When it became known on Sunday evening that the city of Munich would dress the stadium in rainbow colors (because the Hungarian parliament passed the anti-pedophile law), in which the Hungarian and German teams will meet tomorrow night, Péter Niedermüller, the mayor of Erzsébetváros, immediately thanked him on his social media page. Here.

Even this was exceeded by Gergely Homonnay, who was happy to take a photo with the fallen prime minister, who wrote: "The film can play before our mental eyes, that the stew-eating black army marches into the stadium lit up in the colors of the rainbow.."

As a writer, the person who is not worth a word even corrected this with the following:
"Come on, French! While the Hungarian fans are the epitome of barbarism, as long as they sing Nazi rhymes, humiliate the citizens of other nations in their dignity, and the police drive away the journalists and do not collect them, I, as a Hungarian, have a duty to express my solidarity towards the citizens of a nation that takes to the field with the Hungarian team , saving the honor of Hungarians."

Well, they both fell flat on their faces. Last night, UEFA banned Munich's Allianz Arena from being lit up in rainbow colors during the European Championship match. The newspaper Bild, which was the first to report the news, did not agree with this. At the end of the article, the editor noted: if UEFA did not allow the rainbow lighting, then the German players and fans must place this symbol inside the stadium.

But that should be their problem. We go there to play football.