What was Fegyőr's biggest grievance in recent years? Did your coffee get cold because the subway was late after a protest? Kristóf Trombitás asks the million-dollar question on social media.
"Those left-wing subversives who are constantly dictating Hungary should take a good look at the picture below: this is what it's like when oppression reigns in a state and you go to the streets to show your distaste for the existing power - otherwise by peaceful means.
The police will come, in the best case you will get a couple with the tonfa and disturb the country, in the worst case the state authority will punish, record, monitor, disable and beat you before and after.
What was Fegyőr's biggest grievance in recent years? Did your coffee get cold because the subway was late after a protest? Or for Donáth? How about Gyurcsány, Kunhalmi, Jakab?
They have created a parallel reality for their followers, in which they aim to present themselves as brave resisters and, unfortunately, relatively many people believe this.
Since 2010, how many peaceful, left-wing demonstrations have been made impossible, banned, or broken up ad absurdum? Let's not even go as far as 1988 or 1989, just 2006 is enough in the comparison. Are the one million people fighting for Hungarian press freedom? Internet debt? The sled burner? Going to public television? A protester for nobody else? The antics before Carmelita?”