Ahh, Shifting Baseline Disorder, too, Mattias . . . and with AI-Mixed Reality-Virtual Reality-Augmentaed Reality, we are on a steep and quickening of circling the proverbial drain.
He's off on Soviet Union history, and alas, how man Russian cities did USA and UK want to nuke during Oppen-Monster-Heimer's conflicted genocidal bomb making?
Ahh, Shifting Baseline Disorder, too, Mattias . . . and with AI-Mixed Reality-Virtual Reality-Augmentaed Reality, we are on a steep and quickening of circling the proverbial drain.
He's off on Soviet Union history, and alas, how man Russian cities did USA and UK want to nuke during Oppen-Monster-Heimer's conflicted genocidal bomb making?
Whipping up fear, uh? Nothing like a good war to get millions to go all in and kill each other, and then, destroy countries.
Viagra and Libya?
Doesn't take much to destroy a country, people, generations afterward.
We Used to Call These Moves, 'daft,' 'queer,' 'inane' and grotesque: Here, Bernays.
but in the Post Edward Bernays World of Getting Women (not his wife, though) to suck on cancer sticks for the perceived coolness of it, we will see more of this 3rd grade reading level shit!!!!!!
Here, Eddy boy:
Standard American policy (among everyday people as much as politicians) for a long time maintained that what the rest of the world was up to was really none of our business. This changed right about the time we entered the first world war, though even having entered it, public opinion mostly stood opposed. It was Edward Bernays’ first large-scale project in fact, working on a team for the military to convince the average Joe that war was good and right. As such, Bernays helped to present a paint-by-number framework for such convincing that governments have since mastered – with flair.]
Another?
Our more extravagant meal was conjured up when Edward Bernays secured the Beech-Nut Packing Company as a client who wanted him to raise their pork sales. Bernays went to work collecting testimony from nearly 5,000 doctors across the U.S. who said simply that a heavier breakfast was a healthier one, while some of them specifically cited bacon and eggs as an example. The ploy worked.
+--+
How many die form cigarettes? Tobacco kills up to half of its users. · Tobacco kills more than 8 million people each year, including 1.3 million non-smokers who are exposed to second hand smoke.
+--+
That cancerous smile, Eddy Boy?
Edward Bernays was hired by Alcoa to present industrial-grade fluoride, a common byproduct (and regulated pollutant) produced by the manufacture of its big seller, aluminum, as a benefit to public health. Bernays himself is quoted as saying that he took the job because he was fascinated to see if he could convince an entire nation to vote against what it knew instinctively to be its own good health interests. Using methods like calling up every dictionary and encyclopedia he could find and having them add a then-non-existent entry on “fluoridation,” giving the whole concept a sense of authority, he, as per usual, succeeded with flying colors.
+---+
Bernays literally wrote the book on an idea he termed “engineering consent.” He presented the argument that democracy could not be left in the hands of the unwashed masses, that the world’s wealthy and powerful must protect those lower on the class rung from themselves. The method of providing this protection was to manipulate their votes by the same kinds of campaigns which Bernays had perfected, all the while promoting the beauty of free election.
+--+
"Propaganda is the executive arm of the invisible government." -- Bernays
Lucky Strike cigarettes proudly bore a bright green package when they hired Bernays to raise sales. Through polling, he discovered that women in particular were opposed to the brand because it clashed with just about every outfit.[4]
Rarely one to take the straight-forward route, Bernays didn’t demand a change in packaging from the company but instead – by planting supportive articles in fashionable magazines and hosting “green balls” where, perhaps obviously, everyone invited wore green in an environment decorated with the same –, he created a massive fashion trend for the color green. It worked. People wore more green and Lucky Strike, appearing well ahead of the game, became a popular brand accessory.
Ahh, Shifting Baseline Disorder, too, Mattias . . . and with AI-Mixed Reality-Virtual Reality-Augmentaed Reality, we are on a steep and quickening of circling the proverbial drain.
He's off on Soviet Union history, and alas, how man Russian cities did USA and UK want to nuke during Oppen-Monster-Heimer's conflicted genocidal bomb making?
Whipping up fear, uh? Nothing like a good war to get millions to go all in and kill each other, and then, destroy countries.
Viagra and Libya?
Doesn't take much to destroy a country, people, generations afterward.
We Used to Call These Moves, 'daft,' 'queer,' 'inane' and grotesque: Here, Bernays.
but in the Post Edward Bernays World of Getting Women (not his wife, though) to suck on cancer sticks for the perceived coolness of it, we will see more of this 3rd grade reading level shit!!!!!!
Here, Eddy boy:
Standard American policy (among everyday people as much as politicians) for a long time maintained that what the rest of the world was up to was really none of our business. This changed right about the time we entered the first world war, though even having entered it, public opinion mostly stood opposed. It was Edward Bernays’ first large-scale project in fact, working on a team for the military to convince the average Joe that war was good and right. As such, Bernays helped to present a paint-by-number framework for such convincing that governments have since mastered – with flair.]
Another?
Our more extravagant meal was conjured up when Edward Bernays secured the Beech-Nut Packing Company as a client who wanted him to raise their pork sales. Bernays went to work collecting testimony from nearly 5,000 doctors across the U.S. who said simply that a heavier breakfast was a healthier one, while some of them specifically cited bacon and eggs as an example. The ploy worked.
+--+
How many die form cigarettes? Tobacco kills up to half of its users. · Tobacco kills more than 8 million people each year, including 1.3 million non-smokers who are exposed to second hand smoke.
+--+
That cancerous smile, Eddy Boy?
Edward Bernays was hired by Alcoa to present industrial-grade fluoride, a common byproduct (and regulated pollutant) produced by the manufacture of its big seller, aluminum, as a benefit to public health. Bernays himself is quoted as saying that he took the job because he was fascinated to see if he could convince an entire nation to vote against what it knew instinctively to be its own good health interests. Using methods like calling up every dictionary and encyclopedia he could find and having them add a then-non-existent entry on “fluoridation,” giving the whole concept a sense of authority, he, as per usual, succeeded with flying colors.
+---+
Bernays literally wrote the book on an idea he termed “engineering consent.” He presented the argument that democracy could not be left in the hands of the unwashed masses, that the world’s wealthy and powerful must protect those lower on the class rung from themselves. The method of providing this protection was to manipulate their votes by the same kinds of campaigns which Bernays had perfected, all the while promoting the beauty of free election.
+--+
"Propaganda is the executive arm of the invisible government." -- Bernays
Lucky Strike cigarettes proudly bore a bright green package when they hired Bernays to raise sales. Through polling, he discovered that women in particular were opposed to the brand because it clashed with just about every outfit.[4]
Rarely one to take the straight-forward route, Bernays didn’t demand a change in packaging from the company but instead – by planting supportive articles in fashionable magazines and hosting “green balls” where, perhaps obviously, everyone invited wore green in an environment decorated with the same –, he created a massive fashion trend for the color green. It worked. People wore more green and Lucky Strike, appearing well ahead of the game, became a popular brand accessory.