22 Examples of Propaganda Working as Expected
Propaganda is just a part of our daily lives now. We just expect to be bombarded by misinformation on an hourly basis. Most of the time, this...
Published 10 months ago in Wtf
Propaganda is just a part of our daily lives now. We just expect to be bombarded by misinformation on an hourly basis.
Most of the time, this is pretty harmless. Sometimes, though, it rises to the level of damaging propaganda. And here is the propaganda that caused the most damage throughout history!
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Perhaps not the most damaging, but certainly a vile example… when Pope Benedict XVI told the people of sub-Saharan Africa that condoms would actually make the HIV/AIDS crisis worse. This obviously drew extreme criticism from everyone that actually wanted to end/improve the crisis. It is a peak example of one valuing the perpetuation of their superstitious beliefs over the life of their followers. -u/P0ster_Nutbag2
McCarthyism completely trashed the layperson's understanding of the distinction between "socialism" and "communism" (actually it's more of a range) Now welfare and other social programs are often seen as "the slippery slope that will turn the USA into a failure like the USSR," and not "the kind of thing that just about every modern, developed democratic nation has which improves the lives of its citizens" -u/AdvocateSaint6
The carbon footprint is lie…BP made that popular in 2004. And all these years later we are still turning off half the lights like a makes a bit of difference. Oil companies like BP contribute 71% of the carbon pollution today. So even if we the people made up the other 29% and we cleaned it all up, we would still be fucked because of them. but that footprint bullshit took the focus off of them and put it on to us. -u/Papa_Smurf8712
Greenpeace VS GMOs Some people worked hard to modify rice to have vitamin A so has to help poor communities who did not have proper diets. Greenpeace convinced their governments GMOs are poison so tons of the stuff was burned. Children were going blind and dying and all Greenpeace cared about was the genetic purity of a plant! -u/lemons_of_doubt18
The one I think about the most is back in the 80s in the U.S. We were told constantly how the Japanese were going to rule the world because of their work ethic. Americans gave up a lot of workers' rights and time for their lives. When I finally was able to travel outside of the U.S. I heard about how Americans are workaholics. It dawned on me there was some BS propaganda going on that facilitated the current sh**ty situation in the states. -u/DrippyCheeseDog20
Dr. Robert Ho Man Kwok's 1968 letter in the New England Journal of Medicine talking of Chinese restaurant syndrome caused by MSG without any scientific evidence. Added a lot of content to preexisting stigma toward East Asians. However, blinded experiments could not prove his claims. -u/doesntcareatall22
Andrew Wakefield's fraudulent "research" claiming a link between vaccinations and autism for the purposes of selling his own "safe" vaccines. He single handedly set back not just childhood vaccinations (with a resulting unprecidented spike in measles), but fostered an anti-science sentiment that is still bearing rotten fruit in the current COVID pandemic. it's rare that you can point your finger to one person and say "YOU are personally responsible for millions of deaths", yet here we are. -u/McFeely_Smackup24
In the 90s, child abduction fear porn was all the rage on the nightly news. And they were always the 1 in a million, crazy stories with horrific deaths and would play weekly. Chris Hanson's "To Catch a Predator" didn't help. However, these kidnappings were extremely rare in reality. Kids lost almost all unsupervised playtime, which as it turns out is very helpful for learning how to socialize. -u/HarrysonTubman