vote for Fidesz is voting against order.


2️⃣ Scapegoating

Excerpt

“the dirty streets of the 8th district under the local liberal left-wing mayor”

Technique

A complex urban issue (cleanliness, public space management) is attributed to a single political actor.

Goal

To provide a simple explanation:

➡️ “left-wing leadership = dirt and disorder”.

Effect

The voter may feel that:

➡️ local problems are caused by one political side alone.


3️⃣ Negative Emotional Framing (Disgust Framing)

Keywords

  • “dirty”
  • “scattered everywhere”
  • “disgusting”

Technique

The communication uses physical disgust to strengthen a political message.

Goal

To trigger a strong emotional reaction.

Effect

The reader:

➡️ reacts emotionally rather than rationally.


4️⃣ Guilt by Association

Excerpt

“the dirty street of the left-wing mayor meeting the world of Tisza”

Technique

Two unrelated things are linked together:

  • a dirty street
  • the Tisza party

without proving a direct connection.

Goal

To transfer a negative image from one actor to another.

Effect

In the reader’s mind it may create the impression that:

➡️ “Tisza = disorder.”


5️⃣ Repetition Technique

Excerpt

“whoever wants order, whoever wants peace, whoever wants calm…”

Technique

The same message is repeated in several variations.

This is a classic campaign communication tool.

Goal

To embed the core message in the audience’s mind.

Effect

Because of repetition, the statement may feel:

➡️ more familiar
➡️ therefore more believable.


6️⃣ False Dilemma

Excerpt

“There is no other solution.”

Technique

The political choice is narrowed down to two options:

  • Fidesz
  • the wrong decision

Goal

To eliminate the perception of legitimate political alternatives.

Effect

The reader may feel that:

➡️ there is no valid alternative choice.


📊 Summary

The text follows a classic campaign propaganda pattern.

Core narrative

“Order vs. Chaos.”

Tools used

  • emotional manipulation
  • scapegoating
  • guilt by association
  • repetition
  • false dilemma

Communication goal

➡️ to make voters decide not based on political programs,
but based on emotional identity and perceived moral alignment.