Sebastian Vettel
Sebastian Vettel set an example at the Formula 1 race in Hungary. A politician doesn't like that, he delivers an outrageous Nazi comparison.
The controversial Hungarian “Pedophile Law” is causing a stir around the world. At the Formula 1 guest appearance at the Hungaroring, Sebastian Vettel protested in his own way. With a rainbow shirt, the rainbow on the helmet and the face mask, he campaigns for the rights of homosexuals.
Vettel receives praise for it, also from politics. Hungary's opposition politician Attila Mesterhazy, for example, speaks on Facebook of a “fine, educated, European” statement. Tamas Deutsch, politician of the ruling Fidesz party, does not want to approve of this. But his counterattack is more than questionable and inappropriate.
“The Germans have always been good at using politically correct symbolism in line with current trends,” he writes about a photo of the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin in which fans in the stands show the Hitler salute. But there is criticism from the Hungarian opposition: “How can you sink so deep? Now you call a world champion a Nazi. What monsters have become of the former young democrats” (Note: Fidesz stands for “Union of young democrats”).