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COVID 911 – Demonstration for a normal life György Gődény, a pharmacist who has become famous for his statements that downplay the severity of the coronavirus epidemic in recent weeks, called a demonstration on Friday afternoon in Budapest’s Szabadság Square (and the squares that bear the name of Hungarian county capitals on freedom). According to Gődény, the scientists targeted by the mainstream media and journalists create unnecessary fear in people, because the coronavirus should not be taken so seriously.
On the announced start date of the demonstration, there were hardly any demonstrators, the press workers prevailed.
This allowed us to see up close what message they wanted to share with the general public on their banners. You didn’t have to search far to find the first powerful reference.
Three-quarters of an hour after the start, the crowd had grown a little thicker, though they weren’t so scattered that they didn’t seem like a rule-following group by following the epidemic rules of distance.
After another hour, the crowd multiplied, now with thousands voicing their appearance, doubting the seriousness of the epidemic and preferring to suspect that it was simply a masterpiece of forces seeking to make people impossible. They give speeches, most of them about not denying the existence of the covid, but considering the measures excessive. They believe that many things are not logical, such as why at school you have to wear a mask in the hall if you don’t do it in the classroom, and why politicians don’t wear a mask then.
The protesters are a very mixed crowd, there are containers with aluminum foil helmets, but there are also those who simply do not like to wear a mask or are angry that they could not go on vacation. The speakers, who according to Gödény’s preliminary information will number ten, are also heterogeneous companies, including pregnant women and economists. In essence, they argue that it is an exaggeration to impose restrictions of this degree due to such disease.
Although Gődény has repeatedly stated that he is neither a conspiracy believer nor an anti-vaccine, his followers were summoned on the 19th anniversary of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center on September 11, the most prevalent day in conspiracy theories of the 21st century. and selected this as his featured photo:
György Gődény also shared his thoughts on the epidemic on Rádió1’s morning show, organized by Balázs Sebestyén (part 1, part 2, part 3) between himself and Zsolt Boldogkői, molecular biologist, doctor of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, head of the Department of Medical Biology at the University of Szeged. between your teacher. The debate, by the way, broke an audience record.
The bodybuilding pharmacist did not jump into public life embracing skeptical thoughts about the coronavirus, he was already chairman of a camouflage party.
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