
They are no longer even hiding it: they want to overthrow and remove Viktor Orbán’s government from abroad. The film We Are the World presents how the global network operates.
The premiere of We Are the World at the Uránia Cinema shows how foreign NGOs, global organizations, and so-called civil groups seek to interfere in Hungarian politics, how they aim to remove Viktor Orbán and the national government from the outside, and what we must do to expose these tricks and prevent representatives of foreign interests from coming to power in Hungary.
We Are the World will also be broadcast on Duna TV on February 24 at 9 PM.
🔴 1️⃣ “They’re not even hiding it anymore” – Revelation without evidence
📌 Technique: insinuation + implied certainty
The sentence presents a serious accusation as if it were already a proven fact.
It does not name any specific document, decision, or mechanism.
👉 Effect:
The reader feels that a secret has been exposed — even though no concrete evidence is provided.
🔴 2️⃣ “They want to overthrow it from abroad” – Construction of an external enemy
📌 Technique: external threat framing
“Global network”
“foreign NGOs”
“representatives of foreign interests”
Political competition is reframed not as an internal debate, but as an attack against national sovereignty.
👉 Effect:
The domestic opposition is portrayed not as an independent actor, but as a proxy serving foreign interests.
🔴 3️⃣ Film as proof – Emotional validation
📌 Technique: media product = appearance of documentation
A film itself is not evidence.
But the claim that “the film presents how the global network operates” suggests:
➡️ the system has already been uncovered and exposed
➡️ visual proof exists
👉 Effect:
It strengthens the feeling that “something big is happening behind the scenes.”
🔴 4️⃣ Moral division
📌 Technique: binary framing
Two sides are presented:
- the national government
- foreign interests
No nuance.
No legitimate alternative.
Only defense or betrayal.
👉 Effect:
The choice becomes a moral question, not a policy debate.
🔴 5️⃣ Mobilizing closure
“What must we do to prevent it…”
📌 Technique: call for collective action
After presenting the threat comes the narrative of shared responsibility.
👉 Threat → identification → action.
🎯 Summary
This communication:
- constructs an external enemy
- uses a conspiracy-style framing
- creates legitimacy by referring to a film
- draws a moral two-pole map
- ultimately mobilizes
Not evidence.
Not policy debate.
But identity-based campaign messaging.