alexa

Enough with the theatrics.

Péter Magyar is now pretending that he has nothing to do with what is happening, while Volodymyr Zelenskyy is openly pressuring Hungary over the oil pipeline. Their objective is clear: to put pressure on the country so that a pro-Ukrainian government comes to power in Hungary.

But let’s look at the facts.

Which party’s representatives appeared in the European Parliament wearing T-shirts with the Ukrainian flag and repeatedly voted for banning Russian energy, providing financial support to Ukraine, and accelerating Ukraine’s EU accession? Tisza.

Which party campaigned in favor of Ukraine joining the European Union? Tisza.

Which party’s defense minister candidate shouted “Slava Ukraini”? Tisza.

And which party leader paid tribute at Ukrainian military graves while saying nothing about the forcibly conscripted ethnic Hungarians from Transcarpathia? Again, Tisza.

Meanwhile, Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian leadership themselves say that the oil blockade is meant to help “pro-Ukrainian” forces come to power in Hungary.

👉 The difference is simple:

  • They would phase out cheap energy.
  • We will protect it.
  • They answer to Brussels and Kyiv.
  • We answer to Hungary.

The stakes are Hungary’s energy security and the livelihood of Hungarian families.

🟠 Fidesz is the safe choice.


Péter Magyar is pretending that he has nothing to do with the Ukrainian pressure we have seen in recent days, while it is clear that they are cooperating with the Ukrainians in order to bring a pro-Ukrainian government to power in Hungary. That is exactly what the Tisza party represents.

So let’s look at the facts about what Péter Magyar and his allies have done so far.

Who was it whose party members sat in the European Parliament wearing Ukrainian-flag T-shirts and openly supported Ukraine?
Whose party voted for abandoning Russian oil and other Russian energy sources in the European Parliament?
Whose party campaigned for Ukraine’s accession to the European Union?
Whose ally repeatedly shouted “Slava Ukraini”?

And who was the party leader who paid tribute at the graves of Ukrainian soldiers while remaining silent when ethnic Hungarians were forcibly conscripted in Transcarpathia?

We know exactly that Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian leadership themselves are interested in seeing the next Hungarian prime minister called Péter Magyar.

Why? Because they want Péter Magyar and his allies to lobby for Ukraine’s EU accession by 2027, and they also want Hungary to abandon cheap Russian energy.

We all know what that would mean: the end of utility price reductions.

We continue to stand with Hungarian families, while Péter Magyar and his allies stand with Ukraine.

That is what will be at stake in April.

And that is why Fidesz is the safe choice.

The following text is a classic campaign-style political propaganda message that combines several well-known communication and manipulation techniques. The goal is not primarily factual information, but rather to trigger emotional reactions, strengthen a political camp, and mobilize voters.


🎭 Propaganda and manipulation techniques in the text

1️⃣ Construction of an enemy image (demonization)

Excerpt

“Zelensky is openly blackmailing Hungary.”
“They want to bring a pro-Ukrainian government to power.”

Technique

👉 constructing an external enemy (Ukraine)
👉 assigning an internal enemy (Péter Magyar / Tisza)

Goal

To create the impression that Hungary is under external pressure or attack, and that the opposition is an instrument of that pressure.

Effect

  • strong emotional reaction
  • defensive political reflex

2️⃣ Guilt by association

Excerpt

“wearing Ukrainian-flag T-shirts in the European Parliament”
“Slava Ukraini”

Technique

👉 linking a political actor to another country through symbolic gestures

Goal

To portray the opponent as serving foreign interests.

Effect

Readers may develop the perception that:

➡️ “they do not represent Hungarian interests.”


3️⃣ Selective examples (cherry-picking)

Excerpt

references to specific European Parliament votes and symbolic gestures

Technique

👉 presenting only examples that support the desired narrative
👉 omitting context and other decisions or votes

Goal

To construct a simple and one-sided political storyline.

Effect

Complex political decisions appear simplified and one-dimensional.


4️⃣ Dramatization of threat

Excerpt

“the country’s energy security and the livelihood of Hungarian families are at stake”

Technique

👉 emphasizing existential danger

Goal

To create the feeling that:

➡️ “if the opposition wins, serious consequences will follow.”

Effect

  • fear
  • political mobilization

5️⃣ False dilemma (binary framing)

Excerpt

“They would eliminate cheap energy, we will protect it.”
“They answer to Brussels and Kyiv, we answer to Hungary.”

Technique

👉 reducing a complex political choice to two simple options.

Goal

To simplify the decision for voters:

  • either the government
  • or forces acting against national interests

Effect

Political nuance and complexity disappear.


6️⃣ Repetition (classic propaganda technique)

The second half of the text almost completely repeats the same claims.

Technique

👉 continuous repetition of key messages

Goal

To embed the narrative in the audience’s mind.

Effect

Repeated claims may appear more credible, even without proof.


📊 The simplified narrative behind the propaganda

The communication builds a very simple political framework:

Narrative

➡️ Ukraine = blackmail and threat
➡️ Péter Magyar / Tisza = representatives of Ukrainian interests
➡️ Fidesz = defender of Hungarian families and cheap energy


⚖️ Summary

The text is a typical election campaign message that combines several techniques:

  • construction of an external enemy
  • linking the political opponent to foreign interests
  • dramatization of threat
  • simplified binary political choice
  • repetition and emotional mobilization

The aim is not to present the complex political situation, but to create an emotionally powerful and easily understandable political narrative.

alexandra

As a mother, I know that there is no greater worry than when we fear for our children.
When they leave for school in the morning or go out for entertainment in the evening, we only want one thing: that they come home safely.

But how could they be safe if Budapest’s nightlife venues operate as drug hubs?

Drugs are not part of culture, no matter what Dávid Vitézy, Gergely Karácsony, or the Tisza faction claim.

❌ The police shut down a venue called Turbina for 30 days after a Tunisian man was found selling drugs there. An arrest warrant has already been issued against him.

Drugs are the enemy of our children’s and young people’s future. While the government is taking tough action against dealers through the Delta program, Budapest is still following the liberal, pro-drug strategy of the left.

👉 Together with the Budapest Fidesz faction, we have repeatedly proposed that the City Assembly adopt a real anti-drug strategy, but due to the lack of support from Gergely Karácsony and the Tisza Party, it could not be passed. In practice, this means they said yes to the current situation and to drug use among young people.

We will not give up: we continue to stand for zero tolerance. We will protect Hungarian youth from the harmful effects of drugs!

🟠 That is why Fidesz is the safe choice!


For the next 30 days, techno definitely won’t be booming here, because the police have shut down this nightclub. A Tunisian man was selling drugs at this venue, and an arrest warrant has already been issued for him.

I believe that nightlife venues are not meant to become drug dens. No matter what Gergely Karácsony or Dávid Vitézy claim, drugs are not part of culture and have no place there.

We continue to stand for zero tolerance, because drugs take away young people’s future and their opportunities.

Unfortunately, drugs remain a serious problem in Budapest today. The government has taken strong action against drug dealers through the Delta program. However, in Budapest there is still a strategy in place that can be described as liberal and pro-drug.

We have tried several times to bring a proposal before the City Assembly to create a real anti-drug strategy, but without the support of Gergely Karácsony and the Tisza Party, it could not be adopted.

In effect, they stood by the current situation and implied that it is acceptable in a major city if young people use drugs.

We disagree with that. We believe that every Hungarian young person must be protected from the very harmful effects of drugs.

The following text is a classic campaign-style political communication that combines several well-known propaganda and persuasion techniques.
Its goal is not merely to provide information, but to trigger emotional reactions, strengthen political alignment, and mobilize voters.


🎭 Propaganda and Communication Techniques in Alexandra’s Message

The simplified narrative of the communication

➡️ Drugs / Budapest nightlife venues = danger to young people
➡️ Karácsony / Vitézy / Tisza = “pro-drug” politics
➡️ Government / Fidesz = order, protection, zero tolerance

The entire message constructs a very simple political framework:

danger → responsible opponent → government offering the solution


1️⃣ Emotional identification – the “concerned mother” narrative

Excerpt

“As a mother, I know there is no greater worry than fearing for our children.”

Technique

👉 using a personal role
👉 activating parental fears

Goal

To make readers see the speaker not as a political actor, but as a worried parent.

Effect

Political statements appear more credible because they start from a personal emotion.


2️⃣ Fear appeal

Excerpt

“How could they be safe if Budapest’s nightlife venues operate as drug dens?”

Technique

👉 dramatizing danger
👉 generalization

Goal

To make the issue appear larger and more widespread than a single incident.

Effect

Readers may develop the impression that:

➡️ “Budapest is full of drugs”
➡️ “young people are in danger”


3️⃣ Generalizing from a single case

Excerpt

“The police closed the Turbina nightclub for 30 days…”

Technique

👉 anecdotal evidence (a single example)

Goal

To build a general problem from a specific incident.

Effect

Readers may easily conclude that:

➡️ this is not an isolated case
➡️ this characterizes the whole city


4️⃣ Political scapegoating

Excerpt

“Dávid Vitézy, Gergely Karácsony and the Tisza faction”

Technique

👉 clearly assigning blame

Goal

To link the drug problem directly to political opponents.

Effect

A complex social issue becomes a simple narrative:

➡️ “if they are in power → drugs”
➡️ “if we are in power → order”


5️⃣ Labeling

Excerpt

“liberal, pro-drug strategy”

Technique

👉 using political labels

Goal

To place opponents into a negative ideological category.

Effect

Readers respond to the label itself, rather than evaluating specific policies or decisions.


6️⃣ False dichotomy

The implicit message of the text:

➡️ either zero tolerance
➡️ or pro-drug policies

Technique

👉 presenting two extreme options

Reality

Drug policy usually includes several approaches:

  • prevention
  • harm reduction
  • treatment
  • law enforcement measures
  • combinations of these strategies

7️⃣ Repetition (propaganda repetition)

The message repeatedly emphasizes:

  • drugs
  • zero tolerance
  • protecting young people
  • the left being pro-drug

Goal

To reinforce the message in the reader’s mind.

Repetition is one of the most fundamental techniques of propaganda.


8️⃣ “Us vs. them” framing

Narrative structure

Us

  • the government
  • Fidesz
  • order
  • protection

Them

  • the left
  • liberals
  • pro-drug policies

Effect

A political disagreement is transformed into a moral conflict.


9️⃣ Campaign closing message

Excerpt

“That is why Fidesz is the safe choice!”

Technique

👉 political call-to-action

Goal

To conclude the entire narrative with a clear electoral message.


Summary

The text follows a typical campaign communication model:

1️⃣ personal story (mother and child)
2️⃣ construction of a threat (drugs)
3️⃣ identification of a scapegoat (the opposition)
4️⃣ presentation of a solution (the government)
5️⃣ electoral mobilization

This structure is one of the most commonly used patterns in modern political communication.

alexa

❗ I call on the city leadership — Gergely Karácsony and the Tisza faction of the Budapest Assembly — to immediately remove the Ukrainian flag from City Hall.

After everything that has happened, how can that flag still be flying on the building of the nation’s capital? Zelensky has issued what was described as a deadly threat against Viktor Orbán, Ukraine has been blackmailing Hungary for weeks by refusing to reopen the Druzhba oil pipeline, and they are also threatening us because we brought home two Hungarian prisoners of war from Russian captivity.

👉 It is time for the Tisza faction to support the removal of the Ukrainian flag as well — unless they want to continue cooperating with Zelensky, as they have done so far. Péter Magyar’s pretence will not fool anyone; Hungarians know exactly that he represents Ukrainian interests.

We will not allow Hungary to be blackmailed, and we will defend Hungarian interests. That is why Fidesz is the only safe choice.

Even today, the Ukrainian flag is still flying above City Hall. After Zelensky allegedly issued a deadly threat against the Hungarian prime minister yesterday, after Ukraine has been continuously blackmailing Hungary and deliberately refusing to reopen the Druzhba oil pipeline, and after they are now threatening us again because we brought two Hungarian prisoners of war home from Russian captivity — despite all of this, the flag of Ukraine can still be seen flying on the building of the capital of the nation.

I therefore firmly and immediately call on Mayor Gergely Karácsony to take this flag down. This flag has no place on the building of City Hall.

I also call on the factions of the Budapest Assembly — especially the Tisza faction — to support this initiative and stop cooperating with the Ukrainians.

We will not fall for this, and Hungarians will not fall for it on April 12 either. People know exactly who stands with them and defends their interests — and who stands on Ukraine’s side.

The text is a typical campaign-style political propaganda message that combines several communication techniques.
Its goal is to trigger an emotional reaction, strengthen political camps, and mobilize voters.

Simplified narrative of the message:

➡️ Ukraine / Zelenskyy = threat and blackmail
➡️ Karácsony / Tisza / Péter Magyar = serving Ukrainian interests
➡️ Fidesz = defender of Hungarian interests

Below are the main propaganda techniques used in the text.


🎭 Propaganda and manipulation techniques in the text

1️⃣ Creating an enemy image (demonization)

Excerpt

“Zelenskyy has issued a deadly threat against Viktor Orbán.”
“The Ukrainians are blackmailing us.”

Technique

👉 construction of an external enemy

Goal

To present Ukraine and its leadership as a source of danger.

Effect

The reader develops fear and hostility toward the designated enemy.


2️⃣ Scapegoating

Excerpt

“Gergely Karácsony and the Tisza faction…”
“Péter Magyar represents Ukrainian interests.”

Technique

👉 blaming political opponents for an external conflict

Goal

To portray domestic political opponents as serving foreign interests.

Effect

The opposition can be depicted not as legitimate political actors but as “traitors.”


3️⃣ Symbolic conflict (flag politics)

Excerpt

“Take down the Ukrainian flag from City Hall.”

Technique

👉 organizing political debate around a symbol

Goal

To reduce a complex political conflict to a simple visual issue.

Effect

Complex geopolitical questions appear in the form of an easily understandable symbol.


4️⃣ Suggestive claims without evidence

Excerpt

“The Ukrainians are blackmailing us.”
“They are collaborating with the Ukrainians.”

Technique

👉 repeating unproven claims

Goal

To make the accusation stick as a perceived fact in the reader’s mind.

Effect

Readers often do not examine the evidence but accept the narrative.


5️⃣ “Us vs. them” framing (polarization)

Excerpt

“We will not allow Hungary to be blackmailed.”

Technique

👉 sharp division between political camps

Goal

The message builds the following contrast:

us = Hungarian interests
them = Ukrainian interests

Effect

Readers can more easily identify with the “us” side.


6️⃣ Electoral mobilization

Excerpt

“That is why only Fidesz is the safe choice.”

Technique

👉 embedding a campaign message into a current conflict

Goal

To connect the geopolitical issue directly to the election.

Effect

Readers may develop the perception that:

➡️ the election = a security decision


📊 The overall narrative of the communication

The text constructs a very simple political storyline:

1️⃣ Ukraine threatens Hungary
2️⃣ The opposition cooperates with Ukraine
3️⃣ Fidesz is the only protection

This follows a classic three-step propaganda narrative:

➡️ danger
➡️ traitors
➡️ savior


Summary

The text is not primarily intended to provide information, but to mobilize voters emotionally.

The main techniques used are:

  • creation of an enemy image
  • scapegoating
  • symbolic conflict (the flag)
  • unproven claims
  • “us vs. them” polarization
  • electoral mobilization

alexa

We expelled the seven Ukrainian citizens who, accompanied by an intelligence general, were transporting 40 million dollars, 35 million euros, and 9 kilograms of gold from Austria to Ukraine through Hungary.

Just to illustrate how large this sum is: a stack of the banknotes would roughly reach the height of the Puskás Arena, the Colosseum, or the Leaning Tower of Pisa, and would even rise higher than Vajdahunyad Castle.

In light of all this, we have questions.

Were they merely transporting the money through Hungary, or was it intended to be used here for someone’s interests?
Where exactly would this enormous amount of cash end up?

We have already seen the “golden toilet,” and we have read reports about how money can flow in ways that are impossible to trace. That is why we are demanding immediate answers.

If you also do not want your wealth to end up in Ukraine, fill out the national petition, which is now available online, and let us send a message together:

We say NO to further financing of the Russian–Ukrainian war!
We say NO to making us pay for the functioning of the Ukrainian state for the next 10 years!
We say NO to increases in utility prices caused by the war!


Ukrainian gold is raining down in Hungary.
The Hungarian tax authority (NAV) stopped a Ukrainian cash-transport vehicle carrying a Ukrainian intelligence general and several Ukrainian citizens who were transporting a large amount of money from Austria to Ukraine.

There were 35 million euros, 40 million dollars, and 9 kilograms of gold in the car.

Do you know how much money that is?

A stack of dollar bills 44 meters high, a stack of euro bills 35 meters high, and a cube of gold about the size of a Rubik’s Cube, worth nearly 500 million forints.

Why would anyone need to transport such a large amount of cash?

If it is really true, as they claim, that this was a transaction between banks, then why wouldn’t the banks simply transfer the money electronically?

And third: why would a Ukrainian intelligence officer need to escort this wealth?

We have questions, and we expect answers. After all, we have all heard the reports about the “golden toilet” of the Ukrainian war mafia.

So far, however, instead of answers, we have received only threats from Ukraine.

Brief Analysis of the Text

The quoted text is a classic political propaganda post that combines several communication techniques. The goal is not to present precise factual information, but to provoke outrage and political mobilization.


1️⃣ Dramatization of Large Numbers

Example

“40 million dollars, 35 million euros, and 9 kilograms of gold”

Technique

  • repetition of shocking numbers
  • visual comparisons (Puskás Arena, the Colosseum)

Goal

To create the impression in the reader that the corruption involved is of an unbelievable scale.


2️⃣ Leading Questions

Example

“Are they just transporting it through Hungary, or is it being used here for someone’s benefit?”

Technique

  • accusation framed as a question

Goal

To lead the reader to reach the intended conclusion on their own, without evidence.


3️⃣ Building an Enemy Image

Narrative

➡️ Ukraine = corrupt / mafia-like
➡️ Hungary = in danger
➡️ petition = defense

Goal

Strengthening political loyalty and encouraging public mobilization.


4️⃣ Invoking Scandalous Stories

Example

“golden toilet”

Technique

  • referencing earlier corruption stories

Goal

To create automatic associations in the reader’s mind.


5️⃣ Call to Action

Example

“fill out the national petition”

Technique

  • political mobilization

Goal

To turn the emotional reaction into a concrete political action.


In summary

The narrative of the text is:

  • Ukraine = corrupt and threatening
  • the money transport = proof of this
  • Hungarian government / petition = defense

This structure is typical campaign communication, where the emphasis is on emotional impact rather than detailed factual information.

alexa

More than 1.1 million people have already filled out the National Petition, and now it can also be completed online.

Ukraine has escalated the situation, and its methods are unacceptable: President Zelensky has sent a death threat to the Hungarian Prime Minister, today Hungarian authorities intercepted a Ukrainian intelligence-linked gold convoy carrying 9 kilograms of gold and a large amount of cash, and the Druzhba oil pipeline has not been reopened for more than a month for political reasons by an ally of Péter Magyar.

Only Viktor Orbán can say no to the European Union membership of the Ukrainian mafia state, and say no to the war.

Today there will be a protest against financing the war and against Ukrainian blackmail at 4 p.m. in front of the Ukrainian Embassy.

More than 1.1 million people have already filled out the National Petition, and it can now also be completed online.
Let as many people as possible protest against financing the war and against Ukrainian blackmail.

Moreover, we can do this in person today at 4 p.m. in front of the Ukrainian Embassy, where Péter Szijjártó will also give a speech.
Let’s be there in as many numbers as possible!

The text you provided is a classic mobilization campaign propaganda message that combines several well-known communication techniques at the same time. The goal is not to present information accurately, but to trigger an emotional reaction and mobilize people in the streets.

The simplified narrative of the message is:

➡️ Ukraine = threat / blackmail
➡️ Viktor Orbán = the only defender
➡️ Petition / protest = necessary response

Below are the main propaganda techniques used in the text.


🎭 Propaganda and Manipulation Techniques in the Text

1️⃣ “Big number” effect (bandwagon effect)

Excerpt

“More than 1.1 million people have already filled out the National Petition.”

Technique

👉 bandwagon psychology / social proof

Goal

To suggest that
“everyone already supports this.”

Effect

Readers are more likely to join a cause when they feel that large numbers of people are already supporting it.


2️⃣ Construction of an enemy image

Excerpt

“Ukrainian mafia state”
“Ukrainian blackmail”

Technique

👉 demonization / enemy construction

Goal

To present an external actor in a uniformly negative role.

Effect

The reader feels anger and a sense of threat.


3️⃣ Emphasizing dramatic threats

Excerpt

“sent a deadly threat”

Technique

👉 dramatization

Goal

To extremely amplify the severity of an event.

Effect

Readers may feel that the country is under immediate danger.


4️⃣ Suspicious stories without evidence

Excerpt

“Ukrainian intelligence gold convoy”

Technique

👉 insinuation / conspiracy narrative

Goal

To introduce a mysterious corruption-related story.

Effect

The story is emotionally powerful, even if the details are not verifiable.


5️⃣ “Single solution” narrative

Excerpt

“Only Viktor Orbán can say no…”

Technique

👉 false dilemma

Goal

To reduce political choice to a single option.

Effect

Readers may feel:

➡️ if not him → then danger


6️⃣ Call for immediate action

Excerpt

“Protest today… at 4 PM”

Technique

👉 mobilization

Goal

To convert emotional reaction into immediate political action.

Effect

Readers react quickly instead of reflecting longer.


📊 The Real Function of the Communication

The text does not primarily provide information. Instead, it:

1️⃣ triggers an emotional reaction
2️⃣ defines political sides
3️⃣ mobilizes people (petition + protest)

This follows a classic campaign communication structure:

crisis → enemy → leader → action.

alexa

Strong women, strong businesses in Óbuda!

Ildikó puts incredible work into her own clothing store, which is doing well thanks to her efforts.

Of course, government support also helps: with the Széchenyi Card she is able to develop and expand her business.

At the same time, the increasingly turbulent state of the world worries her as well. She fears that if we are dragged into a war, her son might be taken as a soldier and would have to give up his swimming career; and if energy prices spiral out of control, her business could be ruined.

Ildikó and small entrepreneurs and mothers like her can count on us. As long as Viktor Orbán is governing, we will stay out of the war and continue to stand by affordable energy.

Thank you for the conversation!


“If I can, I’m going to invest now — the shop will be completely renovated.”

“Really? So you’re actually starting now?”

“Yes, this month.”

“That’s great timing. What is the general mood like now? If we look a bit beyond this very narrow environment — the shop — what do you feel and see?”

“Well, fear… and the worry that they might take the child to be a soldier. That’s the biggest fear.”

“Yes, he’s twelve now.”

“Yes, he’s exactly at that age.”

“And that he might have to give up swimming because of the war.”

“Of course. A sports career, as I understand it.”

🎭 Propaganda and Influence Techniques in Alexandra’s Message

The text is a classic campaign-style political communication that tries to convey a political message through a personal story.
The goal of the communication is to create emotional identification, and then turn that emotion into a political conclusion.

The simplified narrative:

➡️ Government / Orbán = protection, stability, support
➡️ War / energy prices / an uncertain world = threat

Below are the main propaganda and rhetorical techniques used in the message.


1️⃣ Use of a personal story (storytelling)

Excerpt

“Ildikó puts incredible work into her own clothing shop…”

Technique

👉 presenting the story of an ordinary person

Goal

To present the message not at a political level, but through a personal life story.

Effect

Readers can more easily identify with a specific person than with an abstract political argument.


2️⃣ Creating a point of identification (ordinary people framing)

Excerpt

“Ildikó and small entrepreneurs and mothers like her…”

Technique

👉 representation of the “average citizen”

Goal

To present the political message as if it represents the interests of ordinary people.

Effect

Readers may feel that politics is about their own everyday problems.


3️⃣ Government success narrative

Excerpt

“She can develop her business with the Széchenyi Card.”

Technique

👉 positive political framing

Goal

To present economic support programs as direct political achievements.

Effect

Government policies become linked to personal success stories.


4️⃣ Fear-based framing

Excerpt

“If we are dragged into a war, her son could be taken as a soldier.”

Technique

👉 activation of security-related fears

Goal

To present geopolitical conflict as a personal family threat.

Effect

Readers interpret the issue not as geopolitics, but as a danger to their children’s future.


5️⃣ Invoking economic fears

Excerpt

“With energy prices spiraling out of control, her shop could go bankrupt.”

Technique

👉 emphasizing economic uncertainty

Goal

To frame everyday economic concerns within a political narrative.

Effect

Politics becomes directly connected to people’s daily livelihood.


6️⃣ Offering a simple political solution

Excerpt

“As long as Viktor Orbán governs, we will stay out of the war…”

Technique

👉 simplified cause-and-effect narrative

Goal

To reduce a complex geopolitical situation to the decision of a single political leader.

Effect

Political choice is framed as a decision between safety and danger.


7️⃣ Emotional closure

Excerpt

“Ildikó and small entrepreneurs like her can count on us.”

Technique

👉 protective political framing

Goal

To present the political actor as a supportive and caring protector.

Effect

The message ends on a positive and reassuring emotional tone.


Summary

The communication structure of the message:

  1. Story of an ordinary person
  2. Economic success linked to government support
  3. Fear (war, energy prices)
  4. Presentation of a political solution

This follows a typical campaign communication formula:

➡️ personal story
➡️ emotional identification
➡️ presentation of a threat
➡️ offering a political solution

alexa lost

❗In severe psychiatric crises, patients are sometimes put in a straitjacket so that everyone can clearly see that the person is a danger to themselves and to others.
But somehow Noár slipped out of it, and since then he has been hyperventilating Magyar Péter’s lies…

Ukrainians threaten Hungarians every day. Zelensky has said that he is ready to blackmail us with the Druzhba pipeline, and the Nazi military officers he has decorated have also repeatedly threatened our country, saying they could be here “with a brigade in two minutes.”

Yes, that oil is missing from your car as well, and yes, they also want to be in your living room “within two minutes.”

As for energy issues: you are nowhere near good enough of an actor to play the role of an energy lawyer with this level of zero knowledge. 😉

Not enough oil can come from Croatia, and even that would arrive at a much higher price. Brent crude itself is already about 30% more expensive than the oil that could come from there, and the combined cost of tanker shipping and transport through the Adria pipeline is also higher.

And I saved the saddest part for the end. Noár, how much are you being paid for this? How can someone sink this low in hatred toward their own country and nation?

Do you seriously believe the Croatian prime minister from the European People’s Party (who, by the way, is currently reintroducing conscription)?

Their only problem is that their own state oil company is controlled by MOL, which is a huge Hungarian achievement and something from which every Hungarian benefits.

Right now the Croats simply see an opportunity in the Ukrainian blackmail to strengthen their own positions at the expense of Hungarians. Yes, at your expense too.

And by the way, they are lying — something Zsolt Hernádi, the CEO of MOL, demonstrated perfectly (although of course you probably didn’t see that, since you’re saying such nonsense without spending even a minute looking into the facts).

Tell us already: from what deep pit or euro-filled sack does this hatred come? Is the government lying, the prime minister lying, MOL lying, the energy lawyers lying — everyone who says that Hungary and MOL are right?

What you are doing with Tisza is shameless, lying hate propaganda. If it were up to you, Hungary would no longer have Europe’s cheapest utility costs, and gasoline would quickly rise to 1,000 forints.

Fortunately, Hungarians are far smarter than you, and they expect far more from a government than this traveling circus act you’re putting on with your friend Péter Magyar.

In April, Fidesz and Viktor Orbán are the safe choice!

The following text is a typical campaign-style political propaganda message that combines several classic manipulation and rhetorical techniques. The goal is not to provide information, but to discredit the opponent, create fear, and mobilize political support.

The simplified narrative behind the message:

➡️ Ukraine / the opposition = danger and betrayal
➡️ Government / Fidesz = protection and common sense

Below are the main techniques presented in bullet points.


🎭 Propaganda and Manipulation Techniques in the Text

1️⃣ Personal attack (ad hominem)

Excerpt

“they put a straitjacket on him…”
“he is hyperventilating Magyar Péter’s lies”
“such stupidity”

Technique

👉 personal discrediting

Goal

To question the mental state of the opponent so the reader does not focus on the arguments.

Effect

The reader focuses not on the debate but on discrediting the opponent.


2️⃣ Creating an enemy image

Excerpt

“the Ukrainians threaten Hungarians every day”
“Nazi military officers”

Technique

👉 demonization of an external enemy

Goal

To construct a simple and threatening enemy image.

Effect

The reader feels personally threatened, making them more likely to accept the political narrative.


3️⃣ Fear appeal

Excerpt

“they want to be in your living room in two minutes”

Technique

👉 visualization of existential threat

Goal

To turn a geopolitical conflict into a personal danger.

Effect

The reader reacts emotionally rather than rationally.


4️⃣ False simplification

Excerpt

“Not enough oil can come from Croatia.”

Technique

👉 oversimplification of a complex energy policy issue

Goal

To present a complicated infrastructure and market issue as a simple one-sentence truth.

Effect

The reader does not see the real factors involved (market conditions, refinery technology, transport routes, etc.).


5️⃣ Appeal to authority

Excerpt

“Hernádi Zsolt demonstrated this perfectly.”

Technique

👉 authority-based argument

Goal

To close the debate by invoking authority.

Effect

The reader feels the issue is already settled.


6️⃣ Betrayal narrative

Excerpt

“hatred toward your own country and nation”

Technique

👉 manipulation of patriotism

Goal

To portray the opponent not as a political rival but as anti-national.

Effect

Political debate turns into a moral judgment.


7️⃣ Suggestion of conspiracy

Excerpt

“does this hatred come from a sack of euros?”

Technique

👉 insinuation of foreign funding

Goal

To portray the opponent as serving foreign interests.

Effect

The reader becomes more likely to reject the opponent entirely.


8️⃣ Economic scare tactics

Excerpt

“fuel would cost 1000 forints”

Technique

👉 economic fear-mongering

Goal

To present dramatic economic consequences of the opposition’s policies.

Effect

The reader reacts through their own financial concerns.


9️⃣ “Us vs. them” tribal politics

Excerpt

“Hungarians are fortunately much smarter than you”

Technique

👉 sharp polarization of political camps

Goal

To lock the reader into a political identity group.

Effect

The debate becomes a tribal conflict rather than a rational discussion.


🔟 Campaign closing mobilization

Excerpt

“In April, Fidesz and Viktor Orbán are the safe choice!”

Technique

👉 classic campaign CTA (call to action)

Goal

To trigger a voting decision at the end of the message.

Effect

The entire message ultimately functions as political advertising.


Summary

The text is not a policy debate, but an emotionally driven campaign message that:

  • uses personal attacks
  • constructs an external enemy
  • generates fear
  • applies economic scare tactics
  • manipulates patriotism
  • and ultimately ends with electoral mobilization

This communication model follows the “fear + betrayal + protection” narrative, a structure commonly used in modern political propaganda.

alexa

Let’s protest together against Ukrainian blackmail!

Keeping the Druzhba oil pipeline closed at the same time as the outbreak of the Iranian war is a double crime. We can already see what is happening in Germany, where fuel prices immediately skyrocketed.

👉 This is exactly what the Ukrainians want to happen here as well. Zelenskyy has been maintaining this oil blockade for more than a month, putting the energy security of every Hungarian family at risk.

If you’ve had enough of this too, then come this Friday at 4 p.m. in front of the Ukrainian Embassy, and let’s stand up together for our country!

Hungary cannot be blackmailed!

Anyone who has had enough of the Ukrainians constantly blackmailing us — now, for example, by not supplying crude oil — should be there this Friday at 4 p.m. in front of the Ukrainian Embassy. With our presence we can say that we have had enough of Ukraine trying to pressure Hungary in every possible way.

Enough is enough — let’s stand up and let as many people as possible make their voices heard.

🎭 Propaganda and Influence Techniques in Alexandra’s Message

The text is a classic political mobilization message. It combines several propaganda and rhetorical techniques in order to provoke outrage, fear, and a sense of urgency to act among readers.
The ultimate goal is to mobilize political support and encourage people to appear at a public protest, based on a simple narrative:

➡️ Ukraine = a blackmailing enemy
➡️ Hungary = a defensive victim

Below are the most important techniques used in the message.


1️⃣ Creating an Enemy Image

Excerpt

“Ukrainian blackmail”
“Ukraine is blackmailing Hungary”

Technique

👉 Enemy image construction / demonization

Goal

To place an external actor clearly in a negative role.

Effect

Readers may form a simplified conclusion:

➡️ “Ukraine is the cause of the problem.”

This reduces the possibility of a nuanced understanding of complex situations.


2️⃣ Fear Appeal Related to Energy Security

Excerpt

“it threatens the energy security of every Hungarian family”

Technique

👉 Fear appeal

Goal

To present energy supply as an existential threat.

Effect

Readers may perceive the political issue as:

➡️ “If this continues → the country is in danger.”


3️⃣ Oversimplified Cause-and-Effect Explanation

Excerpt

“We can see what is happening in Germany, where fuel prices immediately skyrocketed.”

Technique

👉 Oversimplification / false causal relationship

Goal

To reduce complex energy and oil market processes to a single cause.

Effect

Readers may believe:

➡️ “The Ukrainian blockade → automatically causes high fuel prices.”

In reality, fuel prices are influenced by many factors (oil markets, refinery capacity, taxes, logistics, etc.).


4️⃣ Narrative of National Unity

Excerpt

“let us stand together for our country”

Technique

👉 Patriotic mobilization

Goal

To frame a political position as a patriotic duty.

Effect

Readers may interpret the situation as:

➡️ “If you agree → you are patriotic”
➡️ “If you disagree → you stand with the other side.”


5️⃣ Moral Outrage Framing

Excerpt

“a double crime”

Technique

👉 Moral framing

Goal

To present a political decision as a moral wrongdoing rather than a policy dispute.

Effect

Readers may perceive the issue as:

➡️ justice vs. injustice.


6️⃣ Direct Mobilization

Excerpt

“come on Friday at 4 PM to the Ukrainian embassy”

Technique

👉 Political mobilization / call to action

Goal

To transform online anger into real-world political demonstration.

Effect

The emotional tension created in the text is directed toward concrete action.


7️⃣ Repetition (One of the Core Principles of Propaganda)

Excerpt

The word “blackmail” appears repeatedly.

Technique

👉 Repetition

Goal

To anchor the key message in the reader’s mind.

Effect

Due to repetition, the core message becomes automatic:

➡️ “Ukraine is blackmailing Hungary.”


📊 The Overall Narrative Structure

The message follows a simple three-step propaganda structure:

1️⃣ Threat
“Ukraine is blackmailing Hungary.”

2️⃣ Dramatic escalation of danger
“Energy security is at risk, fuel prices will skyrocket.”

3️⃣ Call to action
“Let’s go protest.”


Summary

The message is a classic political mobilization propaganda that:

  • constructs an enemy image
  • generates fear
  • simplifies complex causes
  • frames the issue in patriotic terms
  • and ultimately calls people to a demonstration.

alexa

You won’t believe this! The German foreign minister has called for the blockade to be lifted immediately!
But not the Ukrainian one…

Johann Wadephul recently urged Hungary to immediately allow the transfer of the 90-billion-dollar war loan, saying that “Europeans must do even more to help Ukraine.”

But war comes with a serious price — one that every German is paying heavily. Strangely, however, this does not seem to bother the minister.

Fuel prices have jumped above 830 forints overnight, there is no longer cheap Russian oil or gas, and families and businesses are struggling to pay the skyrocketing costs.

Meanwhile, Volkswagen has just announced that it can no longer afford to maintain its previous system. Within a few years, the company plans to lay off 35,000 workers and move part of its production to Mexico instead.

In Hungary, something like this must not happen.
We will not pay for this meaningless war, and we will protect Hungarian jobs — which is why Fidesz remains the safe choice.

The German foreign minister’s statement was that the blockade must be ended immediately.
But of course he was not referring to the blockade that Ukraine is applying against Hungary and Slovakia. Instead, he was targeting us — Hungarians — demanding that we immediately allow every EU decision that is important for Ukraine to pass.

In my opinion, perhaps the German foreign minister should rather focus on the fact that Volkswagen is relocating part of its production to Mexico, and that 36,000 people may lose their jobs in the difficult economic situation they themselves have created.

The message is a typical political campaign narrative that combines several propaganda and influence techniques. Its goal is to trigger an emotional reaction while guiding the reader toward a simple political conclusion:

➡️ EU / Germany = pro-war and causing economic damage
➡️ Hungary / Fidesz = protecting the country and jobs

Below are the main techniques used, listed in points.


🎭 Propaganda and influence techniques in Alexandra’s message

1️⃣ Creating outrage (emotional trigger)

Excerpt

“You won’t believe this!”

Technique
👉 emotional opening / outrage activation

Purpose
To provoke an immediate emotional reaction in the reader before any actual information is processed.

Effect

The reader approaches the text from the beginning with the feeling that
➡️ “something outrageous has happened.”


2️⃣ Building an enemy image (external enemy framing)

Excerpt

“The German foreign minister called on Hungary…”

Technique
👉 external enemy narrative

Purpose

To frame the situation as if
➡️ foreign actors are trying to force Hungary into something.

Effect

The reader may begin to think that
➡️ “Brussels and Germany are putting pressure on us.”


3️⃣ Narrative reframing (reframing)

Excerpt

“He demanded the end of the blockade — but not from the Ukrainians.”

Technique
👉 framing / reinterpretation of the narrative

Purpose

To present the original diplomatic statement as if it were directed against Hungary.

Effect

The reader may perceive that
➡️ Hungary is being unfairly targeted.


4️⃣ Economic fear appeal

Excerpt

  • “Fuel prices rose above 830 forints overnight”
  • “there is no cheap Russian oil and gas”
  • “families and companies are struggling to pay”

Technique
👉 economic fear-based communication

Purpose

To connect the war and EU policies with everyday cost-of-living problems.

Effect

The reader may feel that
➡️ the war directly worsens their standard of living.


5️⃣ Selective example (cherry-picking)

Excerpt

“Volkswagen plans to lay off 35,000 workers.”

Technique
👉 using a single selected example

Purpose

To use the problems of one company as evidence of the state of the entire European economy.

Effect

The reader may get the impression that
➡️ “Europe’s economy is collapsing.”


6️⃣ Oversimplified cause-and-effect explanation

The message suggests the following chain:

➡️ supporting the war → economic crisis → loss of jobs

Technique
👉 oversimplification

Purpose

To reduce a complex economic situation to a single political decision.


7️⃣ National protection narrative (protector framing)

Excerpt

“We will not pay for this meaningless war.”
“We will protect Hungarian jobs.”

Technique
👉 protector-leader narrative

Purpose

To portray the government as the actor that

➡️ protects the country from external pressure.


8️⃣ Electoral conclusion (political call-to-action)

Excerpt

“That is why Fidesz is the safe choice.”

Technique
👉 political mobilization

Purpose

To turn the entire story into a voting decision.

Narrative

➡️ foreign pressure + economic danger
➡️ only the current leadership can protect the country


Summary

The message follows a classic campaign communication structure:

1️⃣ trigger outrage
2️⃣ present an external enemy
3️⃣ amplify economic fears
4️⃣ offer a single political solution

➡️ “Only the current leadership can protect the country.”

alexa

Where has Péter Magyar been until now?!

The Ukrainians have blocked the Druzhba oil pipeline for more than a month, yet he kept his head down until now. Throughout February he did not say a single word about Zelensky’s oil blockade. He did not lift a finger when hearing the constant Ukrainian threats, and he did not even welcome the Hungarian prisoners of war who were freed and able to return home thanks to the national government’s anti-war policy.

Then, when he could no longer stay silent, he finally spoke up. This man is hypocritical and two-faced — everyone knows that behind the scenes he already struck a deal with Zelensky long ago. Who still believes anything he says?

In times of danger, only an experienced and responsible leader can guarantee Hungary’s peace and security. That is why only Viktor Orbán and Fidesz are the safe choice.

Péter Magyar stayed quietly in the background until now. What do you think about his current reaction? I consider it a hypocritical and two-faced performance. Where was Péter Magyar in the past weeks when the Ukrainians shut down the Druzhba oil pipeline? Where was he? Where is Péter Magyar today? Where was Péter Magyar yesterday when, thanks to a fantastic diplomatic achievement, we brought home two Hungarian prisoners of war from captivity?

We were able to do this, by the way, because we consistently pursued a peace policy and did not send weapons into this war — otherwise we would have had no chance that these two men could now breathe Hungarian air again. And in response, the Ukrainians started threatening us, trying to blackmail us, and pressuring us to hand over various kinds of information.

Where was Péter Magyar then to stand up against this?

So I consider this a very cheap, petty, and dishonest performance — like when two people who are actually winking at each other behind the scenes agree that on stage one will play the good cop and the other the bad cop.

Who actually buys this?

🎭 Propaganda and Influence Techniques in Alexandra’s Message

The text is a classic political campaign message that combines several rhetorical and propaganda techniques. Its goal is to trigger an emotional reaction in the reader while constructing a simple black-and-white political narrative:

➡️ Orbán = security and peace
➡️ Péter Magyar = betrayal and hypocrisy

Below are the most important techniques used in the message.


1️⃣ Building an Enemy Image (Political Demonization)

Excerpt

“This man is hypocritical and two-faced.”
“A very cheap, petty, dishonest performance.”

Technique
👉 character assassination / demonization

Goal
To completely undermine the credibility of the political opponent.

Effect

The reader stops evaluating the political claim and instead forms an emotional judgment:

➡️ “Péter Magyar is a liar.”

This reduces rational evaluation.


2️⃣ “Where Was He?” – Repetitive Attack

Excerpt

“Where was Péter Magyar?”
“Where was Péter Magyar yesterday?”
“Where was Péter Magyar in recent weeks?”

Technique
👉 rhetorical repetition

Goal

To implant a simple message in the voter’s mind:

➡️ “Péter Magyar does nothing.”

Effect

Because of repetition, the claim can appear more credible even without evidence.

This is a well-known propaganda method.


3️⃣ Guilt by Association

Excerpt

“He already made a deal with Zelensky long ago.”

Technique
👉 associating the opponent with an external enemy

Goal

To frame Péter Magyar as someone serving foreign interests.

Effect

The reader may conclude:

➡️ “He does not represent Hungarian interests.”

This technique is particularly powerful in national political communication.


4️⃣ “Us vs. Them” Narrative (Tribal Framing)

Excerpt

“We brought the prisoners of war home.”
“We pursue a peace policy.”

Technique
👉 group identity framing

Goal

To divide the political space into two camps.

Us

  • pro-peace
  • bringing Hungarians home
  • defending the country

Them

  • cooperating with foreign powers
  • silent
  • harming the country

Effect

The voter chooses sides emotionally rather than analytically.


5️⃣ Hero-Leader Narrative

Excerpt

“Only an experienced and responsible leader can guarantee Hungary’s peace and security.”

Technique
👉 strong-leader framing

Goal

To portray Viktor Orbán as:

  • stable
  • experienced
  • the protector of the country

Effect

The reader may internalize the message:

➡️ “In times of crisis, a strong leader is needed.”


6️⃣ Oversimplified Cause-and-Effect

Excerpt

“The return of the prisoners of war is thanks to the government’s peace policy.”

Technique
👉 oversimplification

Goal

To present a complex diplomatic process as the result of a single political decision.

Effect

The event becomes framed as a political achievement.


7️⃣ Emotionally Charged Language

The text contains several strong emotional expressions:

  • “kept quiet”
  • “cheap”
  • “petty”
  • “liar”
  • “winking behind the scenes”

Technique
👉 emotional language

Goal

To provoke anger and outrage.

Effect

Readers respond emotionally rather than rationally.


8️⃣ Political Theatre Narrative

Excerpt

“Like when two people wink at each other behind the scenes.”

Technique
👉 conspiracy framing

Goal

To pre-emptively discredit the opponent’s criticism.

Effect

The reader may feel:

➡️ “Everything is just a staged performance.”


Summary

The message is a typical piece of campaign rhetoric combining the following elements:

  • building an enemy image
  • repetitive attacks
  • linking the opponent to foreign actors
  • “us vs. them” narrative
  • strong-leader framing
  • oversimplified causality
  • emotionally charged language
  • conspiracy framing

Ultimately, the communication reduces politics to a very simple formula:

➡️ Orbán = peace and security
➡️ Péter Magyar = foreign-aligned and untrustworthy

This type of rhetoric is a classic feature of electoral campaign communication.