alexa

We will not allow Hungarians’ money to be sent to Ukraine. Only this way can we preserve our achievements and maintain peace — that is why Fidesz is the safe choice!

Global big capital is preparing for revenge. Between 2010 and 2025, we took 15,000 billion forints from energy companies, banks, and multinationals — and gave it back to the Hungarian people. This is what funds utility price cuts, new factories, the Hungarian Village Program, the 13th and 14th month pensions, student loans, worker loans, and home-creation support.

But now all of this is in danger. Because a Tisza–Brussels big-capital coalition would take away everything from Hungarians that the national government has given them. One wrong decision in 2026, and Hungarians’ money will end up in Ukraine and with multinationals.

Remember this! Fidesz is the safe choice!

🔴 1️⃣ “We will not allow Hungarian money to be sent to Ukraine”

📌 Technique: sovereignty activation + external threat framing

👉 The debate is not about budgetary mechanisms or EU procedures, but is shifted into an emotional frame:
“we” (Hungarians) vs. “they” (external actors)

🎯 Effect:

Activates a sense of ownership (“our money”)

Suggests existential stakes

Elevates the political decision into a form of moral defense


🔴 2️⃣ “Global big capital is preparing for revenge”

📌 Technique: merged enemy image + moralized adversary

“Global big capital” is a vague, faceless category.
No specific actors, institutions, or decisions are named.

🎯 Effect:

Creates a coherent but unverifiable enemy image

Emotionally mobilizes through anger and defensive instincts

This is a classic external conspiracy narrative.


🔴 3️⃣ “We took 15,000 billion forints”

📌 Technique: large numbers as a tool of legitimization

The figure itself is powerful.
But there is no breakdown:

What types of taxes?

What temporary revenues?

How was it calculated?

🎯 Effect:
The government appears as an active redistributor → “we gave it back to the people.”


🔴 4️⃣ Listing of benefits and programs

📌 Technique: achievement accumulation + positive association

Utility price cuts, factories, rural development programs, 13th–14th month pensions, loan schemes…

🎯 Effect:

Political loyalty becomes associated with material security

The election is framed as a condition for maintaining prosperity

This is fear stacking: make the wrong choice → everything is at risk.


🔴 5️⃣ “Tisza–Brussels big capital coalition”

📌 Technique: coalition framing + guilt by association

Separate actors merged into a single bloc:

Opposition party

EU

“Big capital”

🎯 Effect:
Domestic political competition is reframed as a threat backed by external forces.


🔴 6️⃣ “One wrong decision in ’26…”

📌 Technique: binary electoral framing

No middle ground is presented.
Either:

Fidesz → peace, money, stability

Others → money to Ukraine and multinationals

🎯 Effect:
The election is presented as a matter of existential survival.


🧠 Overall Picture

The text operates along three main axes:

External threat (Ukraine, Brussels, big capital)

Internal protection (the national government as shield)

Material security vs. loss (fear framing)

This is not a policy debate, but identity-based mobilization.

alexandra szentkiralyi is lying again and again

A Ukrainian analyst has also confirmed what we have known all along: Brussels and Ukraine are working together to help Péter Magyar come to power.

Their goal is clear: they want Ukraine to become a member of the European Union as early as next year. However, this would pose unforeseeable economic and security risks for our country.

Only Viktor Orbán and the national government are capable of saying no to pressure from Brussels and Ukraine. We cannot allow foreign interests to decide the fate of Hungarians, our money, and our future.

In April, the stakes are enormous, and Fidesz is the only safe choice if we want to preserve our peace and security. 🇭🇺

The head of a Ukrainian research institute admitted that both Brussels and Ukraine are working to help Péter Magyar replace Viktor Orbán as prime minister in Hungary. They are doing this because they know that if Péter Magyar comes to power, Ukraine’s accession as the 27th member of the European Union could become a reality.

The situation is that almost every day there is news proving that there is indeed a plan in Brussels to sweep us aside in Hungary. They want to take control over our daily lives, but the national government will continue to say no every single day.

That is why it is important that we cast our votes in the right place. Today, apart from Viktor Orbán, there is no political force in Hungary capable of resisting these often very covert and aggressive attacks against Hungarian sovereignty with the same determination that he demonstrates.

He does this because he knows that it is not in Hungary’s interest to send our money to Ukraine, to send our sons into a war, or to worsen Europe’s already difficult economic situation through Ukrainian accession.

For us, Hungarian interests will always come first. That is why we fight against all kinds of forces in Brussels, no matter how they maneuver or align themselves with Tisza. We will stand firm in defense of Hungary and our clear position.

🔴 1️⃣ “A Ukrainian analyst confirmed it” – credibility anchor

📌 Technique: appeal to authority + vague sourcing

No name

No institution identified

No specific quotation

No verifiable context

👉 Invoking an “external Ukrainian source” creates the impression of insider confirmation.

🎯 Effect:
The claim appears not as an opinion, but as an “exposed plan.”


🔴 2️⃣ “Brussels and Ukraine are working together” – merged enemy coalition

📌 Technique: coalition framing + guilt by association

Two separate actors:

  • European Union
  • Ukraine

→ fused into a single coordinated power bloc.

🎯 Effect:
Domestic political competition is reframed not as party rivalry, but as a narrative of “external forces vs. the nation.”


🔴 3️⃣ “They want to sweep us out” – sovereignty threat framing

📌 Technique: external threat framing + identity activation

Key phrases:

  • “They want to take control”
  • “Foreign interests”
  • “Pressure tactics”

👉 The conflict is no longer about policy differences, but about national self-defense.

🎯 Effect:
The voter does not deliberate — they defend.


🔴 4️⃣ “Only Viktor Orbán can protect us” – exclusivity framing

📌 Technique: false dilemma + leadership centralization

  • “There is no force besides Viktor Orbán.”
  • “Fidesz is the only safe choice.”

This introduces a leader-centered protection narrative.

🎯 Effect:
The election becomes simplified:

👉 Orbán = security
👉 Others = danger


🔴 5️⃣ Fear triad: money – war – economic collapse

📌 Technique: fear stacking

Three strong emotional triggers:

  • “They will send our money away.”
  • “They will send our sons to war.”
  • “Economic decline.”

👉 Layered together, they intensify the sense of threat.

🎯 Effect:
Emotional overload → weakened rational evaluation.


🔎 Substantive note

The claim that the EU would admit Ukraine “as early as next year” is, under current political and legal realities, highly unlikely. EU accession requires:

  • a multi-year negotiation process
  • unanimous approval by all member states
  • full legal harmonization

This is not a matter of an accelerated campaign decision.


🎯 Summary

The text does not primarily provide information; it:

  • mobilizes emotionally
  • constructs an external enemy image
  • reinforces a leader-centered security narrative
  • creates a binary electoral choice

This is classic sovereignty-based campaign communication.

alexa

Big business in here!
Péter Magyar has officially lined up behind the pro-war elite.

This week, the European left held talks in Munich. At the security policy conference hosted in the Bavarian capital, Péter Magyar was joined by Anita Orbán, who previously held key positions in well-known Soros-affiliated organizations.

The Hungarian left also said yes to the Munich alliance. They reaffirmed their unconditional support for Ukraine and their backing of the five-point Zelensky plan, and they also stated that a TISZA-led government would give up Hungary’s independent foreign policy room for maneuver and put the country on the war train.

This alone is already quite outrageous, since this is precisely what the national government has consistently rejected since the beginning of the war. But Péter Magyar went even further. After sealing this war deal, he stated that Brussels — which fuels the Western war hysteria — is merely a “non-existent ghost,” nothing more than an artificially constructed enemy image, so there is supposedly nothing to see here — let’s move along.

This is the same Péter Magyar who previously pointed out with his fingers how much sovereignty we would supposedly have to give up to fulfill Brussels’ demands. It is once again clear — and confirmed yet again — that Péter Magyar would not be able to say no to his bosses. For him, the priority is war and financing Ukraine — this is the Brussels path.

We on the right continue to believe in the Hungarian path, which advances our country along national interests even in the shadow of war. In times of danger, we remain committed to peace and security — before and after April — which is why Fidesz remains the safe choice.


This week, the TISZA Party and Péter Magyar practically made official what we had already seen everywhere. In Munich, Péter Magyar met with several Brussels and European leaders who speak very clearly when it comes to the war or Ukraine. He met with people such as Donald Tusk and many other European and Brussels leaders who openly support Ukraine’s rapid accession and openly advocate providing Ukraine with financial aid and even weapons shipments.

This means that Péter Magyar has clearly given up on pursuing a sovereign, Hungary-first foreign policy. Under his leadership, Hungary would fully align with the pro-war Brussels narrative — something the current Hungarian government has firmly resisted over the past years.

Moreover, Péter Magyar even went so far in an interview as to say that Viktor Orbán is fighting ghosts, and that Brussels itself is such a ghost — something that does not represent a real danger to Hungary. He claims that these are non-existent ghosts being fought. Orbán Viktor, according to him, is fighting Brussels as if it were imaginary.

Well, Péter, the truth is that this so-called non-existent Brussels and non-existent threat is the very force that continues to pressure and blackmail us to this day. It withholds our funds because, for example, we refuse to accept migrants — and we have been fined heavily because of this. It withholds our resources because we do not want to raise our children according to LGBTQ ideology. And it does everything in its power to remove the current Hungarian leadership — a government that is capable of and willing to firmly stand up for Hungarian interests — instead of submitting to Brussels’ pro-war agenda.

That is why in April we must support Fidesz, because Viktor Orbán is the only person in Hungary who is truly capable, willing, and determined to stand up against this Brussels war hysteria.

🔴 1️⃣ “Pro-war elite” – moral labeling

📌 Technique: enemy labeling + moral polarization

Keywords:

“pro-war elite”
“war wagon”
“war hysteria”

👉 What is happening?

The political debate is no longer about policy differences (what kind of support, under what conditions, within what diplomatic framework),
but is transformed into a moral category:

peace vs. war

🎯 Effect:
The opponent is not presented as advocating a different strategy, but as someone who “wants war.”


🔴 2️⃣ “Brussels as a blackmailing force” – external threat narrative

📌 Technique: external threat framing + sovereignty activation

Claims:

“withholding our money”
“blackmailing us”
“trying to remove the Hungarian leadership”

👉 The conflict is framed not as an intergovernmental or legal dispute,
but as national self-defense vs. external interference.

🎯 Effect:
The stakes of the election are elevated to an existential level.


🔴 3️⃣ “Non-existent ghost” – reality-conflict framing

📌 Technique: framing inversion

Core element of the text:

Péter Magyar claims that “Brussels is a non-existent ghost.”

The counter-argument:

“This is the Brussels that blackmails us.”
“This is the force that punishes us.”

👉 The debate thus shifts away from concrete decisions
to the question of whether the threat itself exists.

This is a classic
conflict over reality interpretation.


🔴 4️⃣ “His bosses” – agent framing

📌 Technique: agent framing + questioning loyalty

“He wouldn’t be able to say no to his bosses.”

👉 What does this imply?

The opponent is portrayed as:

not an autonomous political actor,
but an executor of external forces.

🎯 Effect:
It strips him of political independence.


🔴 5️⃣ Invoking specific names – guilt by association

The text mentions:

Magyar Péter
Donald Tusk
Orbán Viktor
Fidesz

📌 Technique: guilt by association

Different European actors → merged into a single bloc → “war elite.”

🎯 Effect:
The opponent is framed not as a Hungarian political alternative,
but as part of an external coalition.


🔴 6️⃣ “Only one man can protect us” – savior narrative

📌 Technique: leader centralization

“Orbán Viktor is the only person…”

👉 Instead of institutional guarantees,
security is personalized around a single leader.

🎯 Effect:
The election is framed not as a contest between parties,
but as:

security vs. collapse


🧠 Summary – structure of the narrative

The entire message is built on three pillars:

External war-driven elite
Internal agent (Magyar Péter)
Single protector (Orbán Viktor)

This is a classic siege-state framing:

external threat
internal betrayal
centralized leader

alexa math genius… idota

Do not let decisions be made over our heads! Brussels wants to disregard the opinion of 2 million Hungarians and already plans to bring Ukraine into the EU as early as next year.

Part of the so-called Zelensky plan is to allow Ukraine to influence decisions even before its full accession is completed. They want to interfere in the elections so that Viktor Orbán cannot stand in the way of Ukrainian demands. They would not even shy away from suspending Hungary’s voting rights.

No matter how they try, we will not give in to external pressure, and we will defend Hungarian interests. That is why Fidesz is the safe choice.

Right now, the issue is not Ukraine, Zelensky, or Macron. The real issue is that Brussels wants to bypass the opinion of two million Hungarians and push Ukraine into the EU. Now pay attention, because I can show you their plan. First comes partial membership — involving Ukraine in decision-making even before full accession. Then, if that sparks debate, they may attempt “reversed enlargement”: political integration first, with full membership rights addressed later. And if even that does not work, then comes Article 7 — suspending voting rights. Meanwhile, they continuously claim that the Hungarian veto is an obstacle, and that only a change of government can solve the issue. If that fails, they would apply Trump-style external pressure, arguing that there is precedent for it. So if a member state says no, and the response is to strip and reduce that state’s rights — is that still a community, or something else?

🔴 1️⃣ “2 million Hungarians” – Minimization through number framing

📌 Technique: selective quantification + narrowed legitimacy

The central element of the text is “the opinion of 2 million Hungarians.”

👉 What is actually happening?

It does not reference any official, verifiable, representative measurement.

It does not clarify what sample was used, what methodology, or when the data was collected.

A campaign-related figure is treated as if it were national consensus.

👉 The psychological objective:

“2 million” sounds like a large number on its own.
But as a proportion, it carries a very different meaning.

The number therefore serves a dual function:

It legitimizes (“we are many”).

And at the same time it relativizes (“this is the country’s opinion”).

The framing is intentional:
the debate is not about society as a whole, but about a politically mobilized segment.

This is subtle proportional distortion.


🔴 2️⃣ “Brussels is bypassing Hungarians” – Sovereignty drama

📌 Technique: external control framing + identity activation

“Let’s not allow decisions to be made over our heads.”

This is a classic sovereignty trigger.

👉 The mechanism:

EU institutional processes are portrayed as a personal attack.

The political debate is reframed as “national self-determination vs. external power.”

Anyone who disagrees is implicitly placed on the “external” side.

This is emotional mobilization, not legal analysis.


🔴 3️⃣ The “Zelensky plan” – Personalized conspiracy framing

📌 Technique: personalization + plan construction without evidence

The text repeatedly refers to a “plan”:

partial membership

reversed enlargement

Article 7

suspension of voting rights

👉 What is missing:

a concrete document

an official decision-making mechanism

a date

an institutional proposal

The word “plan” is emotionally powerful.
The rhetoric of “I will show you their plan” creates a sense of revelation.

But in reality, it is a chain of speculative scenarios.


🔴 4️⃣ Fear stacking

The narrative gradually escalates the stakes:

They bypass Hungarians

They interfere in elections

They suspend voting rights

They apply external pressure

👉 This is a classic threat spiral.

The more conditional future scenarios are presented,
the more the entire situation feels like an inevitable danger.

These are not proven events,
but layered possibilities built on top of each other.


🔴 5️⃣ The number as a political tool

The repetition of “2 million” is not data communication,
but an emotional anchor.

The number functions as:

apparent concreteness

moral undertone (“two million people are being ignored”)

activation of collective grievance

What is not provided:

representativeness

societal proportion

full context

Here, the number does not operate as a measurement,
but as an identity marker.


🔴 6️⃣ Final framing: “Only Fidesz is the safe choice”

📌 Technique: binary choice framing

The entire narrative ultimately leads to a single political conclusion:

→ external threat
→ national defense
→ one safe option

This follows classic crisis communication logic:
first construct danger,
then offer an exclusive solution.


Summary

The text does not engage in factual debate.
Instead, it relies on three main tools:

Proportion-distorting use of numbers

Dramatization of sovereignty threat

Chained speculative future scenarios

Here, “2 million” is not a statistical figure,
but a rhetorical anchor.

The goal:
to make the emotional weight of the number stronger
than its actual societal proportion.

alex and fake news…

👉 Threats are arriving daily from Ukraine — sometimes directed at Hungary, sometimes personally at Viktor Orbán.
🟠 But no matter the provocations, as long as there is a national government, we will remain on the path of peace. This is the Hungarian path that guarantees security.

Seriously, aren’t they ashamed? It’s getting to the point where hardly a week goes by without Hungary — or Viktor Orbán personally — receiving some kind of threat from Ukraine. One time they endanger our energy supply by attacking the Druzhba oil pipeline. Another time there are Ukrainian drones entering our airspace. And now they are threatening us with the 128th Brigade.

Do we even grasp the weight of that? A brigade-sized armed military unit means roughly 4,000 soldiers, around 120 tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, two dozen self-propelled howitzers, air defense missile systems, hundreds of reconnaissance armored vehicles and support military vehicles, and nearly 1,000 infantry troops.

This is what they are threatening us with — us, from whom Ukraine still receives electricity and fuel.

Honestly, it makes your head spin.

And if that were not enough, Ukraine is now demanding another €1.5 trillion from Europe.

It is time to wake up — and for those threatening us to come to their senses.

🔴 1️⃣ “Threats arrive daily” – perpetual siege narrative

📌 Technique: repetition + creation of a constant sense of danger

“Daily”
“hardly a week goes by”

👉 What is happening?
The threat is normalized as permanent.
It is not about specific, verifiable incidents, but about creating an atmosphere of ongoing attack.

👉 Intended effect:
A continuous state of alert.
The audience should not weigh or analyze — but defend.


🔴 2️⃣ “They are threatening us” – activation of collective identity

📌 Technique: communal identification + emotional involvement

“us”
“Hungary”
“Viktor Orbán personally”

👉 What is happening?
A political conflict is reframed as a personal national insult.
It stops being a governmental dispute and becomes an attack on the community itself.

👉 Intended effect:
The reader becomes an involved party, not an outside observer.
Criticism feels like betrayal.


🔴 3️⃣ Military listing – visual fear amplification

📌 Technique: dramatized threat through numbers

“4,000 soldiers”
“120 tanks”
“self-propelled artillery”
“missiles”

👉 What is happening?
A brigade becomes a concrete imagined threat.
Not a political statement — but the image of an imminent invasion.

👉 Intended effect:
A physical fear reaction.
Rational evaluation moves into the background.


🔴 4️⃣ Moral outrage – “it makes your head spin”

📌 Technique: emotional escalation + moral superiority

👉 This is not analysis — it is indignation.

👉 Intended effect:
The audience should not question the claim.
Emotion legitimizes the argument.


🔴 5️⃣ Economic shock – “€1,500 billion”

📌 Technique: large number → disproportionate alarm

Missing context:
– How large compared to the full EU budget?
– In what form?
– Loan? Grant? Spread over how many years?

👉 Intended effect:
Shock value.
“They want to take our money.”


🔴 6️⃣ “National government = peace” – false binary

📌 Technique: two-pole moral mapping

Ukraine → threat
Us → peace
They → provocation
Us → security

👉 No middle ground.
No diplomatic nuance.

👉 Intended effect:
The choice is framed not as political preference, but as existential self-defense.


📌 Overall picture

The text does not primarily transmit information. It:

Builds a sense of constant threat

Dramatizes through military visualization

Activates collective identity

Introduces economic shock

Generates moral outrage

Finally offers a security shelter (“the Hungarian path”)

This is a classic fear stacking narrative.

alexa

This is what this election is about!

It is clearer than daylight that the oil business, the banking world, and the Brussels elite are preparing to form a government. If we allow the Tisza–Brussels–big capital coalition to come to power, they will pick the pockets of families.

As long as there is a national government, we will not send weapons, they will not take our money, and they will not take our young people to Ukraine.

Only Fidesz is the safe choice! Let 2026 be the year of victory!

14.956 billion forints. A huge amount of money. Between 2010 and 2025, this is how much we managed to keep at home and distribute to the Hungarian people in various forms — for example through family support programs, utility price reductions, the reintroduction of the 13th-month pension, and now even a 14th-month pension. This is the money that is badly missing today from the pockets of bankers and foreign multinational corporations — and they are sharpening their knives for it.

Their goal is not only to avoid paying the nearly 2,000 billion forints in taxes and burdens for 2026, but also to claw back this nearly 15,000 billion forints over the coming years. To achieve this, they need a team to lead Hungary that works for them, not one that puts Hungarian interests first.

That is what the April election will be about — that is what is at stake. This is what Viktor Orbán said today in his annual state-of-the-nation speech. He said that a coalition has come together consisting of Tisza, Brussels, and the world of multinationals, bankers, and oil lobbyists.

Everyone with whom Péter Magyar is preparing to govern has some kind of mission within this team. We can talk about Anita Orbán, whose task is to push for Ukraine’s rapid accession to the European Union. Or István Kapitány, whose role would be to detach Hungary from affordable, predictable Russian energy agreements, so that companies like Shell and others can make enormous profits — as they did during the years of the war. Or we can mention the Erste Bank candidate, András Kármán, whose obvious aim would be to ensure that banks no longer have to pay special taxes and can once again collect fat billions from Hungarians, as they did before 2010.

Well, this is what we will not allow. As long as Fidesz is in government, the Hungarian people’s money will remain in Hungary and will be spent on them — not according to the wishes of the Brussels elite or in service of foreign multinationals and bankers.

🔴 1️⃣ “The multinationals have occupied us” – construction of an external enemy

Technique: external threat framing + sovereignty threat

Keywords:

  • “banking world”
  • “Brussels elite”
  • “big capital”
  • “oil lobbyists”
  • “multinationals”

👉 Domestic political competition is no longer framed as a contest between programs,
but as national self-defense vs. foreign occupation.

Intended effect:
Fear + identity activation → “we must defend the country.”


🔴 2️⃣ Merged enemy coalition – “Tisza–Brussels–big capital”

Technique: coalition framing + guilt by association

Three separate spheres:

  • an opposition party
  • EU institutions
  • multinational corporations

→ fused into a single block.

👉 The opponent is no longer portrayed as an autonomous political actor,
but as an “agent of foreign interests.”

Intended effect:
Delegitimization without evidence.


🔴 3️⃣ Massive numbers – “14,956 billion forints”

Technique: number magnification + moralized cost framing

Nearly 15,000 billion forints is given emotional weight:

  • “we kept it at home”
  • “they want to take it away”
  • “they are sharpening their teeth for it”

👉 The number does not appear as a budgetary item,
but as loot.

Intended effect:
Triggering loss aversion.


🔴 4️⃣ Attribution of intentions without evidence

Technique: intention attribution

Examples:

  • “their task is to…”
  • “their job is to…”
  • “clearly their goal is to…”

Without citing any concrete document or decision,
motivations are assigned to actors.

Intended effect:
The audience treats assumptions as facts.


🔴 5️⃣ Energy fear + war framing

Technique: fear stacking

Layers stacked on top of each other:

  • sending weapons
  • taking away young people
  • rising energy prices
  • banking exploitation
  • Ukraine’s EU accession

👉 Several separate issues → one single existential threat package.

Intended effect:
The reader does not weigh details,
but switches into defensive mode.


🔴 6️⃣ “Only Fidesz is the safe choice” – false binary

Technique: false dilemma framing

Two paths are presented:

Fidesz = peace, low utility costs, family protection

Opposition = bankers, war, taking people’s money

No middle option.
No nuance.
No policy debate.

Intended effect:
A moral choice between “good” and “bad.”


🔴 7️⃣ Bandwagon effect via annual speech authority

Technique: authority anchoring

Reference:
Orbán Viktor’s annual State of the Nation speech

👉 The message is not presented as an independent claim,
but as “the Prime Minister said so.”

Intended effect:
Legitimization through authority.


📌 Summary – What is actually happening?

This is not a policy debate about:

  • the structure of energy imports,
  • bank taxes,
  • budgetary items,
  • EU–Ukraine relations.

It is an emotional sovereignty narrative:

🇭🇺 “We protect Hungarian money”
vs.
🌍 “They want to take it away.”

Core mechanism:

Fear + identity + massive numbers + external enemy = mobilization.

alexandra and propaganda

Today, a public debate can escalate into personal attacks within moments. Old friendships and family relationships become strained simply because someone sees the world differently.

Yet without political debates, there is no public life. We argue, we present our reasoning, we try to persuade one another of what we believe to be true.

What does not belong in that space, however, is spitting venom, raging, or threatening the other side. Unfortunately, this has become a common method in comment sections.

Many people now choose to remain silent because they don’t want to end up in the crosshairs. But if we stay silent, then only the loudest, hate-driven voices will remain.

Let’s show that it’s possible to debate with decency. It’s possible to argue without hostility. And yes—sometimes we have to pick up the gauntlet, not with hatred, but with clear and sober words.

The old “impex families” and their successors feel extremely uncomfortable—well… let’s just say uncomfortable—because there’s no longer a “meat pot” for them. Of course, long-standing family and friendly relationships also suffer in this current atmosphere. But I somehow feel—though this is partly subjective—that it’s not fundamentally right-wing people who try to convince others in the loudest and most aggressive way. Instead, in this overwhelming national mood, it sometimes feels as if we can’t even say what we think about the world anymore, because otherwise we’d be metaphorically strung up on the first lamppost we pass.

I’ve always said that we got to know each other as friends, as human beings. The fact that you think differently is one thing. We can still talk. We can try to persuade each other. And if you believe I’m wrong, then think differently—the course of life will eventually prove what stands.

Sometimes we need to find the courage. The things you just said should actually be written down in the comments. They should be posted. Because if we don’t pick up the gauntlet, what will people see online? Only the shouting voices dominating the space. And they will multiply—simply because we chose not to speak.

🔴 1️⃣ “Debate is important, but…” — moral framing

Technique: value alignment + assuming moral high ground

The text opens with universal values:

  • debate is important
  • friendship is important
  • respect is important

👉 Effect:
The reader automatically identifies with the author because these are hard to disagree with.
This acts as a trust gateway through which a political message can later slip in.


🔴 2️⃣ “Us vs. them” hidden polarization

Technique: implicit camp-building

Key sentence:

“it’s not right-wing people who are the most aggressive…”

It never explicitly states who “they” are, but implies:

  • we = civilized
  • they = aggressive

👉 Effect:
The reader instinctively places themselves on one side → identity gets activated.
This is classic ingroup–outgroup framing.


🔴 3️⃣ Victim narrative

Technique: victim framing

“we can’t even say what we think anymore”

👉 Effect:

  • sense of threat
  • feeling of injustice
  • moral outrage

This is a mobilizing tool, because people who feel threatened are more likely to become active.


🔴 4️⃣ Lamp-post imagery — emotional exaggeration

Technique: hyperbole + fear appeal

“they’ll hang us from the nearest lamppost”

👉 Effect:
It doesn’t function as a literal threat but as an emotional image.
Images like this affect audiences faster than rational arguments.


🔴 5️⃣ Activating closing — call to comment

Technique: call-to-action mobilization

“you should comment it… you have to write it…”

👉 Effect:
It doesn’t just shape opinion — it directs behavior:
→ comment
→ respond
→ enter the debate

This is already campaign logic, not just opinion.


🔴 6️⃣ “We are the civilized ones” self-framing

Technique: positive identity construction

The speaker’s implied self-image:

  • calm
  • rational
  • fair
  • pro-dialogue

👉 Effect:
Anyone who agrees with them automatically sees themselves this way too.


🧠 Overall picture — the text’s real communicative function

Not a simple opinion post, but:

a mobilizing identity message

Goals:

  • activate one’s own camp
  • increase comment activity
  • create a sense of moral superiority
  • indirectly delegitimize the opponent

One-sentence strategic summary:
The text is identity-reinforcing and mobilizing political communication hidden behind a conciliatory tone.

sxandi

In response to RTL’s question:

❗ There are situations that, in my view, reveal a great deal about a person’s character — and the affairs surrounding Péter Magyar resemble more of a confusing soap opera. His private-life contradictions, inconsistencies, and previous statements have shown many that he is a two-faced and risky figure.

I believe that someone who cannot draw clear boundaries in their own life is not fit to serve as prime minister. In the current uncertain situation, I consider experienced, stable leadership to be especially important.

🟠 That is why Viktor Orbán and Fidesz are the safe choice!

As for the alleged compromising video recording about Péter Magyar — I cannot comment on that. I have not seen such a video. I have only seen Péter Magyar’s explanations in the press over the past few days. What I observed is that he speaks inconsistently. It is very difficult to make sense of his statements.

I also see that Péter Magyar has said he is not bothered if he enters a party where he apparently sees objects that look like drugs, and despite that, he seems to feel perfectly comfortable there. Honestly, if I heard a similar story about my child’s teacher — that they ended up at a party from early morning until the next day, seeing people who appeared to be using drugs — I would feel very uneasy about it. I feel even more uneasy knowing that this person, who appears to contradict himself and lead a double life, is preparing to become prime minister.

Thank you very much.

🔴 1️⃣ “A chaotic soap opera” – Framing in the opening sentence

📌 Technique: framing + trivializing metaphor

The issues surrounding the political actor are not presented as concrete facts, but framed as a “soap opera.”

👉 Effect:

  • Makes the person appear unserious.
  • Establishes an emotional position for the audience from the very beginning.
  • Does not prove anything — it creates a mood.

🔴 2️⃣ “Two-faced, risky figure” – Labeling instead of evidence

📌 Technique: repetitive moral labeling

Key phrases:

  • “two-faced”
  • “lies”
  • “speaks incoherently”
  • “risky”

👉 What happens?
The debate shifts from the person’s arguments to their personality.

This is classic character framing:
first undermine credibility,
then you no longer need to engage with the program or policy positions.


🔴 3️⃣ Drug reference – Suggestive moral panic

📌 Technique: guilt by association + moral shock

Important: there is no explicit claim of drug use.

The logical chain is constructed as:

“an object that appeared to be drugs”
→ “he felt comfortable there anyway”
→ “what kind of person does that?”

👉 Effect:

  • Activates strong parental/moral instincts.
  • Frames the issue as moral rejection rather than a legal question.

This is a typical moral contamination framing strategy.


🔴 4️⃣ “If he were my child’s teacher…” – Emotional identification

📌 Technique: personal projection

The political issue is relocated into a family context.

👉 Effect:

The audience is no longer evaluating a prime ministerial candidate,
but imagining “my child’s teacher.”

This creates a powerful emotional reframing.


🔴 5️⃣ False suitability inference

📌 Technique: private life → public leadership leap

“Someone who does not draw clear boundaries in their private life is unfit to be prime minister.”

This is a logical leap:
private-life contradictions
→ public-office unfitness

👉 There is no evidence provided — only an asserted conclusion.


🔴 6️⃣ Security framing at the end

📌 Technique: stability framing + false dilemma

The conclusion:

“In uncertain times, experienced, stable leadership is preferable.”
“That is why Orbán Viktor and Fidesz are the safe choice.”

👉 Structure:

Chaos (Magyar Péter)
Moral confusion
Risk
Uncertainty

→ Stability (Orbán)
→ Safe choice (Fidesz)

This is emotional contrast-building.


🧠 The overall communication scheme

Character destruction
→ Moral contamination
→ Family identification
→ Suitability judgment
→ Offering a stable alternative

Not policy.
Not program.
Not concrete decisions.

But emotional positioning.

alexandra wakeup

👉 Brussels and Kyiv have decided: Viktor Orbán must be removed because he does not bow to the will of Brussels and Ukraine, but instead defends the interests of the Hungarian people.

That is why Brussels needs Péter Magyar — because he is the one who would not be able to say no to them. The Tisza Party would bring Ukraine into the EU without question and would assist in supporting the war.

🟠 However, we will not allow others to decide about us without us! We represent peace, low energy prices, and Hungarian families. That is why Fidesz is the only safe choice.

Thank you very much. Staying with the more serious topic, there was also a political podcast — I don’t know whether you have seen or heard it, or whether the public has encountered it — and what was particularly outrageous, if that can even be further intensified, beyond what you already mentioned, is that they openly speak about “removing” Viktor Orbán.

When you think about it, they are talking about removing a democratically elected leader — someone who has been given a two-thirds mandate by voters election after election — simply because he does not steer European affairs, and especially Hungarian affairs, in a direction that would be comfortable or convenient for them. That in itself is astonishing.

But they went even further in this podcast: they openly stated that they hope Péter Magyar will help them and act as a partner in ensuring that Ukraine becomes a member of the European Union by 2027.

They admit that this is not something to talk about too much until April, because it would be an important argument in Viktor Orbán’s hands. So once again we see this incredible two-faced, hypocritical, deceptive arrogance: they know exactly what they want to do — they just cannot talk about it before the election. As Tarzoltán said: you have to win the election first, and after that, anything is possible.

What Tarzoltán represents on a small scale here is what Brussels represents on a larger scale in Europe.

🔴 1️⃣ External Control Narrative

📌 Technique: external control framing + sovereignty threat

“Brussels and Kyiv have decided”
“Viktor Orbán must be removed”

👉 Hungarian domestic political competition is framed not as an internal debate, but as a decision imposed by external powers.
The election is thus presented not as a contest between policy programs, but as national self-determination vs. foreign interference.


🔴 2️⃣ Geopolitics Reduced to Personal Actors

📌 Technique: personalization + scapegoating

Complex EU–Ukraine–member state negotiations
→ simplified into the “will of Brussels” and “the will of Kyiv”

👉 A multi-level institutional process is transformed into a moral conflict.
This is emotionally easier to process than a complex, multi-actor decision-making system.


🔴 3️⃣ Proxy Framing

📌 Technique: proxy framing

“Brussels needs Péter Magyar”
“He cannot say no to them”

👉 The opponent is framed not as an autonomous political actor, but as an executor of external interests.
This delegitimizes their independence before any policy debate can begin.


🔴 4️⃣ Fear Chain Construction

📌 Technique: threat stacking

Ukraine’s EU membership
→ war
→ rising energy prices
→ Hungarian families at risk

👉 A linear cause-and-effect chain is constructed, where everything ultimately ties back to the electoral decision.


🔴 5️⃣ Moral Binary Framing

📌 Technique: binary moral framing

“We represent peace, low energy prices, and Hungarian families”
VS.
“They represent war and Brussels’ will”

👉 There is no nuance, no third option.
The decision becomes a moral choice.


🔴 6️⃣ Emphasis on Democratic Legitimacy

📌 Technique: legitimacy reinforcement

“A leader empowered by a two-thirds majority”

👉 Criticism is framed not merely as political disagreement,
but as questioning a democratically granted mandate.


🔴 7️⃣ “Afterwards, everything is possible” – Suggestion of a Hidden Plan

📌 Technique: insinuation + distrust amplification

The narrative suggests:
they do not say it publicly,
but they have already decided it behind the scenes.

👉 This reinforces the perception of a “hidden power plan.”


🎯 In Summary

The structure of the text follows a classic campaign framework:

  • External enemy
  • Internal proxy
  • Existential stakes
  • Moral choice
  • Safe refuge (“the safe choice”)

This is not a policy debate, but identity- and sovereignty-based mobilization.

alexa

❗ There’s a certain type of person whose smile lights up from a distance — and you instantly know they’re about to sell you something.

The Hungarian “Jockey Ewing” strikes me exactly like that. Like that old school acquaintance with the Avon catalog who’d call you saying, “Let’s just grab a coffee,” and five minutes later the magazine is already in front of you.

Bleached, artificial smile. Vacuum-salesman energy. Big words about “diversification.” And yet somehow we always end up in the same place: they’re trying to dump bad merchandise on us — and on top of that, they think we’re stupid.

👉 The good news? Most Hungarians see through this. They can tell the difference between storytelling and reality.

We’re not buying the vacuum.

When I think of the Hungarian “Jock Ewing,” I can’t shake the image of someone who always wants to sell me something — white, artificially perfect teeth, that over-eager salesman vibe. Everyone knows someone like that. I had them back in school too — the Avon girl, the ones who call you out of the blue: “How are you? Let’s grab a quick coffee,” and then suddenly they’re pushing face cream.

That’s the feeling I get about this guy: that he’s trying to offload some second-rate product on us, packaged with that polished smile like the worst kind of vacuum pitch. And honestly, I don’t think we’re wrong — because at the end of the day, that’s what this is about. They’re trying to sell us something.

They dress it up as “diversification,” they talk about narrowing options as if it’s expanding them, they throw around technical jargon — but in the end, they want to sell us their inferior goods and convince us we’re better off for it.

Thankfully, most Hungarians see through the script. They know the difference between what serves their interests and what doesn’t — whether it’s predictable utility price caps, or being told to experiment with alternatives to stable Russian energy supplies. As Szijjártó Péter once pointed out, LNG isn’t something you carry in a backpack — and gas supply at this scale doesn’t work like that.

That’s my impression of our Hungarian “Jockey Ewing.”

🔴 1️⃣ Karakter-analógia („Jockey Ewing”, Avon-ügynök, porszívóárus)

Technika: popkulturális metafora + hétköznapi negatív élmény

Egy politikai szereplőt nem szakmai vitában támad,
hanem egy ismerős, bizalmatlan figurához hasonlít:

  • tukmáló ügynök
  • műmosoly
  • „el akar adni valamit”

👉 Hatás:
A hallgató nem szakértőt lát, hanem manipulátort.

A gazdasági vita → bizalom kérdéssé alakul.


🔴 2️⃣ Külső benyomás mint bizonyíték

„Kifehérített műmosoly”
„porszívóügynök-energia”

Technika: vizuális keretezés + benyomás-alapú hiteltelenítés

Nem az állítás tartalmát támadja,
hanem a nonverbális képet.

👉 Üzenet:
„Ha így néz ki, biztos nem őszinte.”

Ez klasszikus impression framing.


🔴 3️⃣ „Rossz portékát akarnak ránk sózni”

Technika: kereskedelmi metafora gazdaságpolitikai kérdésre

Az energiapolitikai vita (diverzifikáció, LNG, beszállítói mix stb.)
átfordul egy egyszerű sémára:

jó vs. rossz termék
mi vs. ők
átverés vs. védelem

👉 Így a komplex kérdés érzelmi választássá válik.


🔴 4️⃣ „A magyarok átlátnak rajta”

Technika: közösségi identitás + előre beállított konszenzus

„A magyarok többsége tudja…”

Ez bandwagon + identitás-megerősítés.

👉 Ha nem értesz egyet, akkor kívül kerülsz a „józan többségen”.


🔴 5️⃣ Szakpolitika leegyszerűsítése technikai tréfával

Az LNG-ről szóló „hátizsákos” példa:

Technika: technikai abszurdum + gúny

Komplex infrastruktúra-kérdés
→ fizikai képtelenségként beállítva.

👉 Nevetségessé tesz,
nem cáfol.


🎯 Mi történik valójában?

Nem arról szól a szöveg, hogy:

  • mennyi az LNG ára
  • hogyan működik a diverzifikáció
  • milyen szerződéses struktúrák léteznek
  • milyen ellátásbiztonsági kockázatok vannak

Hanem arról, hogy:

👉 bízz-e a szereplőben vagy sem.

Ez személyalapú hiteltelenítés, nem szakpolitikai vita.