
Let’s be patient with the Tisza supporters! These are not easy days for them. A lot of positive measures are coming into force in February.
It may sound strange coming from me, but I ask everyone to be patient with the Tisza supporters.
These are not easy days for them.
It’s February, and increased wages are coming.
Families with children will benefit, as the increase in the tax allowance for children comes into effect.
Mothers under the age of 40 with two children will no longer pay personal income tax.
Then, a few days later, the 13th-month pension arrives, along with the first installment of the 14th-month pension.
So these are difficult days for those who say that everything is bad in Hungary.
It’s not bad at all.
In Europe, the war is blocking the economy.
We know this, we see it.
But despite this, we are not giving up our most important goals at home.
1️⃣ “Let’s be patient with the TISZA supporters” – pseudo-empathy + moral superiority
This is not genuine empathy, but a favor dispensed from a position of superiority.
- “we” → calm, successful, on the right side
- “they” → nervous, frustrated, losing
👉 Message: anyone who criticizes is really just jealous and in a bad mood.
2️⃣ “They’re not having easy days” – psychologizing the opponent
He does not engage with their arguments, but labels their emotional state.
- no policy debate
- no rebuttal
- only emotional stigmatization
👉 This is infantilization: not political opponents, but “misbehaving children.”
3️⃣ Listing February measures – a reward list used as a weapon
The list is not analysis, but conditioning:
- higher wages
- tax allowances
- personal income tax exemption
- monthly pension payments
👉 Psychological function:
“If you criticize now, you are ungrateful.”
⚠️ Important omissions:
- no mention of inflation
- no mention of real value
- no mention of sustainability
4️⃣ “These are hard days for those who say everything is bad” – false dichotomy
This is a thought-terminating trap:
- either you say “everything is good”
- or you’re labeled as someone who “sees everything as bad”
👉 The critical middle ground disappears, where:
- there can be achievements
- AND there can be serious problems
5️⃣ “Not bad at all” – declarative tone without evidence
This is an authoritarian linguistic gesture.
No argument → a declaration.
No proof → closure.
👉 Message:
“The reality is not up for debate. We define it.”
6️⃣ “In Europe, the war is blocking the economy” – shifting responsibility outward
A classic double technique:
- causes of problems → external
- causes of success → internal
👉 This allows one to be simultaneously:
- a victim
- AND heroic leadership
7️⃣ “We will not give up our goals” – mission rhetoric as closure
This sentence contains no measurable objective.
- no numbers
- no deadlines
- no accountability
👉 Only an identity message:
“We endure. Anyone who questions us is weakening the cause.”
🧠 Overall picture – what is this as a whole?
This is not information, but:
- emotional conditioning
- moral hierarchy
- a reward–shame dual mechanism
- thought-terminating language
📌 In short:
Those who are dissatisfied are bad people.
Those who ask questions are ungrateful.
Those who would debate are already “having hard days.”