balazska

🤡 Another day, another batch of nonsense from Ursula von der Leyen. She is turning energy into a political issue and in the process is destroying the European economy!

Von der Leyen and the entire Brussels establishment are pushing this crazy course at full throttle. Today she spoke about energy. And they keep repeating this expression: “we must diversify, we must diversify.” You could wake them up in the middle of the night and ask what should be done about oil and natural gas, and they would say the same thing: diversification.

But diversification actually means obtaining energy from as many sources as possible — more sources than we currently have — buying it, importing it, bringing it in from multiple suppliers.

Yet they use “diversification” to justify cutting off Russian energy. The most reliable and cheapest energy source available to Europe.

The same line is being pushed by the Tisza party as well — by their multinational-linked figures and their experts. They also want “diversification” in Hungary, which in practice means breaking away from Russian energy sources.

It is completely upside down logic. And it would be extremely harmful for all of Europe — and especially for what matters most to us: the Hungarian economy and the future of reduced household energy prices.

It would be severely damaging and have serious negative consequences if “diversification” meant cutting Hungary off from Russian energy.

1️⃣ Personal Discrediting (Ad Hominem Framing)

Excerpt

“Another day, another batch of nonsense from Ursula von der Leyen.”
“cretin nonsense”

Technique

The communication does not challenge the claim itself but attacks the person.

➡️ “talking nonsense”
➡️ “cretin”

This is a classic ad hominem attack.

Goal

  • to discredit the opponent
  • to simplify the policy debate

Effect

The reader’s attention shifts away from the policy issue (energy supply) and toward judging the person instead.


2️⃣ Semantic Reframing

Excerpt

“Diversification means obtaining energy from as many sources as possible.”

Then:

“Yet they use diversification to explain cutting off Russian energy sources.”

Technique

The speaker gives a narrow definition of diversification and then claims that EU policy contradicts it.

However, in energy policy the concept usually means:

➡️ reducing dependency
➡️ creating alternative supply routes
➡️ lowering geopolitical risk

It does not necessarily mean that every existing source must remain.

Goal

  • to portray EU policy as illogical
  • to create the impression in the audience that
    “this is completely absurd policy.”

Effect

A complex energy policy decision appears as a logical contradiction.


3️⃣ Economic Fear Framing

Excerpt

“It will destroy the European economy.”
“It would be terribly harmful.”

Technique

The use of dramatic economic consequences.

➡️ “destroy”
➡️ “terribly harmful”

Goal

  • to trigger economic fear
  • to elevate energy policy into an existential issue

Effect

The audience perceives the issue not as a technical energy policy debate but as a question of economic survival.


4️⃣ Oversimplified Causality

Excerpt

“If Hungary is cut off from Russian energy → the economy will suffer.”

Technique

Energy policy is a multi-factor system, but the communication reduces it to a single cause.

Real factors include for example:

  • global market prices
  • LNG markets
  • infrastructure
  • contracts
  • geopolitical risks

The narrative instead suggests:

➡️ one decision = economic decline

Goal

  • to create an easy-to-understand narrative
  • to enable rapid political mobilization

Effect

A complex economic process appears to be the direct consequence of one political decision.


5️⃣ Linking External Enemy and Domestic Opposition

Excerpt

“The same thing is pushed by TISZA’s multinational people and experts.”

Technique

The communication links a foreign actor (the EU) with a domestic political opponent (TISZA) in a single narrative.

This is a classic political technique:

➡️ “external pressure”
➡️ “internal collaborators”

Goal

  • to delegitimize the opposition
  • to frame the conflict in national terms

Effect

The reader may feel:

➡️ “Anyone who supports this is not representing Hungarian interests.”


6️⃣ National Economic Protection Narrative

Excerpt

“the Hungarian economy”
“the future of Hungary’s utility cost reduction policy”

Technique

The communication reframes the issue as a national welfare question.

➡️ household utility costs
➡️ national economy

Goal

  • to connect the topic directly to household finances

Effect

The energy policy debate becomes a personal financial issue for citizens.


Summary – Structure of the Narrative

The communication constructs a typical political narrative:

1️⃣ EU leaders are incompetent
2️⃣ Energy policy is illogical
3️⃣ Russian energy = cheap and reliable
4️⃣ Cutting it off = economic catastrophe
5️⃣ The opposition supports the same policy

This creates a strongly polarizing political framing.