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Swarthout
Swarthout is on page 153 of 376 of How Propaganda Works
Nixon’s chief of staff, H. R. Haldeman, wrote in his diary, “President emphasized that you have to face that the whole [welfare] problem is really the blacks. The key is to devise a system that recognizes this, while not appearing to…. Pointed out that there has never in history been an adequate black nation, and they are the only race of which this is true.”
6 hours, 49 min ago Add a comment
How Propaganda Works

Swarthout
Swarthout is on page 139 of 376 of How Propaganda Works
One characteristic effect of propaganda in a liberal democracy will be to erode empathy for the perspectives of a group in a population, while presenting itself as not so doing.
11 hours, 43 min ago Add a comment
How Propaganda Works

Swarthout
Swarthout is on page 121 of 376 of How Propaganda Works
It may be, for example, that the real explanation of the effectiveness of fear for the decision to invade Iraq was the lack of the average American’s ability to imagine himself as a member of a population being invaded and heavily aerially bombed by a vastly more powerful military force, and that in turn was the consequence of stereotypes about Arab Muslims that robbed us of the capacity for empathy toward them.
Dec 19, 2025 04:29PM Add a comment
How Propaganda Works

Swarthout
Swarthout is on page 117 of 376 of How Propaganda Works
Prisoners have become dehumanized as a consequence. They now serve as a strategic instrument in politics. A politician summons up crime to elicit fear, and then offers himself as the instrument to satisfy the desire for retribution (though the desire is for retribution of the fear caused by that very politician).
Dec 19, 2025 04:05PM Add a comment
How Propaganda Works

Swarthout
Swarthout is on page 108 of 376 of How Propaganda Works
It is not reasonable to propose a policy that, from the perspective of another, is unreasonable. The normative ideal of reasonableness is the demand “to live politically with others in the light of reasons all might reasonably be expected to endorse.”
Dec 19, 2025 02:14PM Add a comment
How Propaganda Works

Swarthout
Swarthout is on page 56 of 376 of How Propaganda Works
Advertising: A contribution to public discourse that is presented as an embodiment of certain ideals, but in the service of a goal that is irrelevant to those very ideals.
Dec 17, 2025 04:00PM Add a comment
How Propaganda Works

Swarthout
Swarthout is on page 49 of 376 of How Propaganda Works
Lying too is a betrayal of the rational will. But it is a different kind of betrayal of the rational will than propaganda. At least with lying, one purports to provide evidence. Propaganda is worse than that. It attempts to unify opinion without attempting to appeal to our rational will at all.
Dec 17, 2025 11:03AM Add a comment
How Propaganda Works

Swarthout
Swarthout is on page 48 of 376 of How Propaganda Works
According to these classical characterizations of propaganda...propaganda closes off debate by bypassing the rational will. It makes the state move as one, stirred by emotions that far surpass the evidence for their intensity.
Dec 17, 2025 10:54AM Add a comment
How Propaganda Works

Swarthout
Swarthout added a status update
connecting with people through the written word, and enjoying it.
Dec 16, 2025 04:03AM Add a comment

Swarthout
Swarthout is on page 134 of 349 of From Fascism to Populism in History
Populism is not a simple external response to elites and bureaucracies but is rather a criticism of democracy from within.
Dec 15, 2025 08:32AM Add a comment
From Fascism to Populism in History

Swarthout
Swarthout is on page 85 of 349 of From Fascism to Populism in History
If more generally, dictatorship was rooted in a trinitarian notion of popular sovereignty, according to which the leader personally embodied the nation and the people—or as the fascists put it, one man, one people, one nation—corporatism provided a theory for regulating conflict in capitalism and under the supreme arbitration of the leader.
Dec 14, 2025 11:19AM Add a comment
From Fascism to Populism in History

Swarthout
Swarthout is on page 76 of 349 of From Fascism to Populism in History
Fascists wanted to replace what they saw as mechanistic, repetitive, and involuntary modernity with a “qualified” modernity in which the fascist could tame matter and the economy.
Dec 14, 2025 07:47AM Add a comment
From Fascism to Populism in History

Swarthout
Swarthout is on page 73 of 349 of From Fascism to Populism in History
Violence defined fascism’s conceptual representations, especially with respect to fascist genocidal notions of the abject and sacrifice.
Dec 14, 2025 06:19AM Add a comment
From Fascism to Populism in History

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