Advanced promoters of cancel culture, who walk away from house to house to shame Jehovah’s Witnesses on even-numbered days and enthusiastically persuade fascists with reduced awareness that freedom of speech has already been surpassed by progression, and about the fact that private companies have the right of heart to decide who to employ are now beating themselves to the ground for the sake of John Hrutka and striking a hysteria about a world like a horrible two-year-old deprived of his play.
But let’s move on.
RB Leipzig goalkeeper Péter Gulácsi probably stood up for the rainbow families under some leadership pressure, and against the basic law of Hungary, which was not taken for granted by right-wing supporters and conservative people who mostly respected traditional values.
Celebrities, actors, “stone carvers and ballet dancers” who seek the graces of the advanced and increasingly radical LGBTQI community, however, are very much.
Both sides have embarked on a war of comment and message, which is a great thing, why not argue.
János Hrutka, who has now become a warrior liberal, full-time good man – pardon – has also changed, and in this capacity he takes every opportunity to court his new friends.
Even so, he stood in a fighting position with Gulácsi and the rainbow families, which, as usual, resulted in plenty of likes, congratulatory messages, and dozens of boxing articles in the banned liberal press. Ninety percent Liberny celebs also became Hrutka fans, at the same time as one man they began in some quite embarrassing way, generalizing the scolding of footballers, engaging in vague and less vague explanations about the fact that sensible footballers still exist.
Hrutka, who gladly rode the waves of football player-shaming, enjoyed the attention and bathed in the love of libsik like the former Nazi serfs, now praised by Gyurcsány and Telex.
Stockholm syndrome is also beautiful.
Hrutka then broke his contract last week with Spíler TV, and the liberal manager sent a message to his comrades with a much-suspected post, suggesting they had been screened for his unconstitutional resolution.
At least that’s what the Independent Letters saw in his post, and although they had been enthusiastically arguing a month ago that it was okay for all kinds of trumpeters and right-wingers in America or elsewhere to be kicked out of their jobs in a document – see Gina Carano’s case with Disney – , yet they broke out in a dictatorship that did not want to end, and began to mourn free speech in a hypocritical way, shedding crocodile tears.
Well, on the one hand, it would be good if I could finally decide whether a private company would then be free to decide, so to speak, whether or not to employ people who represent the values it considered important. Because it’s very dissonant that libsi companies have the right to fire their conservative employees, but if their console counterparts do the same, there’s a scream. So some consistency wouldn’t hurt if for no other reason, for the sake of clairvoyance.
On the other hand, Spíler TV denied in its announcement that the contract with Hrutka had been terminated because it attacked the basic law of Hungary.
In the end, it seems to me that Csaba Kajdi, who insulted Katalin Novák and the Hungarian government in an unqualified style, can be judged on TV2 for the second year in a row, and Zsuzsa Demcsák, who echoes her brainstorming, has not even left right-wing Life TV.
János Hrutka will also have a TV job again, I would dare to bet a large amount on this, we will see him again for sure soon. Let’s say at the RTL Club.
Péter Kolosi leaves no one on the side of the road.
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