“There are people who use the Christmas season to spread hatred and hostility. We know exactly who they are — but now let me show you how we spend the days before Christmas. I think that would be really great.”

🎭 1️⃣ Projection (what they do → they blame others for)
“Some people use even the Christmas period for spreading hate.”
🔍 Real function:
Not describing — labeling
Not proving — insinuating
Not naming — but everyone is expected to “know” who he means
👉 Classic narcissistic trick:
“I don’t do it — they do.”
while in reality he and his circle thrive on constant hate-fueling.
This is projection: relocating one’s own behavior onto the “enemy.”
🧠 2️⃣ Moral superiority posturing
“We know who they are…”
This is an in-group signal:
“We — the good ones”
“They — the bad ones”
📌 Message:
- If you’re with us → you’re moral
- If you’re against us → you’re hateful
No debate, no nuance, no facts — only moral judgment.
🎬 3️⃣ Stage shift: “But we, on the other hand…”
“…let me show you how we spend the days before Christmas.”
This is image repair.
🧩 What’s happening?
- The previous accusation is never proven
- They simply cut to a new scene:
hate → love
conflict → cozy Christmas mood
👉 A narrative escape:
“I won’t address criticism — I’ll distract you with a feel-good picture.”
🔄 4️⃣ The full formula in one sentence
“We are not spreading hate — the haters are the ones who criticize us.”
This equals:
- self-absolution
- blame-shifting
- emotional blackmail (“How dare you criticize during Christmas?”)
🧨 Why is this dangerous?
Because it:
- normalizes their own aggression
- demonizes dissent
- turns every differing opinion into a moral attack
Meanwhile:
They start the division
Then they play the victim.