 |
- Truth is not the absence of propaganda; propaganda thrives
in presenting different kinds of truth, including half
truths, incomplete truths, limited truths, out of context
truths. Modern propaganda is most effective when it presents
information as accurately as possible. The Big Lie or
Tall Tale is the most ineffective propaganda.
- Propaganda is not so much designed to change opinions
so much as reinforce existing opinions, prejudices, attitudes.
The most successful propaganda will lead people to action
or inaction through reinforcement of what people already
believe to be true.
- Education is not necessarily the best protection against
propaganda. Intellectuals and "the educated"
are the most vulnerable to propaganda campaigns because
they (1) tend to absorb the most information (including
secondhand information, hearsay, rumors, and unverifiable
information); (2) are compelled to have an opinion on
matters of the day and thus expose themselves more to
others' opinions and propaganda campaigns; and (3) consider
themselves above the influence of propaganda, thereby
making themselves more susceptible to propaganda.
- What makes the study of propaganda so problematic is
that it is generally regarded as the study of the darker
side of our nature; the study of their evil versus our
good. Those whom we consider evil thrive in propaganda,
while we spread only the truth. The best way to study
propaganda is to separate one's ethical judgments from
the phenomenon itself. Propaganda thrives and exists,
for ethical and unethical purposes.
- Propaganda seeks to modify public opinion, particularly
to make people conform to the point of view of the propagandist.
In this respect, any propaganda is a form of manipulation,
to adapt an individual to a particular activity.
- Modern forms of communication, including mass media,
are instruments of propaganda. Without the monopoly concentration
of mass media, there can be no modern propaganda. For
propaganda to thrive, the media must remain concentrated,
news agencies and services must be limited, the press
must be under central command, and radio, film, and television
monopolies must pervade.
- One must become aware of propaganda, its limitations,
its strengths, its influence, and its persuasive qualities,
if one is to master it. To say that one is free of the
influence of propaganda is a sure sign of its pervasive
existence in society.
- Modern propaganda began in the United States in the
early 20th Century. During World War I, the mass media
were integrated with public relations and advertising
methods to advocate and maintain support for war. The
Creel Committee established the first American publicity
campaign to spread and disseminate the gospel of the American
way to all corners of the globe.
- In the United States, private commercial propaganda
is as important to notions of democracy as governmental
propaganda. Commercial appeals to the people through advertising,
which plays on irrational fantasies and impulses, are
some of the most pervasive forms of propaganda in existence
today.
- Propaganda in a democracy establishes truth in the sense
that it creates "true believers" who are as
ideologically committed to the democratic progress as
others are ideologically committed to its control. The
perpetuation of democratic ideals and beliefs in the face
of concentrated power in propaganda institutions (media,
political institutions) is a triumph of propaganda in
modern American society.
Compiled by Nancy Snow, Ph.D.
Source: Jacques Ellul, Propaganda
< Back to Propaganda
News
|