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👉 This Sunday will be the largest Peace March ever — but we need you there too!

In recent weeks, Hungary’s sovereignty has come under serious attack when the President of Ukraine tried to blackmail and threaten our country. We cannot allow foreign interests to decide for us about war, energy, or how the Hungarian people’s money should be spent!

Let’s gather in large numbers at the Peace March and show that Hungary cannot be blackmailed and that we will not be dragged into a war.

🟠 Let’s meet on March 15 and stand up for Hungary!

This week the largest Peace March ever will take place, but for it to truly become the biggest, it is also necessary that you are there as well.

1️⃣ External Threat Framing

Excerpt

“a serious attack has hit Hungary’s sovereignty”

“the President of Ukraine has blackmailed and threatened our country”

Technique

The communication portrays an external political actor as a direct threat to Hungary.

Key words in the text:

  • attack
  • blackmail
  • threat
  • sovereignty

These are expressions that strongly activate security and defensive instincts.

Goal

➡️ create a sense of danger
➡️ justify political mobilization

Effect

The reader may feel that:

➡️ Hungary has been attacked
➡️ therefore people must close ranks and stand together


2️⃣ Patriotic Mobilization

Excerpt

“let us stand up for Hungary”

“let us show”

“let us be as many as possible”

Technique

The text calls for collective action and frames participation as a patriotic duty.

The “we” form dominates throughout:

  • let us show
  • let us stand up
  • let us be

This is classic movement-style language.

Goal

➡️ increase mass participation
➡️ turn the political event into a demonstration of collective strength

Effect

The reader may feel that:

➡️ if they do not attend, they are missing a national stand or national moment.


3️⃣ Moral Framing

Excerpt

“we cannot allow foreign interests to decide for us”

Technique

The political debate is turned into a moral dilemma.

Two sides are presented:

  • Hungary’s interests
  • foreign interests

The middle ground disappears.

Goal

➡️ simplify a complex political conflict
➡️ frame participation as a moral choice

Effect

The reader may feel that:

➡️ anyone who does not support this position may be standing with foreign interests.


4️⃣ Fear Framing

Excerpt

“we will not be dragged into the war”

Technique

The communication implicitly introduces the threat of war.

It does not explicitly claim that war will happen, but suggests that:

➡️ someone wants to drag Hungary into it.

Goal

➡️ evoke fear
➡️ present the political position as a defensive reaction

Effect

The reader may feel that:

➡️ participation helps protect peace.


5️⃣ Symbolic Timing (Historical Symbolism)

Excerpt

“Let’s meet on March 15”

Technique

The event is linked to a powerful historical symbol.

March 15 in Hungary symbolizes:

  • freedom
  • revolution
  • national independence

Goal

➡️ present the event as historically significant

Effect

The gathering appears not simply as a political demonstration, but as:

➡️ a national stand.


Summary

The text combines several classic political communication techniques:

  • external threat framing
  • patriotic mobilization
  • moral framing
  • fear framing
  • historical symbolism

Together these create strong emotional mobilization, framing participation as a patriotic duty and national