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Those who don’t march in step won’t get euros by evening.

The Croatian prime minister — a European People’s Party ally of Péter Magyar — has just reintroduced conscription. Today, hundreds of young Croatians began their military service, which will last for several months.

The same thing is happening in Germany and Poland, where similar measures are being introduced and where young people are holding large demonstrations against them.

🗣 But this does not concern the pro-war politicians.

This is what is expected within the European People’s Party, this is Manfred Weber’s dream. This is also what Romulusz Ruszin-Szendi has repeatedly promised to Hungarian youth.

🚨 If Tisza comes to power, conscription will come as well, because Péter Magyar cannot say no to Brussels’ war demands.

“Those who don’t march in step won’t get euros by evening.”
That is what Péter Magyar’s European People’s Party ally could have said, because the Croatian prime minister has now introduced conscription, the result of which is that Croatian young people have already begun their several-month military service.

And it’s not only Croatia. Everywhere where there is a Brussels-friendly government, something similar is happening. Just look at Poland or Germany, where young Germans are even taking to the streets to protest against conscription.

We do not want this. We do not want conscription.

But Romulusz Ruszin-Szendi has already said that if they come to power, then if necessary everyone will be pulled into the army.

This is what can be expected from pro-war leaders in Europe, and this would also be our fate if a pro-war Tisza government were to lead Hungary.

We will not allow this.
That is why Fidesz is the only safe choice.

1️⃣ Fear Framing

Excerpt

“If TISZA comes, conscription will come as well.”

Technique

The text activates a very strong personal fear:

➡️ compulsory military service
➡️ young people being “dragged” into the army

This is one of the strongest political fears in Europe.

Goal

  • to frighten young people and parents
  • to trigger an emotional reaction

Effect

The reader may develop the feeling:

➡️ “If we vote the wrong way, young people will be taken into the army.”


2️⃣ False Causality

Excerpt

“If TISZA comes, conscription will come as well.”

Technique

The text automatically links two things together, even though there is no evidence that they are connected.

Logical chain presented in the text:

European People’s Party → TISZA → conscription

In reality:

  • there is no EU rule requiring conscription
  • each country decides independently about its military system.

Goal

A simple political message:

➡️ “If they come to power → there will be trouble.”

Effect

The reader may feel that:

➡️ a political change represents a direct danger.


3️⃣ Puppet Framing (External Control Narrative)

Excerpt

“Péter Magyar cannot say no to Brussels’ demands.”

Technique

The political opponent is portrayed as someone who:

➡️ is not independent
➡️ is controlled by Brussels

This is a classic sovereignty narrative.

Goal

  • to weaken the legitimacy of the opponent
  • to mobilize national sentiment

Effect

The reader may feel that:

➡️ the opponent serves foreign interests.


4️⃣ Enemy Construction

Excerpt

“pro-war politicians”

Technique

A political bloc is described using a single negative label.

Instead of individual actors, the text presents one homogeneous group:

  • Brussels
  • the European People’s Party
  • TISZA
  • “pro-war leaders”

Goal

Create a clear political divide:

WE vs THEM
peace vs war

Effect

The reader may more easily identify with the “home side”.


5️⃣ Overgeneralization from Examples

Excerpt

“everywhere where there is a Brussels-friendly government, similar things are happening”

Technique

Examples from a few countries are used to present a general European trend.

In reality:

  • each country decides on military policy for different reasons
  • many EU member states do not have conscription.

Goal

Build the narrative:

➡️ “Europe is becoming militarized.”


6️⃣ Authority Framing

Excerpt

“Ruszin-Szendi promised it…”

Technique

A statement by a single person is framed as if it were a confirmed political plan.

Goal

Make the message appear more credible.


7️⃣ Final Political Mobilization

Excerpt

“only Fidesz is the safe choice”

Technique

The text ends with a classic campaign structure:

danger → fear → solution

The “solution,” of course, is the political party being promoted.


The Actual Structure of the Text

1️⃣ building fear
2️⃣ presenting an external enemy
3️⃣ demonizing the opponent
4️⃣ projecting a future threat
5️⃣ offering a political solution

This is a classic campaign communication template.


💡 Why it may feel nauseating

Probably because:

  • it relies on strong emotional manipulation
  • the narrative is highly simplified
  • there is no real fact-based debate

This type of text is typically not informational content, but mobilizing propaganda.