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Whose voice guides your choice

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Whose voice guides your choice

  1. 1. Whose voice guides your choice? Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Propaganda techniques in the media
  2. 2. How do you decide who is the best candidate… Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
  3. 3. or which is the best toothpaste ? Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
  4. 4. Looking for facts to back up your choice is an excellent idea, but find out who is presenting those facts. Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
  5. 5. Are they facts at all, or is the advertiser using propaganda techniques to persuade you? Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
  6. 6. What are Propaganda techniques? • Propaganda is designed to persuade. • Its purpose is to influence your opinions, emotions, attitudes, or behavior. • It seeks to “guide your choice.”
  7. 7. Who us e s P ropa g a nda ? •Military •Media •Advertisers •Politicians •You and I
  8. 8. What are some of the techniques used to persuade us? •Bandwagon •Name-calling •Testimonial •Glittering Generality •Plain-folks appeal •Transfer •Emotional words •Faulty Reasoning •Fear
  9. 9. B a ndw a g eo y b o d y is doing this. •E v r n •If you want to fit in, you need to “jump on the bandwagon” and do it too. •The implication is that you must J OI N in to F I T in . Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
  10. 10. For e x a m p le : If t h e w h o le Bank of the World Visa Card- You can use it from Tennessee to w o r ld Timbuktu- anywhere you travel in whole wide u s e s t h is world !! V IS A c a r d , Sign up today at www.bowvisa.com yo u m u s t Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
  11. 11. N a m e -c a llin g •A negative word or feeling is attached to an idea, product, or person. • If that word or feeling goes along with that person or idea, the implication is that we shouldn’t be interested in it.
  12. 12. For example: Do we want a mayor who will leave us in debt? Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Spending grew 100% under Mayor Moneybags!
  13. 13. Testimonial •A famous person endorses an idea, a product, a candidate. •If someone famous uses this product, believes this idea, or supports this candidate, so should we.
  14. 14. For example: If we drink milk we will all be as famous as Milly the model. Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Milly the Model asks, “Got Milk?”
  15. 15. Glittering Generality •A commonly admired virtue is used to inspire positive feelings for a person, idea, or product. •Words like truth, democracy, beauty, timeless are examples of those general terms.
  16. 16. For example: If you want to be brighter, you’ll support Bill Brite. Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Look on the bright side! Vote for Bill Brite !
  17. 17. Plain-folks appeal This idea, product, or person is associated with normal, everyday people and activities.
  18. 18. For Example: We want a Jim Smith, a mayor who supports the regular American worker. Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Vote for Smith
  19. 19. Transfer •Symbols, quotes, or images of famous people are used to convey a message. •The message may not necessarily be associated with them.
  20. 20. Celebrate For example: the American Way this 4th Joe uses symbols of of July- America to tie his Eat at Joe’s restaurant to American values for Joe’s Barbeque Independence Day. Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
  21. 21. Emotional words •Words that leave us with positive feelings are used to describe a product, person, or idea. •We associate those words and, therefore, those positive feelings with the product.
  22. 22. For example: What feelings are inspired by the words “true love”? If you wear this cologne will someone fall in love with you? True Love Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
  23. 23. Faulty Reasoning •Factual supporting details are used though they do not support the conclusion. It works like this: •Christians believe in God. •Muslims believe in God. •Christians are Muslims.
  24. 24. For example: Does this mean that teachers need medication to keep their cool during the school More teac hers recommend day ? C alm-me to help them make it through the day Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
  25. 25. Fear •Our fears are displayed. •Ideas, candidates, or products are shown to put our fears to rest.
  26. 26. For example: If you use Safety Ware it will prevent people Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Guard against from stealing Identity theft your identity-or Use Safety Ware will it? www.safetyware.com
  27. 27. How do we make sure that we are making informed choices, Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 instead of allowing others to sway us in our decision-making?
  28. 28. We make our own choices when … •we read and listen to reliable sources, •we watch for combinations of truths and lies, •we check for hidden messages, •we watch for use of propaganda techniques,
  29. 29. and, most importantly, www.scottish.parliament.uk/ educationservice WHEN WE LISTEN TO OUR OWN VOICES !

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