For Jarosław Kurski, deputy editor-in-chief of Gazeta Wyborcza, Poland's silent majority bears partial responsibility for the developments:

“It's possible to observe the march in Warsaw on November 11 and not see the anti-Semitism, the xenophobia and the Islamophobia. ... It's possible to ignore the fact that representatives of fascist organisations from Italy, Slovakia and Hungary took part. Like the indifferent majority, you can sit back comfortably in the centre and not take a stand. ... All of you who see what is happening but refuse to acknowledge it; who hear it but act as if you hadn't; or those who don't really care one way or another: you must know that you won't be any less to blame than those who see, hear, understand and take pleasure in the developments - because they are glad to see public life in Poland become fascisised.”