With a lot of left-wing media attention, a petition was started to end the recently created musical pavement on highway number 21. Of course, the rioters are disturbed by the note itself, the "anthem" of Hungarians living abroad, Nélküled, is heard from the pavement...

HVG "noticed" it, Telex took the news right away. What a coincidence! And the fact that 444 did the same, I think other far-left portals did too. Maybe not all of them - yet - but I'm not in the mood to investigate.

The news reads as follows: On Friday, Zsolt Petrik, an "independent" representative of Lőrinci (on his Facebook page, he is already listed as a sympathizer of the Tisza party and a certified founder of "Tisza Sziget"), will launch a petition in order to abolish it on highway number 21, Hatvan and Lőrinci, a recently created musical pavement.

The "independent" civil…

Because the road music bothers the people who live there, not to mention that it annoys the birds and can scare the foreign tourists driving there who don't speak Hungarian.

In the video attached to the article, they also play the song, of course composed for car wheels. The video theoretically reveals how loud it is, but it would really become clear if I were to drive it myself. Maybe I will, but it won't be today, it's not worth it all.

However, the recording clearly shows who may be upset by the note. According to the representative, the residents of the area, but no matter how much I strained my eyes, and even how much I checked the footage, I could not see a single house, barn, or even a cottage on it.

So who does this tune annoy? I think that in addition to the invisible inhabitants there, it can disturb the crew of the passenger planes, the satellites orbiting the Earth, the inhabitants of the international space station, but also probably the deep-sea divers.

It's very pitiful and transparent. I do not claim, but I rightly assume that the problem is not that the road "makes music", but that it makes music. It plays the tune of Nélküled, which has become a football anthem, and this can be quite annoying for those who are proud to stay seated when the stadium is resounding with this.

I would like to know if the road music would be just as "unbearable" if the catchy melody of the International was soaring towards the sky from under the wheels. I am afraid that Zsolt Petrik would refrain from organizing a protest against him.

Of course, I could be wrong and the music noise really bothers the people in the area, as well as others besides Mr. Petrik, but I really don't think so.

But if my assumption is true and the song itself, and not the noise, annoys the newly elected representative, then my opinion is: it would have been better without you.

Author: György Tóth Jr

Cover photo: Tamás Dernovics/magyarepitok.hu