While the ugly LGBTQ girl Viki Radványi talks about her ordeal in Budapest, the international music channel cut to a video clip showing uniformed people insulting LGBTQ people on the streets. There is only one problem: the recording was not made in Hungary, but in Georgia.

Viktória Radványi, one of the organizers of Budapest Pride, earned the "Generation Change" recognition of the MTV European Music Awards.

No, Radványi is not fighting for the LGBTQ cause in Kabul, Islamabad or some African country, or perhaps in England, where gays are threatened in their physical reality. Viki Radványi risks her life on the streets of Budapest every day.

How much danger he actually exposes himself to by being gay and the organizer of Budapest Pride is provided by the fact that

the award ceremony took place in the Puskás Arena.

And the gay community as a whole is in danger. LGBTQ people are attacked in the street and fired from their jobs. Viki Radványi talked about this in a video that was also produced by MTV.

With emotional music, he told about how he can't hold his girlfriend's hand in Budapest, he has to constantly look behind her because he feels his life is in danger.

With what Radványi said, the recordings are truly shocking.

The only problem is that the recordings were not made in Hungary, but in Georgia. So, while the award-winning lady was talking about the violence taking place on the streets of Budapest, the filmmakers used footage from another country to illustrate how harshly the authorities are dealing with Hungarian Pride participants.

As if something similar had already happened. A few years ago, a photograph went around the world showing Hungarian policemen fighting with a family of three on the railway tracks.

Then the whole Western world snorted at the sight of brutality.

After a few days, of course, it turned out that the Hungarian police had rescued a mother with a small child from the hands of a violent migrant, who dragged both the mother and her child between the tracks.

The rebuttal did not receive a fraction of attention. For the Western public, what happened was what they saw in the photo. The actual background of the scene is completely incidental.”

Gyuri Szalma's full article HERE .

Update:

the Mandiner wrote the news on Monday , the 29th , that the video was simply a lie, MTV changed its content. They seem to have realized that they don't beat LGBTQ people here, despite the fact that more and more of us think that the father is the man and the mother is the woman.

Here is the original MTV video:

Featured image: Attila Kisbenedek / AFP