Ervin Lázár was the target of government books from pro-government circles



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The first book of fairy tales for LGBTQ awareness, Fairy Tale for All, was published in Hungary these days. The publication was followed by violent protests, several articles dealt with it, it is discussed in discussion forums, protests are organized against it, and whoever does not agree with the ideology of the book may receive physical threats – begins his article in KDNP vasarnap.hu László Deák-Sárosi, employee of the Hungarian Research Institute, official ,. (The post was noticed by hvg.hu.)

Even the beat is strong:

Ervin Lázár’s stories have always been rejected, the main story, The Seven-Headed Fairy in particular.

According to Deák-Sárosi, the “seven-headed fairy” as an image also results in “confusion and loss of value” in a child. He also adds that the strange figure of the fairy tale can cause great damage because, for example, “the lessons of many good fairy tales are clouded by the ‘seven-headed fairy’ and many other incompetent figures.”

An employee of the Hungarian Research Institute then wonders about the story of the worm trapped in a tree, and then goes on to allow adults who can laugh at Lázár’s “selfish” image associations to get caught up at an earlier stage in their development.

He concludes his article as follows:

So there are idiot writers and readers so useful that they can be used for their own ends by the power of the economic background that draws out consumerists. Those who have not yet reached the stage of formal operations or a level of critical reflection, that is, a state of proportionality and gradation that can be seen with common sense, can accept anything that is acceptable, even against their own interests. .



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